bazel-lib/docs/jq.md

4.5 KiB

Wrapper rule around the popular jq utility.

For jq documentation, see https://stedolan.github.io/jq/.

Usage examples

load("@aspect_bazel_lib//lib:jq.bzl", "jq")

Create a new file bazel-out/.../no_srcs.json containing some JSON data:

jq(
    name = "no_srcs",
    srcs = [],
    filter = ".name = "Alice"",
)

Remove a field from package.json:

The output path bazel-out/.../package.json matches the path of the source file, which means you must refer to the label :no_dev_deps to reference the output, since Bazel doesn't provide a label for an output file that collides with an input file.

jq(
    name = "no_dev_deps",
    srcs = ["package.json"],
    filter = "del(.devDependencies)",
)

Merge data from bar.json on top of foo.json, producing foobar.json:

jq(
    name = "merged",
    srcs = ["foo.json", "bar.json"],
    filter = ".[0] * .[1]",
    args = ["--slurp"],
    out = "foobar.json",
)

Long filters can be split over several lines with comments:

jq(
    name = "complex",
    srcs = ["a.json", "b.json"],
    filter = """
        .[0] as $a
        # Take select fields from b.json
        | (.[1] | {foo, bar, tags}) as $b
        # Merge b onto a
        | ($a * $b)
        # Combine 'tags' array from both
        | .tags = ($a.tags + $b.tags)
        # Add new field
        + {\"aspect_is_cool\": true}
    """,
    args = ["--slurp"],
)

Load filter from a file filter.jq, making it easier to edit complex filters:

jq(
    name = "merged",
    srcs = ["foo.json", "bar.json"],
    filter_file = "filter.jq",
    args = ["--slurp"],
    out = "foobar.json",
)

Convert genquery output to JSON.

genquery(
    name = "deps",
    expression = "deps(//some:target)",
    scope = ["//some:target"],
)

jq(
    name = "deps_json",
    srcs = [":deps"],
    args = [
        "--raw-input",
        "--slurp",
    ],
    filter = "{ deps: split("\n") | map(select(. | length > 0)) }",
)

When Bazel is run with --stamp, replace some properties with version control info:

jq(
    name = "stamped",
    srcs = ["package.json"],
    filter = "|".join([
        # Don't directly reference $STAMP as it's only set when stamping
        # This 'as' syntax results in $stamp being null in unstamped builds.
        "$ARGS.named.STAMP as $stamp",
        # Provide a default using the "alternative operator" in case $stamp is null.
        ".version = ($stamp[0].BUILD_EMBED_LABEL // "<unstamped>")",
    ]),
)

jq is exposed as a "Make variable", so you could use it directly from a genrule by referencing the toolchain.

genrule(
    name = "case_genrule",
    srcs = ["a.json"],
    outs = ["genrule_output.json"],
    cmd = "$(JQ_BIN) '.' $(location a.json) > $@",
    toolchains = ["@jq_toolchains//:resolved_toolchain"],
)

jq

jq(name, srcs, filter, filter_file, args, out, data, expand_args, kwargs)

Invoke jq with a filter on a set of json input files.

PARAMETERS

Name Description Default Value
name Name of the rule none
srcs List of input files. May be empty. none
filter Filter expression (https://stedolan.github.io/jq/manual/#Basicfilters). Subject to stamp variable replacements, see Stamping. When stamping is enabled, a variable named "STAMP" will be available in the filter.

Be careful to write the filter so that it handles unstamped builds, as in the example above.
None
filter_file File containing filter expression (alternative to filter) None
args Additional args to pass to jq []
out Name of the output json file; defaults to the rule name plus ".json" None
data List of additional files. May be empty. []
expand_args Run bazel's location-expansion on the args. False
kwargs Other common named parameters such as tags or visibility none