* app.yaml: update to go112 Make the required changes to use go112 due to the deprecation of Go 1.9. Migration doc: - https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/go111/go-differences References: - https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/govanityurls/issues/29#issuecomment-506538041 - https://github.com/etcd-io/maintainers/issues/17 * go.mod: initial commit Migrate this project to use go.mod and update the README. This is part of the recommended steps to runtime: go111 and beyond. https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/go111/go-differences * vendor: add dependent packages Add all dependencies for the project via vendoring for offline builds. * travis.yml: drop go 1.6 for 1.12 Go 1.6 is too old to have a number of builtin packages for the latest appengine package. Remove and update to match app engine version: 1.12. * appengine.go: remove unused file From the go111 migration doc: "The appengine build tag is deprecated and will not be used when building your app for deployment. Ensure your code still functions correctly without it being set." https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/go111/go-differences * main: respect PORT environment variable The go111 runtime should use the PORT variable to decide the listening http port. "PORT The port that receives HTTP requests." https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/go111/runtime
2.6 KiB
YAML support for the Go language
Introduction
The yaml package enables Go programs to comfortably encode and decode YAML values. It was developed within Canonical as part of the juju project, and is based on a pure Go port of the well-known libyaml C library to parse and generate YAML data quickly and reliably.
Compatibility
The yaml package supports most of YAML 1.1 and 1.2, including support for anchors, tags, map merging, etc. Multi-document unmarshalling is not yet implemented, and base-60 floats from YAML 1.1 are purposefully not supported since they're a poor design and are gone in YAML 1.2.
Installation and usage
The import path for the package is gopkg.in/yaml.v2.
To install it, run:
go get gopkg.in/yaml.v2
API documentation
If opened in a browser, the import path itself leads to the API documentation:
API stability
The package API for yaml v2 will remain stable as described in gopkg.in.
License
The yaml package is licensed under the Apache License 2.0. Please see the LICENSE file for details.
Example
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"gopkg.in/yaml.v2"
)
var data = `
a: Easy!
b:
c: 2
d: [3, 4]
`
// Note: struct fields must be public in order for unmarshal to
// correctly populate the data.
type T struct {
A string
B struct {
RenamedC int `yaml:"c"`
D []int `yaml:",flow"`
}
}
func main() {
t := T{}
err := yaml.Unmarshal([]byte(data), &t)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- t:\n%v\n\n", t)
d, err := yaml.Marshal(&t)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- t dump:\n%s\n\n", string(d))
m := make(map[interface{}]interface{})
err = yaml.Unmarshal([]byte(data), &m)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- m:\n%v\n\n", m)
d, err = yaml.Marshal(&m)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- m dump:\n%s\n\n", string(d))
}
This example will generate the following output:
--- t:
{Easy! {2 [3 4]}}
--- t dump:
a: Easy!
b:
c: 2
d: [3, 4]
--- m:
map[a:Easy! b:map[c:2 d:[3 4]]]
--- m dump:
a: Easy!
b:
c: 2
d:
- 3
- 4