This powershell module is a thin wrapper on top of YamlDotNet that serializes and un-serializes simple powershell objects to and from YAML. It was tested on powershell versions 4 and 5, supports Nano Server and apparently works with powershell on Linux. I suspect it works on Mac as well, but I have not had a chance to test it.
The lib
folder contains the YamlDotNet assemblies. They are not really required, just a fall-back in case your system does not already have them installed and loaded. Feel free to remove the lib
folder if you prefer to add the required assemblies yourself.
This module is available for installation via Powershell Gallery. Simply run the following command:
Install-Module powershell-yaml
Import-Module powershell-yaml
PS C:\> $yaml = ConvertTo-Yaml @{"hello"="world"; "anArray"=@(1,2,3); "nested"=@{"array"=@("this", "is", "an", "array")}}
PS C:\> $yaml
anArray:
- 1
- 2
- 3
nested:
array:
- this
- is
- an
- array
hello: world
Import-Module powershell-yaml
PS C:\> $yaml = @"
anArray:
- 1
- 2
- 3
nested:
array:
- this
- is
- an
- array
hello: world
"@
PS C:\> $obj = ConvertFrom-Yaml $yaml
PS C:\> $obj
Name Value
---- -----
anArray {1, 2, 3}
nested {array}
hello world
PS C:\> $obj.GetType()
IsPublic IsSerial Name BaseType
-------- -------- ---- --------
True True Hashtable System.Object
Unserializing multiple documents results in an array representing the contents of each document. The result of this does not translate back to the same documents if you pass it back through ConvertTo-Yaml.
Import-Module powershell-yaml
PS C:\> $yaml = @"
---
anArray:
- 1
- 2
- 3
nested:
array:
- this
- is
- an
- array
hello: world
---
second: document
goodbye: world
"@
PS C:\> $obj = ConvertFrom-Yaml $yaml -AllDocuments
PS C:\> $obj
Name Value
---- -----
anArray {1, 2, 3}
nested {array}
hello world
goodbye world
second document
PS C:\> $obj.GetType()
IsPublic IsSerial Name BaseType
-------- -------- ---- --------
True True Object[] System.Array
PS C:\> $obj[0]
Name Value
---- -----
anArray {1, 2, 3}
nested {array}
hello world
PS C:\> $obj[1]
Name Value
---- -----
goodbye world
second document
$mergingYaml = @"
---
default: &default
value1: 1
value2: 2
hoge:
<<: *default
value3: 3
"@
ConvertFrom-Yaml -Yaml $mergingYaml -UseMergingParser
Name Value
---- -----
default {value1, value2}
hoge {value2, value3, value1}
Important note: For the time being, overwriting keys will throw a duplicate key exception.
$mergingYamlWithDuplicates = @"
---
default: &default
value1: 1
value2: 2
hoge:
<<: *default
# this is a duplicate
value1: 44
value3: 3
"@
The awesome YamlDotNet assembly allows us to serialize an object in a JSON compatible way. Unfortunately it does not support indentation. Here is a simple example:
Import-Module powershell-yaml
PS C:\> $yaml = @"
anArray:
- 1
- 2
- 3
nested:
array:
- this
- is
- an
- array
hello: world
"@
PS C:\> $obj = ConvertFrom-Yaml $yaml
PS C:\> $obj
Name Value
---- -----
anArray {1, 2, 3}
nested {array}
hello world
PS C:\> ConvertTo-Yaml -JsonCompatible $obj
{"anArray": [1, 2, 3], "nested": {"array": ["this", "is", "an", "array"]}, "hello": "world"}
# Or you could do it in one line.
PS C:\> ConvertFrom-Yaml $yaml | ConvertTo-Yaml -JsonCompatible
{"anArray": [1, 2, 3], "nested": {"array": ["this", "is", "an", "array"]}, "hello": "world"}
Before running the associated unit tests; please make sure you have Pester installed, as it is the testing framework of choice.
After Pester is up and running, the tests may be ran by simply entering the
tests directory and running Invoke-Pester
:
PS C:\> Install-Module Pester
PS C:\> Install-Module Assert
PS C:\> git clone https://github.com/cloudbase/powershell-yaml.git $HOME\powershell-yaml
PS C:\> cd $HOME\powershell-yaml
PS C:\Users\Guest\powershell-yaml> powershell.exe -NonInteractive -Command {Invoke-Pester}