124 lines
3.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
Executable File
124 lines
3.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
Executable File
============
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jmespath.php
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============
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JMESPath (pronounced "jaymz path") allows you to declaratively specify how to
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extract elements from a JSON document. *jmespath.php* allows you to use
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JMESPath in PHP applications with PHP data structures. It requires PHP 5.4 or
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greater and can be installed through `Composer <http://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md>`_
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using the ``mtdowling/jmespath.php`` package.
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.. code-block:: php
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require 'vendor/autoload.php';
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$expression = 'foo.*.baz';
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$data = [
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'foo' => [
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'bar' => ['baz' => 1],
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'bam' => ['baz' => 2],
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'boo' => ['baz' => 3]
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]
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];
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JmesPath\search($expression, $data);
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// Returns: [1, 2, 3]
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- `JMESPath Tutorial <http://jmespath.org/tutorial.html>`_
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- `JMESPath Grammar <http://jmespath.org/specification.html#grammar>`_
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- `JMESPath Python library <https://github.com/jmespath/jmespath.py>`_
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PHP Usage
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=========
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The ``JmesPath\search`` function can be used in most cases when using the
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library. This function utilizes a JMESPath runtime based on your environment.
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The runtime utilized can be configured using environment variables and may at
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some point in the future automatically utilize a C extension if available.
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.. code-block:: php
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$result = JmesPath\search($expression, $data);
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// or, if you require PSR-4 compliance.
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$result = JmesPath\Env::search($expression, $data);
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Runtimes
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--------
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jmespath.php utilizes *runtimes*. There are currently two runtimes:
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AstRuntime and CompilerRuntime.
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AstRuntime is utilized by ``JmesPath\search()`` and ``JmesPath\Env::search()``
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by default.
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AstRuntime
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~~~~~~~~~~
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The AstRuntime will parse an expression, cache the resulting AST in memory,
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and interpret the AST using an external tree visitor. AstRuntime provides a
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good general approach for interpreting JMESPath expressions that have a low to
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moderate level of reuse.
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.. code-block:: php
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$runtime = new JmesPath\AstRuntime();
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$runtime('foo.bar', ['foo' => ['bar' => 'baz']]);
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// > 'baz'
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CompilerRuntime
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``JmesPath\CompilerRuntime`` provides the most performance for
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applications that have a moderate to high level of reuse of JMESPath
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expressions. The CompilerRuntime will walk a JMESPath AST and emit PHP source
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code, resulting in anywhere from 7x to 60x speed improvements.
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Compiling JMESPath expressions to source code is a slower process than just
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walking and interpreting a JMESPath AST (via the AstRuntime). However,
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running the compiled JMESPath code results in much better performance than
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walking an AST. This essentially means that there is a warm-up period when
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using the ``CompilerRuntime``, but after the warm-up period, it will provide
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much better performance.
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Use the CompilerRuntime if you know that you will be executing JMESPath
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expressions more than once or if you can pre-compile JMESPath expressions
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before executing them (for example, server-side applications).
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.. code-block:: php
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// Note: The cache directory argument is optional.
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$runtime = new JmesPath\CompilerRuntime('/path/to/compile/folder');
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$runtime('foo.bar', ['foo' => ['bar' => 'baz']]);
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// > 'baz'
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Environment Variables
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You can utilize the CompilerRuntime in ``JmesPath\search()`` by setting
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the ``JP_PHP_COMPILE`` environment variable to "on" or to a directory
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on disk used to store cached expressions.
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Testing
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=======
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A comprehensive list of test cases can be found at
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https://github.com/jmespath/jmespath.php/tree/master/tests/compliance.
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These compliance tests are utilized by jmespath.php to ensure consistency with
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other implementations, and can serve as examples of the language.
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jmespath.php is tested using PHPUnit. In order to run the tests, you need to
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first install the dependencies using Composer as described in the *Installation*
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section. Next you just need to run the tests via make:
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.. code-block:: bash
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make test
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You can run a suite of performance tests as well:
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.. code-block:: bash
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make perf
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