JSLT is a complete query and transformation language for JSON. The language design is inspired by jq, XPath, and XQuery.
JSLT can be used as:
- a query language to extract values from JSON (
.foo.bar[0]
), - a filter/check language to test JSON objects (
starts-with(.foo.bar[0], "http://")
) , - a transformation language to convert between JSON formats.
Here is an example transform:
{
"time": round(parse-time(.published, "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssX") * 1000),
"device_manufacturer": .device.manufacturer,
"device_model": .device.model,
"language": .device.acceptLanguage,
"os_name": .device.osType,
"os_version": .device.osVersion,
"platform": .device.platformType,
"user_properties": {
"is_logged_in" : boolean(.actor."spt:userId")
}
}
Operation | Explanation |
---|---|
. |
The context node |
.<name> |
Get value of key "<name>" inside an object |
.[<index>] |
Get value <index> inside an array |
.[<from> : <to>] |
Array slicing |
if (<expr>) <expr> else <expr> |
If test to decide which value to return |
let <name> = <expr> |
Define a variable |
$<name> |
Refer to a variable |
[for (<expr>) <expr>] |
Transform an array |
{for (<expr>) <expr> : <expr>} |
Transform an object |
def <name>(<name>, <name>...) <expr> |
Declare a function |
// <anything up to end of line> |
Comment |
{ <key> : <expr> } |
Object constructor |
{ <key> : <expr>, * : . } |
Specify one key, copy rest of input |
To include JSLT in your project, depend on:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.schibsted.spt.data</groupId>
<artifactId>jslt</artifactId>
<version>0.1.4</version>
</dependency>
At runtime JSLT depends on Jackson, and nothing else.
To transform one JsonNode
into another, do:
import com.schibsted.spt.data.jslt.Parser;
import com.schibsted.spt.data.jslt.Expression;
JsonNode input = ...;
Expression jslt = Parser.compileString(transform);
JsonNode output = jslt.apply(input);
For more alternatives, see the javadoc.
To run transforms on the command-line, first build with ./gradlew clean shadowJar
. Then you can run with:
java -cp build/libs/*.jar com.schibsted.spt.data.jslt.cli.JSLT transform.jslt input.json
The result is written to standard out.
You can implement your own functions and add them to the language. See the extension function tutorial.
If you have questions about how to use JSLT, please ask the question
on StackOverflow, with the tag jslt
.
If you have problems, feature requests, or think you found a bug, please open an issue.
The language design is not finished, so features may be added. The language as it stands is not likely to change.
The entire language is implemented, and all of the function library. Functions may be added.
The language has been used in production at Schibsted since January 2018, performing about 9 billion transforms per day, and many times more queries.
Developing a language for JSON processing: video of talk, (slides only)[https://www.slideshare.net/larsga/jslt-json-querying-and-transformation].
Anthony Sparks is working on a VM-based implementation in Java
Copyright (c) 2018 Schibsted Marketplaces Products & Technology AS
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
Things to be done:
- Move the tests out into JSON files.
- Write a proper spec with EBNF and everything.
- Fix the syntax ambiguity problem with
let
anddef
. - Implement toString() throughout the object tree, so that it's possible to turn expressions back to strings.
- Optimizer:
- Optimize
... and boolean( ... )
by removingboolean()
. - Implement parse tree traversal API.
- Make sure entire tree is traversed (inside function decls and variables, for example).
- Complete constant folding. Particularly constant folding for variables would be valuable.
- Inlining of functions.
- Eliminate unused variables.
- Optimize
- Avoid building more scope objects than necessary and avoid creating deep scope trees that require a lot of lookup.
- Use property-based testing and fuzz testing to harden the parser.
See also the list of ideas.