Kazaam was created with the goal of supporting easy and fast transformations of JSON data with Golang. This functionality provides us with an easy mechanism for taking intermediate JSON message representations and transforming them to formats required by arbitrary third-party APIs.
Inspired by Jolt, Kazaam supports JSON to JSON transformation via a transform "specification" also defined in JSON. A specification is comprised of one or more "operations". See Specification Support, below, for more details.
API Documentation is available at http://godoc.org/gopkg.in/qntfy/kazaam.v2.
Kazaam is primarily designed to be used as a library for transforming arbitrary JSON. It ships with six built-in transform types, described below, which provide significant flexibility in reshaping JSON data.
Also included when you go get
Kazaam, is a binary implementation, kazaam
that can be used for
development and testing of new transform specifications.
Finally, Kazaam supports the implementation of custom transform types. We encourage and appreciate pull requests for new transform types so that they can be incorporated into the Kazaam distribution, but understand sometimes time-constraints or licensing issues prevent this. See the API documentation for details on how to write and register custom transforms.
Kazaam currently supports the following transforms:
- shift
- concat
- coalesce
- extract
- default
- pass
The shift transform is the current Kazaam workhorse used for remapping of fields. The specification supports jsonpath-esque JSON accesses and sets. Concretely
{
"operation": "shift",
"spec": {
"object.id": "doc.uid",
"gid2": "doc.guid[1]",
"allGuids": "doc.guidObjects[*].id"
}
}
executed on a JSON message with format
{
"doc": {
"uid": 12345,
"guid": ["guid0", "guid2", "guid4"],
"guidObjects": [{"id": "guid0"}, {"id": "guid2"}, {"id": "guid4"}]
},
"top-level-key": null
}
would result in
{
"object": {
"id": 12345
},
"gid2": "guid2",
"allGuids": ["guid0", "guid2", "guid4"]
}
The jsonpath implementation supports a few special cases:
- Array accesses: Retrieve
n
th element from array - Array wildcarding: indexing an array with
[*]
will return every matching element in an array - Top-level object capture: Mapping
$
into a field will nest the entire original object under the requested key
The shift transform also supports a "require"
field. When set to true
,
Kazaam will throw an error if any of the paths in the source JSON are not
present.
The concat transform allows the combination of fields and literal strings into a single string value.
{
"operation": "concat",
"spec": {
"sources": [{
"value": "TEST"
}, {
"path": "a.timestamp"
}],
"targetPath": "a.timestamp",
"delim": ","
}
}
executed on a JSON message with format
{
"a": {
"timestamp": 1481305274
}
}
would result in
{
"a": {
"timestamp": "TEST,1481305274"
}
}
Notes:
- sources: list of items to combine (in the order listed)
- literal values are specified via
value
- field values are specified via
path
(supports the same addressing asshift
)
- literal values are specified via
- targetPath: where to place the resulting string
- if this an existing path, the result will replace current value.
- delim: Optional delimiter
The concat transform also supports a "require"
field. When set to true
,
Kazaam will throw an error if any of the paths in the source JSON are not
present.
A coalesce transform provides the ability to check multiple possible keys to find a desired value. The first matching key found of those provided is returned.
{
"operation": "coalesce",
"spec": {
"firstObjectId": ["doc.guidObjects[0].uid", "doc.guidObjects[0].id"]
}
}
executed on a json message with format
{
"doc": {
"uid": 12345,
"guid": ["guid0", "guid2", "guid4"],
"guidObjects": [{"id": "guid0"}, {"id": "guid2"}, {"id": "guid4"}]
}
}
would result in
{
"doc": {
"uid": 12345,
"guid": ["guid0", "guid2", "guid4"],
"guidObjects": [{"id": "guid0"}, {"id": "guid2"}, {"id": "guid4"}]
},
"firstObjectId": "guid0"
}
An extract
transform provides the ability to select a sub-object and have kazaam return that sub-object as the top-level object. For example
{
"operation": "extract",
"spec": {
"path": "doc.guidObjects[0].path.to.subobject"
}
}
executed on a json message with format
{
"doc": {
"uid": 12345,
"guid": ["guid0", "guid2", "guid4"],
"guidObjects": [{"path": {"to": {"subobject": {"name": "the.subobject", "field", "field.in.subobject"}}}}, {"id": "guid2"}, {"id": "guid4"}]
}
}
would result in
{
"name": "the.subobject",
"field": "field.in.subobject"
}
A default transform provides the ability to set a key's value explicitly. For example
{
"operation": "default",
"spec": {
"type": "message"
}
}
would ensure that the output JSON message includes {"type": "message"}
.
A pass transform, as the name implies, passes the input data unchanged to the output. This is used internally when a null transform spec is specified, but may also be useful for testing.
To start, go get the versioned repository:
go get gopkg.in/qntfy/kazaam.v2
If you want to create an executable binary from this project, follow
these steps (you'll need go
installed and $GOPATH
set):
go get gopkg.in/qntfy/kazaam.v2
cd $GOPATH/src/gopkg.in/qntfy.kazaam.v2/kazaam
go install
This will create an executable in $GOPATH/bin
like you
would expect from the normal go
build behavior.
See godoc examples.