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automates the fixing of problems reported by yamllint

Project description

Docker Image Kataocda scenario

PyPI PyPI - Python Version PyPI - Downloads

yamlfixer's logo yamlfixer

❔ About

yamlfixer automates the fixing of problems reported by yamllint by parsing its output.

🎬 Demo

Click on the white triangle in the image below to view a short video demonstration:

asciicast

📑 Installation

💡 You can try the install process online thanks to the dedicated Katacoda scenario.

The easiest way to install yamlfixer is from pypi, as described below.

🐧Linux install

python3 -m pip install yamlfixer-opt-nc

🪟 Windows install

python -m pip install yamlfixer-opt-nc

🚀 Usage

This software automatically fixes some errors and warnings reported by yamllint.

usage: yamlfixer [-h] [-v] [-b] [-B BACKUPSUFFIX] [-d] [-j | -p | -s] [-t TABSIZE] [file [file ...]]

Fix formatting problems in YAML documents. If no file is specified,
then reads input from `stdin`.

positional arguments:
  file                the YAML files to fix. Use `-` to read from `stdin`.

optional arguments:
  -h, --help          show this help message and exit
  -v, --version       display this program's version number and exit.
  -b, --backup        make a backup copy of original files.
  -B BACKUPSUFFIX, --backupsuffix BACKUPSUFFIX
                      sets the suffix for backup files, `.orig` is
                      the default.
  -d, --debug         output debug information to stderr.
  -l, --listfixers    output the list of available fixers.
  -n, --nochange      don't modify anything.
  -j, --jsonsummary   output JSON summary to stderr.
  -p, --plainsummary  output plain text summary to stderr.
  -s, --summary       output colored plain text summary to stderr.
                      If stderr is not a TTY output is identical to
                      --plainsummary.
  -t TABSIZE, --tabsize TABSIZE
                      sets the number of spaces to replace tabs with,
                      default is 2.

yamlfixer launches yamllint on each specified filename, then parses its output and try to fix the reported problems. The special filename - means stdin, and is assumed if there's no other filename argument.

If input is read from stdin, the corrected output will be sent to stdout.

Other files will be overwritten if needed. Original files, stdin excepted, can be preserved as .orig if the --backup command line option is used. You can specify any other backup filename suffix with the --backupsuffix command line option.

Both summaries and diagnostic information are sent to stderr.

This command exits with -3 if there are incompatible command line options. It exits with -2 if yamllint is not available on your system. Otherwise it exits with 0 if all input files either are skipped or successfully pass yamllint strict mode, else -1.

For convenience, all or parts of the command line arguments can be read from a file, one per line, by using the well known @argsfile syntax.

IMPORTANT: Not all problems are fixable by yamlfixer. Due to the fact that yamllint doesn't currently report all faulty lines, yamlfixer might even introduce indentation problems under some circumstances.

⚠️Use at your own risk, you have been warned... ⚠️

💪 Tips and tricks

Find here a set of tips & tricks about how to achieve great things.

Don't find the usecase you're looking for ➡️ 🎫 Fill a dedicated issue so we could share your idea with the comunity

⏩ One liners

Most of use love short and efficient command lines. Here are some ready to use ones :

Piping json summary through jq

yamlfixer --jsonsummary bad.yml 2>&1 | jq

So you can get a nicely colored (and validated json output) :

  "filestofix": 1,
  "passedstrictmode": 1,
  "modified": 0,
  "skipped": 0,
  "notwriteable": 0,
  "unknown": 0,
  "details": {
    "/home/jerome/yamlfixer/bad.yml": {
      "status": "PASSED",
      "issues": 0,
      "handled": 0
    }
  }
}

Check if yamlfixer could fix a yaml and get the exit code

See how piping fixing and linting can be interesting... and get exit code so you can go further in automation :

yamlfixer <bad.yml | yamllint --format parsable --strict -
echo $?

🧰 Single purpose tools worth knowing

  • ytt : "YAML templating tool that works on YAML structure (instead of text)."
  • jq : "lightweight and flexible command-line JSON processor."
  • vimdiff : "edit two, three or four versions of a file with Vim and show differences"
  • icdiff : "improved colored diff "
  • gomplate : "A flexible commandline tool for template rendering. Supports lots of local and remote datasources."

🔖 Related contents

📖 Licensing information

Copyright (C) 2021-2022 OPT-NC

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program.  If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 Contact

To contact the authors of this software, simply fill an issue on this project.

OPT-NC, aka Office des Postes et Télécommunications de Nouvelle-Calédonie, check OPT-NC Github Organization page for more.

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