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      ^^^[_]^^^                                                   ^^^[_]^^^

Build Status Slack ( We'll be in #spruce)

Introducing Spruce

spruce is a general purpose YAML & JSON merging tool.

It is designed to be an intuitive utility for merging YAML/JSON templates together to generate complicated YAML/JSON config files in a repeatable fashion. It can be used to stitch together some generic/top level definitions for the config and pull in overrides for site-specific configurations to DRY your configs up as much as possible.

How do I get started?

spruce is available via Homebrew, just brew tap starkandwayne/cf; brew install spruce

Alternatively, you can download a prebuilt binaries for 64-bit Linux, or Mac OS X

How do I compile from source?

  1. Install Go, e.g. on Ubuntu sudo snap install --classic go
  2. Fetch sources via go get github.com/geofffranks/spruce
  3. Change current directory to the source root cd ~/go/src/github.com/geofffranks/spruce/
  4. Compile and execute tests make all

Is there a playground I can use before installing spruce?

Yes! play.spruce.cf is around for testing out data merging + transformation in a cleanroom environment. It has a number of spruce versions available to it, and can be used to reproduce/troubleshoot bugs that you're seeing in production. Once you've reproduced an issue, or solution to a problem, you can save it, and share with a colleague, or reference in a GitHub issue.

A Quick Example

# Let's build the first yaml file we will merge
$ cat <<EOF first.yml
some_data: this will be overwritten later
a_random_map:
  key1: some data
heres_an_array:
- first element
EOF

# and now build the second yaml file to merge on top of it
$ cat <<EOF second.yml
some_data: 42
a_random_map:
  key2: adding more data
heres_an_array:
- (( prepend ))
- zeroth element
more_data: 84

# what happens when we spruce merge?
$ spruce merge first.yml second.yml
a_random_map:
  key1: some data
  key2: adding more data
heres_an_array:
- zeroth element
- first element
more_data: 84
some_data: 42

The data in second.yml is overlayed on top of the data in first.yml. Check out the merge semantics and array merging for more info on how that was done. Or, check out this example on play.spruce.cf

Documentation

What else can Spruce do for you?

spruce doesn't just stop at merging datastructures together. It also has the following helpful subcommands:

spruce diff - Allows you to get a useful diff of two YAML files, to see where they differ semantically. This is more than a simple diff tool, as it examines the functional differences, rather than just textual (e.g. key-ordering differences would be ignored)

spruce json - Allows you to convert a YAML document into JSON, for consumption by something that requires a JSON input. spruce merge will handle both YAML + JSON documents, but produce only YAML output.

spruce vaultinfo - Takes a list of files that would be merged together, and analyzes what paths in Vault would be looked up. Useful for determining explicitly what access an automated process might need to Vault to obtain the right credentials, and nothing more. Also useful if you need to audit what credentials your configs are retrieving for a system..

License

Licensed under the MIT License

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