Crates.io | jlu |
lib.rs | jlu |
version | 0.1.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2024-07-04 10:24:40.924769 |
updated_at | 2024-07-04 10:24:40.924769 |
description | Command-line utilities for on-the-fly investigation of JSON Lines |
homepage | https://github.com/sile/jlu |
repository | https://github.com/sile/jlu |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1291584 |
size | 31,667 |
$ jlu
Command-line utilities for on-the-fly investigation of JSON Lines
Usage: jlu <COMMAND>
Commands:
count Read JSON objects from stdin and count the occurrences of the values associated with the specified top-level member names
flatten Read JSON values from stdin and convert each value into a flattened JSON object
names Read JSON objects from stdin and output the unique member names for all top-level objects
rename Read JSON objects from stdin and rename top-level member names that match a regular expression with a replacement string
table Read JSON objects from stdin and create a markdown table
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Options:
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print version
Please execute the following command:
$ cargo install jlu
In addition, pre-built binaries for Linux and MacOS are available in the releases page.
$ jlu flatten
$ jlu flatten --help
Read JSON values from stdin and convert each value into a flattened JSON object
Usage: jlu flatten
Options:
-h, --help Print help
$ jq . example0.json
{
"aaa": 1,
"bbb": [
"a",
"b",
"c"
],
"ccc": {
"x": 10,
"y": 20
}
}
$ cat example0.json | jlu flatten | jq .
{
"aaa": 1,
"bbb[0]": "a",
"bbb[1]": "b",
"bbb[2]": "c",
"ccc.x": 10,
"ccc.y": 20
}
Note that the following commands assume that the input JSON values are flat JSON objects.
$ jlu names
$ jlu names --help
Read JSON objects from stdin and output the unique member names for all top-level objects
Usage: jlu names
Options:
-h, --help Print help
$ cat example0.json | jlu flatten | jlu names
"aaa"
"bbb[0]"
"bbb[1]"
"bbb[2]"
"ccc.x"
"ccc.y"
$ jlu rename
$ jlu rename --help
Read JSON objects from stdin and rename top-level member names that match a regular expression with a replacement string.
For details about regular expressions and replacement strings, please refer to the documentation of the regex crate: https://docs.rs/regex/latest/regex/struct.Regex.html#method.replace_all
Usage: jlu rename <REGEX> <REPLACEMENT>
Arguments:
<REGEX>
Regular expression to match top-level member names
<REPLACEMENT>
String to replace the matched segment of the member names
Options:
-h, --help
Print help (see a summary with '-h')
$ cat example0.json | jlu flatten | jlu rename '(.+)\.' '' | jq .
{
"aaa": 1,
"bbb[0]": "a",
"bbb[1]": "b",
"bbb[2]": "c",
"x": 10,
"y": 20
}
$ jlu count
$ jlu count --help
Read JSON objects from stdin and count the occurrences of the values associated with the specified top-level member names
Usage: jlu count [NAMES]...
Arguments:
[NAMES]... Names of the top-level members to count
Options:
-h, --help Print help
$ cat example1.json
{"level":"info","msg":"Hello World!"}
{"level":"error","msg":"Hello Rust!"}
{"level":"info","msg":"Hello JSON!"}
$ cat example1.json | jlu count level | jq .
{
"error": 1,
"info": 2
}
$ cat example1.json | jlu count level msg | jq .info
{
"Hello JSON!": 1,
"Hello World!": 1
}
$ jlu table
$ jlu table --help
Read JSON objects from stdin and create a markdown table
Usage: jlu table [OPTIONS] [COLUMN_NAMES]...
Arguments:
[COLUMN_NAMES]... Names of object members to be included in the table
Options:
-s, --sort <SORT>
If specified, the table rows are sorted based on the member value associated with this name
-m, --max-column-chars <MAX_COLUMN_CHARS>
Maximum number of characters to display in a column [default: 50]
-h, --help
Print help
$ cat example1.json | jlu table level msg --sort level
| level | msg |
|-------|--------------|
| error | Hello Rust! |
| info | Hello World! |
| info | Hello JSON! |