open-nomad/website/content/docs/job-specification/hcl2/syntax.mdx

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---
layout: docs
page_title: Syntax - Configuration Language
description: |-
HCL has its own syntax, intended to combine declarative
structure with expressions in a way that is easy for humans to read and
understand.
---
# HCL Configuration Syntax
Other pages in this section have described various configuration constructs
that can appear in HCL. This page describes the lower-level syntax of the
language in more detail, revealing the building blocks that those constructs
are built from.
This page describes the _native syntax_ of HCL, which is a rich language
designed to be easy for humans to read and write.
This low-level syntax of HCL is defined in terms of a syntax called _HCL_,
which is also used by configuration languages in other applications, and in
particular other HashiCorp products. It is not necessary to know all of the
details of HCL in order to use Nomad, and so this page summarizes the most
important details. If you are interested, you can find a full definition of HCL
syntax in [the HCL native syntax
specification](https://github.com/hashicorp/hcl/blob/hcl2/hclsyntax/spec.md).
## Arguments and Blocks
HCL syntax is built around two key syntax constructs:
arguments and blocks.
### Arguments
An _argument_ assigns a value to a particular name:
```hcl
image_id = "nginx:1.19"
```
The identifier before the equals sign is the _argument name_, and the expression
after the equals sign is the argument's value.
The context where the argument appears determines what value types are valid
(for example, each job block type has a schema that defines the types of its
arguments), but many arguments accept arbitrary
[expressions](/docs/job-specification/hcl2/expressions), which allow the value to
either be specified literally or generated from other values programmatically.
### Blocks
A _block_ is a container for other content:
```hcl
task "webserver" {
driver = "docker"
config {
# ...
}
}
```
A block has a _type_ (`task` in this example). Each block type defines
how many _labels_ must follow the type keyword. The `task` block type
expects one label, which is `webserver` in the example above.
A particular block type may have any number of required labels, or it may
require none as with the nested `config` block type.
After the block type keyword and any labels, the block _body_ is delimited
by the `{` and `}` characters. Within the block body, further arguments
and blocks may be nested, creating a hierarchy of blocks and their associated
arguments.
HCL uses a limited number of _top-level block types,_ which
are blocks that can appear outside of any other block in a configuration file.
## Identifiers
Argument names, block type names, and the names of most Nomad-specific
constructs like tasks, input variables, etc. are all _identifiers_.
Identifiers can contain letters, digits, underscores (`_`), and hyphens (`-`).
The first character of an identifier must not be a digit, to avoid ambiguity
with literal numbers.
For complete identifier rules, Nomad implements
[the Unicode identifier syntax](http://unicode.org/reports/tr31/), extended to
include the ASCII hyphen character `-`.
## Comments
HCL supports three different syntaxes for comments:
- `#` begins a single-line comment, ending at the end of the line.
- `//` also begins a single-line comment, as an alternative to `#`.
- `/*` and `*/` are start and end delimiters for a comment that might span
over multiple lines.
The `#` single-line comment style is the default comment style and should be
used in most cases. Automatic configuration formatting tools may automatically
transform `//` comments into `#` comments, since the double-slash style is
not idiomatic.
## Character Encoding and Line Endings
Nomad configuration files must always be UTF-8 encoded. While the
delimiters of the language are all ASCII characters, Nomad accepts
non-ASCII characters in identifiers, comments, and string values.
Nomad accepts configuration files with either Unix-style line endings
(LF only) or Windows-style line endings (CR then LF), but the idiomatic style
is to use the Unix convention, and so automatic configuration formatting tools
may automatically transform CRLF endings to LF.