YAML::PP - YAML Parser and Loader
WARNING: This is highly experimental.
Here are a few examples of what you can do right now:
# Load YAML into a very simple data structure yaml-pp-p5-load < file.yaml # The loader offers JSON::PP, boolean.pm or pureperl 1/0 (default) # for booleans my $yppl = YAML::PP::Loader->new(boolean => 'JSON::PP'); my ($data1, $data2) = $yppl->load($yaml); # Print the events from the parser in yaml-test-suite format yaml-pp-p5-events < file.yaml
This is Yet Another YAML Parser. For why this project was started, see "WHY".
This project contains a Parser YAML::PP::Parser and a Loader YAML::PP::Loader.
The parser aims to parse YAML 1.2.
YAML 1.2
Still TODO:
Flow style is not implemented yet, you will get an appropriate error message.
The regexes are not complete. It will not accept characters that should be valid, and it will accept characters that should be invalid.
The parser currently doesn't keep track of the line numbers, so the error messages might not be very useful yet
The error messages in general aren't often very informative
I would like to support a lexer that can be used for highlighting.
The loader is very simple so far.
It supports:
Like in modules like YAML, the Loader will use references for mappings and sequences, but obviously not for scalars.
You can choose between 'perl' (default), 'JSON::PP' and 'boolean'.pm for handling boolean types. That allows you to dump the data structure with one of the JSON modules without losing information about booleans.
'perl'
'JSON::PP'
'boolean'
I also would like to add the possibility to specify a callback for your own boolean handling.
Numbers are created as real numbers instead of strings, so that they are dumped correctly by modules like JSON::XS, for example.
See "NUMBERS" for an example.
TODO:
Mapping Keys in YAML can be more than just scalars. Of course, you can't load that into a native perl structure. The Loader will stringify those keys with Data::Dumper. I would like to add a possibility to specify a method for stringification.
Example:
use YAML::PP::Loader; use JSON::XS; my $yppl = YAML::PP::Loader->new; my $coder = JSON::XS->new->ascii->pretty->allow_nonref->canonical; my $yaml = <<'EOM'; complex: ? ? a: 1 c: 2 : 23 : 42 EOM my $data = $yppl->load($yaml); say $coder->encode($data); __END__ { "complex" : { "{'{a => 1,c => 2}' => 23}" : 42 } }
Tags are completely ignored.
I would like to generate a complete parse tree, that allows you to manipulate the data structure and also dump it, including all whitespaces and comments. The spec says that this is throwaway content, but I read that many people wish to be able to keep the comments.
Compare the output of the following YAML Loaders and JSON::XS dump:
use JSON::XS; use Devel::Peek; use YAML::XS (); use YAML (); $YAML::Numify = 1; # since version 1.23 use YAML::Syck (); $YAML::Syck::ImplicitTyping = 1; use YAML::Tiny (); use YAML::PP::Loader; my $yaml = "foo: 23"; my $d1 = YAML::XS::Load($yaml); my $d2 = YAML::Load($yaml); my $d3 = YAML::Syck::Load($yaml); my $d4 = YAML::Tiny->read_string($yaml)->[0]; my $d5 = YAML::PP::Loader->new->load($yaml); Dump $d1->{foo}; Dump $d2->{foo}; Dump $d3->{foo}; Dump $d4->{foo}; Dump $d5->{foo}; say encode_json($d1); say encode_json($d2); say encode_json($d3); say encode_json($d4); say encode_json($d5); SV = PVIV(0x55bbaff2bae0) at 0x55bbaff26518 REFCNT = 1 FLAGS = (IOK,POK,pIOK,pPOK) IV = 23 PV = 0x55bbb06e67a0 "23"\0 CUR = 2 LEN = 10 SV = PVMG(0x55bbb08959b0) at 0x55bbb08fc6e8 REFCNT = 1 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK) IV = 23 NV = 0 PV = 0 SV = IV(0x55bbaffcb3b0) at 0x55bbaffcb3c0 REFCNT = 1 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK) IV = 23 SV = PVMG(0x55bbaff2f1f0) at 0x55bbb08fc8c8 REFCNT = 1 FLAGS = (POK,pPOK,UTF8) IV = 0 NV = 0 PV = 0x55bbb0909d00 "23"\0 [UTF8 "23"] CUR = 2 LEN = 10 SV = PVMG(0x55bbaff2f6d0) at 0x55bbb08b2c10 REFCNT = 1 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK) IV = 23 NV = 0 PV = 0 {"foo":"23"} {"foo":23} {"foo":23} {"foo":"23"} {"foo":23}
All the available parsers and loaders for Perl are behaving differently, and more important, aren't conforming to the spec. YAML::XS is doing pretty well, but libyaml only handles YAML 1.1 and diverges a bit from the spec. The pure perl loaders lack support for a number of features.
libyaml
I was going over YAML.pm issues end of 216, integrating old patches from rt.cpan.org and creating some pull requests myself. I realized that it would be difficult to patch YAML.pm to parse YAML 1.1 or even 1.2, and it would also break existing usages relying on the current behaviour.
In 2016 Ingy döt Net initiated two really cool projects:
These projects are a big help for any developer. So I got the idea to write my own parser and started on New Year's Day 2017. Without the test suite and the editor I would have never started this.
I also started another YAML Test project which allows to get a quick overview of which frameworks support which YAML features:
https://github.com/yaml/yaml-test-suite
It contains about 160 test cases and expected parsing events and more. There will be more tests coming. This test suite allows to write parsers without turning the examples from the Specification into tests yourself. Also the examples aren't completely covering all cases - the test suite aims to do that.
The suite contains .tml files, and in a seperate 'data' branch you will find the content in seperate files, if you can't or don't want to use TestML.
Thanks also to Felix Krause, who is writing a YAML parser in Nim. He turned all the spec examples into test cases.
As of this writing, the test suite only contains valid examples. Invalid ones are currently added.
This is a tool to play around with several YAML parsers and loaders in vim.
https://github.com/yaml/yaml-editor
The project contains the code to build the frameworks (16 as of this writing) and put it into one big Docker image.
It also contains the yaml-editor itself, which will start a vim in the docker container. It uses a lot of funky vimscript that makes playing with it easy and useful. You can choose which frameworks you want to test and see the output in a grid of vim windows.
Especially when writing a parser it is extremely helpful to have all the test cases and be able to play around with your own examples to see how they are handled.
I was curious to see how the different frameworks handle the test cases, so, using the test suite and the docker image, I wrote some code that runs the tests, manipulates the output to compare it with the expected output, and created a matrix view.
https://github.com/perlpunk/yaml-test-matrix
You can find the latest build at http://matrix.yaml.io
Copyright 2017 by Tina Müller
This library is free software and may be distributed under the same terms as perl itself.
To install YAML::PP, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm YAML::PP
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install YAML::PP
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.