I have been using YAML as configuration file format in several applications, and all went well except one thing: when my program needs to write/modify a config variable in a YAML config file, it destroys formatting and comments by loading and dumping the entire file/structure.
(Well, there is another problem with YAML actually. Most users, many of them are not programmers, will be tripped over the details of YAML rules, like the significance of whitespace in some places. But this is not a major gripe.)
What I would prefer is a YAML loader/dumper which can do round-trip parsing (preserving all whitespaces & comments), or some other human-readable serialization format which has such parser. I'm even considering using Perl document and PPI, since PPI is a round-trip safe parser. Or perhaps PPI can be bent to deal with YAML or similar formats?开发者_如何转开发 I'd rather not use XML, I'd resort to INI+(JSON|YAML|... for key values) before that.
Any advice or pointers?
If you are using block structured YAML and Python is acceptable, you can use the Python package¹ ruamel.yaml which is a derivative of PyYAML and supports round trip preservation of comments:
import sys
import ruamel.yaml
inp = """\
# example
name:
# details
family: Smith # very common
given: Alice # one of the siblings
"""
yaml = ruamel.yaml.YAML()
code = yaml.load(inp)
code['name']['given'] = 'Bob'
yaml.dump(code, sys.stdout)
with result:
# example
name:
# details
family: Smith # very common
given: Bob # one of the siblings
Note that the end-of-line comments are still aligned.
Instead of normal list
and dict
objects the code
consists of
wrapped versions² on which the comments attached.
¹ Install with pip install ruamel.yaml
. Works on Python 2.6/2.7/3.3+.
Disclaimer: I am the author of that package.
² ordereddict
is used in case of a mapping, to preserve ordering
Yeah, you and everyone who thought wow, yaml sounds cool, simply put, it doesn't exist, yet
update: you probably want to use Config::General, its apache config format (xmlish)
No, PPI is not general purpose tool, if you want BNF-ness, you want to use Marpa
Of all INI/JSON/YAML/XML, XML probably has the best editor support for non-programmers (sounds crazy)
One approach to this is using "lenses". See Augeas for one implementation.
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