Documentation for version v0.39.0 is no longer actively maintained. The version you are currently viewing is a static snapshot. For up-to-date documentation, see the latest version.
Data Values
Overview ¶
A ytt
run can be configured by supplying custom Data Values.
(For a high-level overview of ytt
, see How it works.)
Declaring Data Values ¶
Typically, Data Values are declared in a schema file. See the Using Data Values guide for more details.
Note: ytt
continues to support declaring Data Values without schema for backwards-compatibility. However, due to the significantly improved support for catching configuration errors that schema brings, it is the recommended method for doing so.
Configuring Data Values ¶
Data Values can be configured in one of two ways:
- on the command-line via the family of command-line
--data-value...
flags, - in a “Data Values Overlay” document and included via the
--file
flag,
Configuring Data Values via command line flags ¶
The --data-value...
family of command-line flags provides a means of configuring Data Values from:
- the command-line, itself;
- OS environment variables;
- “data values file"s — plain YAML files containing values for multiple Data Values
Those flags are:
--data-value [@lib:]key=value
— sets a Data Value to a string value
key
— name of Data Value. Use dot notation for nested values (e.g.key2.nested=val
)value
— value to set (always interpreted as a string)@lib:
— (optional) specify library whose data values to configure (details below)- examples:
instance.count=123
,key=string
,input=true
, all set to strings
--data-value-yaml [@lib:]key=value
) — sets a Data Value to a YAML-parsed value
key
— name of Data Value.value
— value to set (decoded as a YAML value)@lib:
— (optional) specify library whose data values to configure (details below)- examples:
instance.count=123
sets as integer,key=string
as string,input=true
as bool
--data-value-file [@lib:]key=file-path
— sets a single Data Value to the contents of a given file.
key
— name of Data Value.file-path
— file-system path to a file whose contents will become the value ofkey
.@lib:
— (optional) specify library whose data values to configure (details below)- particularly useful for loading multi-line string values from files such as private and public key files, certificates, etc.
- not to be confused with
--data-values-file
(described below).
--data-values-env [@lib:]PREFIX
— sets one or more Data Values to string values from OS environment variables that start with the given prefix.
PREFIX
— the literal prefix used to select the set of environment variables from which to configure Data Values.@lib:
— (optional) specify library whose data values to configure (details below)- for nested values, use double-underscore (i.e.
__
) in environment variable names to denote a “dot”. - example:
with environment variables…… and the parameter …DVAL_key1=blue DVAL_key2__nested=1337
… would set two Data Values:$ ytt ... --data-values-env DVAL ...
key1=blue
andkey2.nested="1337"
. (both as strings)
--data-values-env-yaml [@lib:]PREFIX
— sets one or more Data Values to the YAML-parsed values from OS environment variables that start with the given prefix.
PREFIX
— the literal prefix used to select the set of environment variables from which to configure Data Values.@lib:
— (optional) specify library whose data values to configure (details below)- for nested values, use double-underscore (i.e.
__
) in environment variable names to denote a “dot”. - example:
with environment variables…… and the parameter …DVAL_key1=blue DVAL_key2__nested=1337
… would set two Data Values:$ ytt ... --data-values-env DVAL ...
key1=blue
(a string value) andkey2.nested=1337
(an integer value).
--data-values-file [@lib:]file-path
— sets one or more Data Values from a plain YAML file.
file-path
— file-system path to a file which will be parsed as YAML structured identically to expected Data Values.- file must be plain YAML (i.e. not a
ytt
template or Data Values Overlay); it cannot contain YAML comments starting with#@
. - array values replace (rather than append to) any existing value.
- if there are more than one YAML documents in such a file, they are merged from top to bottom (last wins)
- file must be plain YAML (i.e. not a
@lib:
— (optional) specify library whose data values to configure (details below)- example:
with the fileprod-values.yml
… and the parameter …domain: example.com client_opts: timeout: 10 retry: 5
… would set all three Data Values:$ ytt ... --data-values-file prod-values.yml ...
domain=example.com
(a string value)client_opts.timeout=10
(an integer value)client_opts.retry=5
(an integer value).
Notes:
- As of v0.34.0+ Data Values passed via
--data-value...
flags do not necessarily need to be declared beforehand. In prior versions ofytt
, a Data Value must be declared (back then, specified in a@data/values
overlay, typically), before it could be configured through a flag. - the
--data-value...
flags can be repeated multiple times and used in any combination. See Data Values merge order for details on how they combine.export STR_VALS_key6=true # will be string 'true' export YAML_VALS_key6=true # will be boolean true ytt -f . \ --data-value key1=val1-arg \ --data-value-yaml key2.nested=123 \ # will be int 123 --data-value-yaml 'key3.other={"nested": true}' \ --data-value-file key4=/path \ --data-values-env STR_VALS \ --data-values-env-yaml YAML_VALS
Configuring Data Values via Data Values Overlays ¶
Data Values can also be configured via a specific kind of ytt
Overlay.
A Data Values Overlay is a YAML document annotated with @data/values
.
#@data/values
---
key1: val1
key2:
nested: val2
key3: val3
key4:
Note:
data.values
is astruct
.
Splitting Data Values Overlays into multiple files ¶
Available in v0.13.0.
It’s possible to split data values into multiple files (or specify multiple data values in the same file). @ytt:data
library provides access to the merged result. Merging is controlled via overlay annotations and follows same ordering as overlays. Example:
values-default.yml
:
#@data/values
---
key1: val1
key2:
nested: val2
key3:
key4:
values-production.yml
:
#@data/values
---
key3: new-val3
#@overlay/remove
key4:
#@overlay/match missing_ok=True
key5: new-val5
Note that key4
is being removed, and key5
is marked as missing_ok=True
because it doesn’t exist in values-default.yml
(this is a safety feature to prevent accidental typos in keys).
config.yml
:
#@ load("@ytt:data", "data")
first: #@ data.values.key1
third: #@ data.values.key3
fifth: #@ data.values.key5
Running ytt -f .
(or ytt -f config.yml -f values-default.yml -f values-production.yml
) results in:
first: val1
third: new-val3
fifth: new-val5
See Multiple data values example in the online playground.
Data Values merge order ¶
Data values are merged in following order (latter one wins):
- default values from
@data/values-schema
files @data/values
overlays (same ordering as overlays)--data-values-file
specified files (left to right)--data-values-env
specified values (left to right)--data-values-env-yaml
specified values (left to right)--data-value
specified value (left to right)--data-value-yaml
specified value (left to right)--data-value-file
specified value (left to right)
(When configuring libraries, the data values merge order, is the same, even if through different mechanisms.)
Library data values ¶
Available in v0.28.0+
Each library may specify data values which will be evaluated separately from the root level library.
Setting library values via files ¶
To override library data values, add @library/ref
annotation to data values YAML document, like so:
#@library/ref "@lib1"
#@data/values
---
key1: val1
key2: val2
#@library/ref "@lib1"
#@data/values after_library_module=True
---
key3: val3
The @data/values
annotation also supports a keyword argument after_library_module
. If this keyword argument is specified, given data values will take precedence over data values passed to the .with_data_values(...)
function when evaluating via the library module.
Setting library values via command line flags ¶
Data value flags support attaching values to libraries for use during library module evaluation:
export STR_VALS_key6=true # will be string 'true'
export YAML_VALS_key6=true # will be boolean true
ytt -f . \
--data-value @lib1:key1=val1-arg \
--data-value-yaml @lib2:key2.nested=123 \ # will be int 123
--data-value-yaml '@lib3:key3.other={"nested": true}' \
--data-value-file @lib4:key4=/path \
--data-values-env @lib5:STR_VALS \
--data-values-env-yaml @lib6:YAML_VALS
--data-values-file @lib6:/path
Library Data Values merge order ¶
For a given library instance, data values are merged in following order (latter one wins):
- default values from schema:
@data/values-schema
files within the library@data/values-schema
files externally referenced in.- given through
instance.with_data_values_schema()
@data/values-schema
files externally referenced inafter_library_module=True
.
- values from data value sources:
@data/values
overlays within the library (same ordering as overlays)@data/values
overlays externally referenced in- specified using
instance.with_data_values()
@data/values
overlays externally referenced inafter_library_module=True
--data-values-file
specified files referenced in (left to right)--data-values-env
specified values referenced in (left to right)--data-values-env-yaml
specified values referenced in (left to right)--data-value
specified value referenced in (left to right)--data-value-yaml
specified value referenced in (left to right)
(Help improve our docs: edit this page on GitHub)