I am new to jq and can't seem to quite get the syntax right for what I want to do. I am executing a command and piping its JSON output into jq. The structure looks like this:
{
"timestamp": 1658186185,
"nodes": {
"x3006c0s13b1n0": {
"Mom": "x3006c0s13b1n0.hsn.cm",
"Port": 15002,
"state": "free",
"pcpus": 64,
"resources_available": {
"arch": "linux",
"gputype": "A100",
"host": "x3006c0s13b1n0",
"mem": "527672488kb",
"ncpus": 64,
"ngpus": 4,
"system": "polaris",
"tier0": "x3006-g1",
"tier1": "g1",
"vnode": "x3006c0s13b1n0"
},
"resources_assigned": {},
"comment": "CHC- Offlined due to node health check failure",
"resv_enable": "True",
"sharing": "default_shared",
"license": "l",
"last_state_change_time": 1658175652,
"last_used_time": 1658175652
},
And so on with a record for each node. In psuedocode, what I want to do is this:
if state is not free then display nodename : {comment = "Why is the node down"}
The nodename is the key, but could be extracted from a field inside the record. However, for future reference, I would like to understand how to get the key. I figured out (I think) that you can't use == on strings, but instead have to use the regex functions.
This gives me the if state is not free part:
<stdin> | jq '.nodes[] | .state | test("free") | not'
This gives me an object with the Mom (which includes the key) and the comment:
jq '.nodes[] | {Mom: .Mom, comment: .comment}'
The question is how do I put all that together? And as for the keys, this gives me a list of the keys: jq '.nodes | keys' but that uses the non-array version of nodes.
One way without touching the keys would be to only select those array items that match the condition, and map the remaining items' value to the comment itself using map_values:
jq '.nodes | map_values(select(.state != "free").comment)'
{
"x3006c0s13b1n0": "CHC- Offlined due to node health check failure"
}
Keeping the whole comments object, which is closer to your desired output, would be similar:
jq '.nodes | map_values(select(.state != "free") | {comment})'
{
"x3006c0s13b1n0": {
"comment": "CHC- Offlined due to node health check failure"
}
}
Accessing the keys directly is still possible though. You may want to have a look at keys, keys_unsorted or to_entries.
My json response is like this.
{
"level": "info",
"timestamp": "2022-03-21T16:10:27.060Z",
"msg": "starting test",
}
{
"level": "warn",
"timestamp": "2022-03-21T16:10:27.060Z",
"msg": "message 2"
}
{
"level": "error",
"timestamp": "2022-03-21T16:10:27.060Z",
"msg": "message 3"
}
I want to extract.
Either 3rd message (or nth message) or the message associated with error
How can I do this with jq?
Use select to filter by condition
jq 'select(.level == "error")'
{
"level": "error",
"timestamp": "2022-03-21T16:10:27.060Z",
"msg": "message 3"
}
Demo
To extract the message, use the -r option
jq -r 'select(.level == "error").msg'
message 3
Demo
If you want to access the nth object, you may want to use a structure whose items you can count. Using the -s option would turn the input stream into an array. Using the --argjson option enables you using an external (JSON) value for reference:
jq -sr --argjson n 2 '.[$n].msg'
message 3
Demo
To directly address the nth element of a stream, use the nth function, in combination with inputs and the -n option to address the entire stream at once:
jq -nr --argjson n 2 'nth($n;inputs).msg'
message 3
Demo
in my HIVE table MYTABLE I have one column "MYCOL" that contains this:
{"id": "a651b57f",
"items": {
"ITEM1": {
"code": "CODE1",
"name": "NAME1"},
"ITEM2": {
"code": "CODE2",
"name": "NAME2"}},
"myinfo": {
"c7daf1a9": {
"id": "c7daf1a9",
"name": "newname",
"type": "newtype",
"appliedto": ["ITEM1", "ITEM2"]}},
"info2": 12}
I would like to access the elements into "myinfo" and I tried something like this:
select GET_JSON_OBJECT(t.MYCOL,'$.myinfo') FROM MYTABLE
but it doesn't work....
may someone help me?
thanks
Make sure the data in HDFS file have one line for each json row (not multiple new lines for one row).
If json row is having multiple new lines then we need to replace all newlines for each row before storing into HDFS.
Example:
HDFS file data:
{"id": "a651b57f","items": {"ITEM1": {"code": "CODE1","name": "NAME1"},"ITEM2": {"code": "CODE2","name": "NAME2"}},"myinfo": {"c7daf1a9": {"id": "c7daf1a9","name": "newname","type": "newtype","appliedto": ["ITEM1", "ITEM2"]}},"info2": 12}
Hive:
with cte as (select string('{"id": "a651b57f","items": {"ITEM1": {"code": "CODE1","name": "NAME1"},"ITEM2": {"code": "CODE2","name": "NAME2"}},"myinfo": {"c7daf1a9": {"id": "c7daf1a9","name": "newname","type": "newtype","appliedto": ["ITEM1", "ITEM2"]}},"info2": 12}')my_col) --sample data
select get_json_object(my_col,'$.myinfo')jsn from cte;
Output:
{"c7daf1a9":{"id":"c7daf1a9","name":"newname","type":"newtype","appliedto":["ITEM1","ITEM2"]}}
Update
--to access name subfield we need to specify the path of json object
hive> select get_json_object(my_col,'$.myinfo.c7daf1a9.name')jsn from <table_name>;
--result
newname
hive> select get_json_object(my_col,'$.myinfo.c7daf1a9.appliedto')jsn from <table_name>;
--result
["ITEM1","ITEM2"]
hive> select get_json_object(my_col,'$.myinfo.c7daf1a9.appliedto[0]')jsn from <table_name>;
--result
ITEM1
I am migrating from ksh to fish. I am finding that I miss the ability to define an associative array, hash table, dictionary, or whatever you wish to call it. Some cases can be simulated as in
set dictionary$key $value
eval echo '$'dictionary$key
But this approach is heavily limited; for example, $key may contain only letters, numbers, and underscores.
I understand that the fish approach is to find an external command when one is available, but I am a little reluctant to store key-value information in the filesystem, even in /run/user/<uid>, because that limits me to "universal" scope.
How do fish programmers work around the lack of a key-value store? Is there some simple approach that I am just missing?
Here's an example of the sort of problem I would like to solve: I would like to modify the fish_prompt function so that certain directories print not using prompt_pwd but using special abbreviations. I could certainly do this with a switch command, but I would much rather have a universal dictionary so I can just look up a directory and see if it has an abbreviation. Then I could change the abbreviations using set instead of having to edit a function.
You can store the keys in one variable and values in the other, and then use something like
if set -l index (contains -i -- foo $keys) # `set` won't modify $status, so this succeeds if `contains` succeeds
echo $values[$index]
end
to retrieve the corresponding value.
Other possibilities include alternating between key and value in one variable, though iterating through this is a pain, especially when you try to do it only with builtins. Or you could use a separator character and store a key-value pair as one element, though this won't work for directories because variables cannot contain \0 (which is the only possible separator for paths).
Here is how I implemented the alternative solution mentioned by #faho
I'm using '__' as seperator.
function set_field --argument-names dict key value
set -g $dict'__'$key $value
end
function get_field --argument-names dict key
eval echo \$$dict'__'$key
end
If you wanted to use a single variable with paired key/values, it's possible but as #faho mentioned, it is more complicated. Here's how you could do it:
function dict_keys -d "Print keys from a key/value paired list"
for idx in (seq 1 2 (count $argv))
echo $argv[$idx]
end
end
function dict_values -d "Print values from a key/value paired list"
for idx in (seq 2 2 (count $argv))
echo $argv[$idx]
end
end
function dict_get -a key -d "Get the value associated with a key in a k/v paired list"
test (count $argv) -gt 2 || return 1
set -l keyseq (seq 2 2 (count $argv))
# we can't simply use `contains` because it won't distinguish keys from values
for idx in $keyseq
if test $key = $argv[$idx]
echo $argv[(math $idx + 1)]
return
end
end
return 1
end
Then you could use these functions like this:
$ set -l mydict \
yellow banana \
red cherry \
green grape \
blue berry
$ dict_keys $mydict
yellow
red
green
blue
$ dict_values $mydict
banana
cherry
grape
berry
$ dict_get blue $mydict
berry
$ dict_get purple $mydict || echo "not found"
not found
#faho's answer got me thinking about this and there are a few this I wanted to add.
At first I wrote a small set of fish functions (A sort of library, if you will) that dealt with serialization, you would call a dict function with a key name, an operation (get, set, add or del) and it would use global variables to keep track of keys and their values. Works fine for flat hashes/dicts/objects, but felt somewhat unsatisfactory.
Then I realized I could use something like jq to (de-)serialize JSON. That would also make it a lot easier to deal with nesting, plus that allows having different dicts which use the same name for a key without any issues. It also separates "dealing-with-environment-variables" and "dealing-with-dicts(/hashes/etc)", which seems like a good idea. I'll focus on jq here, but the same applies to yq or pretty much anything, the core point is: Serialize data before storing, de-serialize when reading, and use some tool to work with such data.
I then proceeded to rewrite my functions using jq. however I soon realized it was easier to just use jq without any functions. To summarize the workfolow, let's consider OP's scenario and imagine we want to use abbreviations for User folders, or even better, we wanna use icons for such folders. To do that, let's assume we use Nerdfonts and have their icons availabe. A quick search for folders on Nerdfont's cheat sheet show we only have folder icons for the home folder (f74b), downloads(f74c) and images(f74e), so I'll use Material Design Icon's "File document box" (f719) for documents, and Material Design Icon's "Video" (fa66) for Videos.
So our Codepoints are:
User folder: \uf74b
Downloads \uf74c
Images: \uf74e
Documents: \uf719
Videos: \ufa66
So our JSON is:
{"~":"\uf74b","downloads":"\uf74c","images":"\uf74e","documents":"\uf719","videos":"\ufa66"}
I kept it in a single line for a reason which will become obvious now. Let's visualize this using jq:
echo '{"~":"\uf74b","downloads":"\uf74c","images":"\uf74e","documents":"\uf719","videos":"\ufa66"}' | jq
For completeness sake, here's how it looks with Nerdfonts installed:
Now let's store this as a variable:
set -g FOLDER_ICONS (echo '{"~":"\uf74b","downloads":"\uf74c","images":"\uf74e","documents":"\uf719","videos":"\ufa66"}' | jq -c)
jq -c interprets JSON and outputs JSON in a compact structure, i.e., a single line. Ideal for storing variables.
If you need to edit something you can use jq, lat's say you want to change the abbreviation for documents to "doc" instead of an icon. Just do:
set -g FOLDER_ICONS (echo $FOLDER_ICONS | jq -c '.["documents"]="doc"')
The echo part is for reading a variable, and the set -g is for updating the variable. So those can be ignored if you're not working with variables.
As for retrieving values, jq also does that, obviously. Let's say you want to get the abbreviation for the documents folder, you can simply do:
echo $FOLDER_ICONS | jq -r '.["documents"]'
It will return doc. If you leave out the -r it will return "doc", with quotes, since strings are quoted in JSON.
You can also remove keys pretty easily, i.e.:
set -g FOLDER_ICONS (echo $FOLDER_ICONS | jq -c 'del(."documents")')
will set the variable FOLDER_ICONS to the result of reading it and passing its contents to jq -c 'del(."documents")', which tels jq to delete the key "documents" and output a compact representation of the JSON, i.e. a single line.
Everything I tried worked perfectly fine with nested JSON objects, so it seems like a pretty good solution. It's just a matter of keeping the operations in mind:
reading .["key"]
writing .["key"]="value"
deleting del(."key")
jq also has many other nice features, I wanted to showcase a bit of them so I tried looking for stuff that might be nice to include here. One of the things I use jq for is dealing with wayland stuff, especially swaymsg -t get_tree, which I've just ran and, with a mere 4 workspaces with a single window in each, outputs a 706-line JSON from hell (Was 929 when I wrote this, 6 windows across 5 workspaces, later I closed 2 windows I was done with so I came back here and re-ran the command to share the lowest possible value).
To give a more complex example of how jq might be used, here's parsing the swaymsg -t get_tree:
swaymsg -t get_tree | jq -C '{"id": .id, "type": .type, "name": .name, "nodes": (.nodes | map(.nodes) | flatten | map({"id": .id, "type": .type, "name": .name, "nodes": (.nodes | map(.nodes) | flatten | map({"id": .id, "type": .type, "name": .name}))}))}'
This will give you a tree with only id, type, name and nodes, where nodes is an array of objects, each consisting of the id, type, name and nodes of the children, with the children nodes also being an array of objects, now consisting of only id, type and name. In my case, it returned:
{
"id": 1,
"type": "root",
"name": "root",
"nodes": [
{
"id": 2147483646,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "__i3_scratch",
"nodes": []
},
{
"id": 184,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "1",
"nodes": []
},
{
"id": 145,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "2",
"nodes": []
},
{
"id": 172,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "3",
"nodes": [
{
"id": 173,
"type": "con",
"name": "Untitled-4 - Code - OSS"
}
]
},
{
"id": 5,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "4",
"nodes": []
}
]
}
You can also easily make a flattened version of that with jq by slightly changing the command:
swaymsg -t get_tree | jq -C '[{"id": .id, "type": .type, "name": .name}, (.nodes | map(.nodes) | flatten | map([{"id": .id, "type": .type, "name": .name}, (.nodes | map(.nodes) | flatten | map({"id": .id, "type": .type, "name": .name}))]))] | flatten'
Now instead of having a key nodes, the child nodes are also in the parent's array, flattened, in my case:
[
{
"id": 1,
"type": "root",
"name": "root"
},
{
"id": 2147483646,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "__i3_scratch"
},
{
"id": 184,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "1"
},
{
"id": 145,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "2"
},
{
"id": 172,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "3"
},
{
"id": 173,
"type": "con",
"name": "Untitled-4 - Code - OSS"
},
{
"id": 5,
"type": "workspace",
"name": "4"
}
]
It's pretty nifty, not limited to environment variables, and solves pretty much every problem I can think of. The only con is verbosity, so it may be a good idea to write a few fish functions for dealing with that, but that's beyond the scope here, as I'm focusing on a general approach to (de-)serialization of key-value mappings (i.e., dicts, hashes, objects etc), which can be (also) used with environment variables. For reference, a good starting point if dealing with variables might be:
function dict
switch $argv[2]
case write
read data
set -xg $argv[1] "$data"
case read, '*'
echo $$argv[1]
end
end
This simply deals with reading and writing to a variable, the only reason it's worth sharing is, first, that it allows piping something to a variable, and second, that it sets a starting point to make something more complex, i.e. automatically piping the echoed value to jq, or adding an add operation or whatever.
There's also the option of writing a script to deal with that, instead of using jq. Ruby's Marshal and to_yaml seems like interesting options, since I like ruby, but each person has their own preferences. For Python, pickle, pyyaml and json seem worth mentioning.
It's worth mentioning I'm not affiliated to jq in any way, never contributed nor even posted anything on issues or whatever, I just use it, and as someone who used to write scripts whenever I had to deal with JSON or YAML, it was quite surprising when I realized how powerful it was.
I finally needed this for an application, and I'm not super comfortable with fish builtins, so here is an implementation in Lua: https://gist.github.com/nrnrnr/b302db5c59c600dd75c38d460423cc3d. This code uses the alternating key/value representation:
key1 value1 key2 value2 ...