A diff tool for YAML files, and sometimes JSON
dyff
is inspired by the way the old BOSH v1 deployment output reported changes from one version to another by only showing the parts of a YAML file that change.
Each difference is referenced by its location in the YAML document by using either the Spruce or go-patch path syntax. The output report aims to be as compact as possible to give a clear and simple overview of the change.
Similar to the standard diff
tool, it follows the principle of describing the change by going from the from
input file to the target to
input file.
Input files can be local files (filesystem path), remote files (URI), or the standard input stream (using -
).
All orders of keys in hashes are preserved during processing and output to the terminal, most notably in the sub-commands to convert YAML to JSON and vice versa.
The homeport/tap
has macOS and GNU/Linux pre-built binaries available:
brew install homeport/tap/dyff
It is available in the snapcraft
store in the Productivity section.
snap install dyff
Prebuilt binaries can be downloaded from the GitHub Releases section.
There is a convenience script to download the latest release for Linux or macOS if you want to need it simple (you need curl
and jq
installed on your machine):
curl --silent --location https://git.io/JYfAY | bash
You can download and build dyff
from source using go get
:
GO111MODULE=on go get github.com/homeport/dyff/cmd/dyff
-
Show differences between the live configuration of Kubernetes resources and what would be applied (
kubectl
version >=v1.20.0
):# Setup export KUBECTL_EXTERNAL_DIFF="dyff between --omit-header --set-exit-code" # Usage kubectl diff [...]
The
--set-exit-code
flag is required so that thedyff
exit code matcheskubectl
expectations. An exit code0
refers to no differences,1
in case differences are detected. Other exit codes are treated as program issues.Note: Versions of
kubectl
older thanv1.20.0
did not split the environment variable into field, therefore you cannot use command arguments. In this case, you need to wrap thedyff
command with its argument into a helper shell script and use this instead. -
Show the differences between two versions of
cf-deployment
YAMLs:dyff between \ https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cloudfoundry/cf-deployment/v1.10.0/cf-deployment.yml \ https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cloudfoundry/cf-deployment/v1.20.0/cf-deployment.yml
-
Embed
dyff
into Git for better understandable differences# Setup... git config --local diff.dyff.command 'dyff_between() { dyff --color on between --omit-header "$2" "$5"; }; dyff_between' echo '*.yml diff=dyff' >> .gitattributes # And have fun, e.g.: git log --ext-diff -u git show --ext-diff HEAD
-
Convert a JSON stream to YAML
sometool --json | jq --raw-output '.data' | dyff yaml -
-
Sometimes you end up with YAML or JSON files, where the order of the keys in maps was sorted alphabetically. With
dyff
you can restructure keys in maps to a more human appealing order:sometool --export --json | dyff yaml --restructure -
Or, rewrite a file in place with the restructured order of keys.
dyff yaml --restructure --in-place somefile.yml
-
Just print a YAML (or JSON) file to the terminal to look at it. By default,
dyff
will use a neat output schema which includes different colors and indent helper lines to improve readability. The colors are roughly based on the default Atom schema and work best on dark terminal backgrounds. The neat output is disabled if the output ofdyff
is redirected into a pipe, or you can disable it explicitly using the--plain
flag.dyff yaml somefile.yml
-
Convert a YAML file to JSON and vice versa:
dyff json https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cloudfoundry/cf-deployment/v1.19.0/cf-deployment.yml
The
dyff
sub-command (yaml
, orjson
) defines the output format, the tool automatically detects the input format itself.dyff yaml https://raw.githubusercontent.com/homeport/dyff/main/assets/bosh-yaml/manifest.json