Construct YAML from a directory tree
The entire world seems to think declarative configuration is best represented as YAML. This is especially prevalent in the land of Kubernetes and related tools. Terrible ideas have a tendency to accumulate leading to awful solutions to the wrong problems.
Whilst this tool doesn't pretend to move the mountain it does try to nudge it back in the right direction.
Put simply, dy
allows one to build a YAML document from a directory tree containing snippets of YAML. The aim is to make the document easier to reason about and maintain.
It is useful everywhere complex YAML configuration is employed: CI pipelines, Cloudformation, Kubernetes, etc. See the examples for inspiration, especially in tandem with envsubst.
divvy /ˈdɪvi/ - To share out. Informal, British - A foolish or stupid person
dy
parses a directory tree according to the following rules:
- A directory is a text key
- A file name has contents that are rendered under a key named after the file prefix
- A file name that begins with an underscore is rendered without a key at the current indentation level
Consider the following example:
$ tree k8s_deployment/
k8s_deployment/
├── _header.yaml
├── metadata.yaml
└── spec
├── _replicas.yaml
├── selector.yaml
└── template
├── metadata
│ └── labels.yaml
└── spec
└── containers.yaml
4 directories, 6 files
$ dy k8s_deployment/
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.7.9
ports:
- containerPort: 80
$ dy k8s_deployment/ | kubectl apply --validate=true --dry-run=true -f -
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment created (dry run)
You may pass multiple directories as arguments and they will each be parsed and
emitted as documents in their own right. In this way a single dy
invocation
can be used to produce a valid multi-document YAML stream.
brew tap sampointer/dy
brew install dy
Download the appropriate package for your distribution from the releases page.