Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
307 lines (207 loc) · 8.53 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

307 lines (207 loc) · 8.53 KB

CircleCI Clojars Project cljdoc badge

CLI to transform between JSON, EDN, YAML and Transit using Clojure.

Quickstart

$ bash < <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/borkdude/jet/master/install)
$ echo '{:a 1}' | jet --to json
{"a":1}

Rationale

This is a command line tool to transform between JSON, EDN and Transit using Clojure. It runs as a GraalVM binary with fast startup time which makes it suited for shell scripting. It may seem familiar to users of jq.

Installation

Brew

Linux and macOS binaries are provided via brew.

Install:

brew install borkdude/brew/jet

Upgrade:

brew upgrade jet

Windows

On Windows you can install using scoop and the scoop-clojure bucket.

ASDF

jet can be installed with asdf version manager. More information on the plugin page.

Installer script

Install via the installer script:

$ bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/borkdude/jet/master/install)

By default this will install into /usr/local/bin. To change this, provide the directory name:

$ bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/borkdude/jet/master/install) /tmp

Download

You may also download a binary from Github.

JVM

Leiningen

This tool can also be used via the JVM. If you use leiningen, you can put the following in your .lein/profiles:

{:user
 {:dependencies [[borkdude/jet "0.4.23"]]
  :aliases {"jet" ["run" "-m" "jet.main"]}}}

And then call jet like:

$ echo '["^ ","~:a",1]' | lein jet --from transit --to edn
{:a 1}

Deps.edn

In deps.edn:

:jet {:deps {borkdude/jet {:mvn/version "0.4.23"}}
      :exec-fn jet.main/exec
      :main-opts ["-m" "jet.main"]}

You can use both the -M and -X style invocation, whichever you prefer:

$ echo '[1 2 3]' | clj -M:jet --colors --func '#(-> % first inc)'
2

$ echo '[1 2 3]' | clj -X:jet :colors true :thread-last '"(map inc)"'
(2 3 4)

Or install jet as a clj tool:

$ clojure -Ttools install-latest :lib io.github.borkdude/jet :as jet

$ echo '[1 2 3]' | clj -Tjet exec :colors true :func '"#(-> % first inc)"'
2

Usage

jet supports the following options:

  -i, --from            [ edn | transit | json | yaml ] defaults to edn.
  -o, --to              [ edn | transit | json | yaml ] defaults to edn.
  -t, --thread-last                                     implicit thread last
  -T, --thread-first                                    implicit thread first
  -f, --func                                            a single-arg Clojure function, or a path to a file that contains a function, that transforms input.
      --no-pretty                                       disable pretty printing
  -k, --keywordize      [ <key-fn> ]                    if present, keywordizes JSON/YAML keys. The default transformation function is keyword unless you provide your own.
      --colors          [ auto | true | false]          use colored output while pretty-printing. Defaults to auto.
      --edn-reader-opts                                 options passed to the EDN reader.
      --no-commas                                       remove commas from EDN
  -c, --collect                                         given separate values, collects them in a vector.
  -h, --help                                            print this help text.
  -v, --version                                         print the current version of jet.
  -q, --query                                           DEPRECATED, prefer -t, -T or -f. Given a jet-lang query, transforms input.

Transform EDN using --thread-last, --thread-first or --func.

Examples:

$ echo '{"a": 1}' | jet --from json --to edn
{"a" 1}

$ echo '{"a": 1}' | jet -i json --keywordize -o edn
{:a 1}

$ echo '{"my key": 1}' | jet -i json -k '#(keyword (str/replace % " " "_"))' -o edn
{:my_key 1}

$ echo '{"anApple": 1}' | jet -i json -k '#(-> % csk/->kebab-case keyword)' -o edn
{:an-apple 1}

$ echo '{"a": 1}' | jet -i json -o yaml
a: 1

$ echo '{"a": 1}' | jet -i json -o transit
["^ ","a",1]

$ echo '{:a {:b {:c 1}}}' | jet --thread-last ':a :b :c'
1

$ echo '{:a {:b {:c 1}}}' | jet --func '#(-> % :a :b :c)'
1

$ echo '{:a {:b {:c [1 2]}}}' | jet -t ':a :b :c (map inc)'
(2 3)

$ cat /tmp/fn.clj
#(-> % :a :b :c)
$ echo '{:a {:b {:c 1}}}' | jet --func /tmp/fn.clj
1

$ echo '{:a {:a 1}}' | ./jet -t '(s/transform [s/MAP-VALS s/MAP-VALS] inc)'
{:a {:a 2}}

Raw output

Get raw output from query rather than wrapped in quotes:

$ echo '{"a": "hello there"}' | jet --from json --keywordize -t ":a" --to edn
"hello there"

$ echo '{"a": "hello there"}' | jet --from json --keywordize -t ":a symbol" --to edn
hello there

or simply use println to get rid of the quotes:

$ echo '{"a": "hello there"}' | jet --from json --keywordize -t ":a println" --to edn
hello there

Data readers

You can enable data readers by passing options to --edn-reader-opts:

$ echo '#foo{:a 1}' | jet --edn-reader-opts '{:default tagged-literal}'
#foo {:a 1}
$ echo '#foo{:a 1}' | jet --edn-reader-opts "{:readers {'foo (fn [x] [:foo x])}}"
[:foo {:a 1}]

See this blog by Alex Miller for more information on the tagged-literal function.

Since jet 0.0.14 --edn-reader-opts defaults to {:default tagged-literal}.

Streaming

Jet supports streaming over multiple values, without reading the entire input into memory:

$ echo '{"a": 1} {"a": 1}' | jet --from json --keywordize -t ':a' --to edn
1
1

When you want to collect multiple values into a vector, you can use --collect:

$ echo '{"a": 1} {"a": 1}' | lein jet --from json --keywordize --collect --to edn
[{:a 1} {:a 1}]

Specter

As of version 0.2.18 the specter library is available in --func, --thread-first and --thread-last:

$ echo '{:a {:a 1}}' | ./jet -t '(s/transform [s/MAP-VALS s/MAP-VALS] inc)'
{:a {:a 2}}

Base64

To encode and decode base64 you can use base64/encode and base64/decode.

Jet utility functions

In the jet namespace, the following utilities are available:

paths

Return all paths (and sub-paths) in maps and vectors. Each result is a map of :path and :val (via get-in).

$ echo '{:a {:b [1 2 3 {:x 2}] :c {:d 3}}}' | jet -t '(jet/paths)'
[{:path [:a], :val {:b [1 2 3 {:x 2}], :c {:d 3}}}
 {:path [:a :b], :val [1 2 3 {:x 2}]}
 {:path [:a :c], :val {:d 3}}
 {:path [:a :b 0], :val 1}
 {:path [:a :b 1], :val 2}
 {:path [:a :b 2], :val 3}
 {:path [:a :b 3], :val {:x 2}}
 {:path [:a :b 3 :x], :val 2}
 {:path [:a :c :d], :val 3}]

when-pred

Given a predicate, return predicate that returns the given argument when predicate was truthy. In case of an exception during the predicate call, catches and returns nil.

The following returns all paths for which the leafs are odd numbers:

$ echo '{:a {:b [1 2 3 {:x 2}] :c {:d 3}}}' | jet -t '(jet/paths) (filter (comp (jet/when-pred odd?) :val)) (mapv :path)'
[[:a :b 0] [:a :b 2] [:a :c :d]]

Emacs integration

Sometimes it's useful to reformat REPL output in Emacs to make it more readable, copy to clipboard or just pretty-print to another buffer. All of that is avaiable in the jet.el package.

Vim integration

To convert data in vim buffers, you can select the data you want to convert in visual mode, then invoke jet by typing for example :'<,'>!jet -k --from json (vim will insert the '<,'> for you as you type).

Test

Test the JVM version:

script/test

Test the native version:

JET_TEST_ENV=native script/test

Build

You will need leiningen and GraalVM.

script/compile

License

Copyright © 2019-2023 Michiel Borkent

Distributed under the EPL License, same as Clojure. See LICENSE.