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README.md |
yamlfmt
yamlfmt
is an extensible command line tool or library to format yaml files.
Goals
- Create a command line yaml formatting tool that is easy to distribute (single binary)
- Make it simple to extend with new custom formatters
- Enable alternative use as a library, providing a foundation for users to create a tool that meets specific needs
Maintainers
This tool is not yet officially supported by Google. It is currently maintained solely by @braydonk, and unless something changes primarily in spare time.
Blog
I'm going to use these links to GitHub Discussions as a blog of sorts, until I can set up something more proper:
Installation
To download the yamlfmt
command, you can download the desired binary from releases or install the module directly:
go install github.com/google/yamlfmt/cmd/yamlfmt@latest
This currently requires Go version 1.18 or greater.
NOTE: Recommended setup if this is your first time installing Go would be in this DigitalOcean blog post.
You can also download the binary you want from releases. The binary is self-sufficient with no dependencies, and can simply be put somewhere on your PATH and run with the command yamlfmt
.
You can also install the command as a pre-commit hook. See the pre-commit hook docs for instructions.
Basic Usage
See Command Usage for in-depth information and available flags.
To run the tool with all default settings, run the command with a path argument:
yamlfmt x.yaml y.yaml <...>
You can specify as many paths as you want. You can also specify a directory which will be searched recursively for any files with the extension .yaml
or .yml
.
yamlfmt .
You can also use an alternate mode that will search paths with doublestar globs by supplying the -dstar
flag.
yamlfmt -dstar **/*.{yaml,yml}
See the doublestar package for more information on this format.
Configuration File
The yamlfmt
command can be configured through a yaml file called .yamlfmt
. This file can live in your working directory, a path specified through a CLI flag, or in the standard global config path on your system (see docs for specifics).
For in-depth configuration documentation see Config.