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Overlay module
Overview ¶
ytt
’s Overlay feature provides a way to combine YAML structures together with the help of annotations.
There are two (2) structures involved in an overlay operation:
- the “left” — the YAML document(s) (and/or contained maps and arrays) being modified, and
- the “right” — the YAML document (and/or contained maps and arrays) that is the overlay, describing the modification.
Each modification is composed of:
- a matcher (via an
@overlay/(match)
annotation), identifying which node(s) on the “left” are the target(s) of the edit, and - an action (via an
@overlay/(action)
annotation), describing the edit.
Once written, an overlay can be applied in one of two ways:
- on all rendered templates, declaratively, via YAML documents annotated with
@overlay/match
; this is the most common approach. - on selected documents, programmatically, via
overlay.apply()
.
Programmatic overlays are applied immediately (while the contained template is being evaluated). Declarative overlays are applied in the “Apply Overlays” step as described in How it works.
(For a step-by-step primer on writing and using overlays, watch Primer on ytt
Overlays.)
Overlays as files ¶
As ytt
scans input files, it pulls aside any YAML Document that is annotated with @overlay/match
, and considers it an overlay.
After YAML templates are rendered, the collection of identified overlays are applied. Each overlay executes, one-at-a-time over the entire set of the rendered YAML documents.
Order matters: modifications from earlier overlays are seen by later overlays. Overlays are applied in the order detailed in Overlay order, below.
In the example below, the last YAML document is an overlay (it has the @overlay/match
annotation).
That overlay matcher’s selects the first YAML document only: it’s the only one that has a metadata.name
of example-ingress
.
#@ load("@ytt:overlay", "overlay")
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: example-ingress
annotations:
ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
---
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: another-example-ingress
annotations:
ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
#@overlay/match by=overlay.subset({"metadata":{"name":"example-ingress"}})
---
metadata:
annotations:
#@overlay/remove
ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target:
yields:
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: example-ingress
annotations: {}
---
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: another-example-ingress
annotations:
ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
See also: Overlay files example in online playground.
(For a high-level overview of ytt
, see How it works.)
Overlay order ¶
(as of v0.13.0)
Overlays are applied, in sequence, by:
- left-to-right for file flags
- e.g. in
-f overlay1.yml -f overlay2.yml
,overlay1.yml
will be applied first
- e.g. in
- if file flag is set to a directory, files are alphanumerically sorted
- e.g. in
aaa/z.yml xxx/c.yml d.yml
, will be applied in following orderaaa/z.yml d.yml xxx/c.yml
- e.g. in
- top-to-bottom order for overlay YAML documents within a single file
Next Steps ¶
Familiarize yourself with the overlay annotations.
Programmatic access ¶
Overlays need not apply to the entire set of rendered YAML documents (as is the case with the declarative approach).
Instead, the declared modifications can be captured in a function and applied to a specific set of documents via overlay.apply()
in Starlark code.
In this example we have left()
function that returns target structure and right()
that returns the overlay, specifying the modifications.
overlay.apply(...)
will execute the execute the overlay and return a new structure.
#@ load("@ytt:overlay", "overlay")
#@ def left():
key1: val1
key2:
key3:
key4: val4
key5:
- name: item1
key6: val6
- name: item2
key7: val7
#@ end
#@ def right():
#@overlay/remove
key1: val1
key2:
key3:
key4: val4
key5:
#@overlay/match by="name"
- name: item2
#@overlay/match missing_ok=True
key8: new-val8
#@ end
result: #@ overlay.apply(left(), right())
yields:
result:
key2:
key3:
key4: val4
key5:
- name: item1
key6: val6
- name: item2
key7: val7
key8: new-val8
Next Steps ¶
Familiarize yourself with the two kinds of overlay annotations:
- matchers (via an
@overlay/(match)
annotation), and - actions (via an
@overlay/(action)
annotation).
@overlay
Annotations ¶
There are two groups of overlay annotations:
Matching Annotations ¶
These annotations are used to select which structure(s) will be modified:
@overlay/match ¶
Specifies which nodes on the “left” to modify.
Valid on: Document, Map Item, Array Item.
@overlay/match [by=Function|String, expects=Int|String|List|Function, missing_ok=Bool, when=Int|String|List]
by=
Function|String
— criteria for matching nodes on the “left”Function
— predicate of whether a given node is a match- provided matcher functions (supplied by the
@ytt:overlay
module): - Custom matcher function can also be used
- provided matcher functions (supplied by the
String
— short-hand foroverlay.map_key()
with the same argument- Defaults (depends on the type of the annotated node):
- document or array item: none (i.e.
by
is required) - map item: key equality (i.e.
overlay.map_key()
)
- document or array item: none (i.e.
expects=
Int|String|List|Function
— (optional) expected number of nodes to be found in the “left.” If not satisfied, raises an error.Int
— must match this number, exactlyString
(e.g."1+"
) — must match at least the numberFunction(found):Bool
— predicate of whether the expected number of matches were foundfound
(Int
) — number of actual matches
List[Int|String|Function]
— must match one of the given criteria- Default:
1
(Int
) (i.e. expecting to match exactly one (1) node on the “left”).
missing_ok=
Bool
(optional) shorthand syntax forexpects=[0,1]
when=
Int|String|List
(optional) criteria for when the overlay should apply. If the criteria is met, the overlay applies; otherwise, nothing happens.Int
— must equal this number, exactlyString
(e.g."1+"
) — must match at least the numberList[Int|String]
— must match one of the given criteria
Notes:
expects
,missing_ok
, andwhen
are mutually-exclusive parameters.- take care when
expects
includes zero (0); matching none is indistinguishable from a mistakenly written match (e.g. a misspelling of a key name)
Examples:
#@overlay/match by="id"
: expects to find one (1) node on the “left” that has the keyid
and value matching the same-named item on the “right.”#@overlay/match by=
overlay.map_key("name")
: (same as above)#@overlay/match by=
overlay.all
,expects="0+"
: has no effective matching expectations#@overlay/match missing_ok=True
: expects to find 0 or 1 matching nodes on the “left”#@overlay/match expects=2
: expects to find exactly two (2) matching nodes on the “left”#@overlay/match expects="2+"
: expects to find two (2) or more matching nodes on the “left”#@overlay/match expects=[0,1,4]
: expects to find 0, 1 or 4 matching nodes on the “left”#@overlay/match expects=lambda x: return x < 10
: expects 9 or fewer matching nodes on the “left”#@overlay/match when=2
: applies changes only if two (2) nodes are found on the “left” and will not error otherwise#@overlay/match when=2+
: applies changes only if two (2) or more nodes are found on the “left” and will not error otherwise#@overlay/match when=[0,1,4]
: applies changes only if there were exactly 0, 1 or 4 nodes found on the “left” and will not error otherwise
History:
- v0.28.0+ — added
when
keyword argument.
Custom Overlay Matcher Functions ¶
The matcher functions from @ytt:overlay
cover many use-cases. From time-to-time, more precise matching is required.
A matcher function has the following signature:
Function(indexOrKey,left,right):Boolean
indexOrKey
- when
left
is an array item: (Int
) — the potential match’s zero-based index in the list that is the left-side - when
left
is a map item: (any
) — the potential match’s key in the map that is the left-side
- when
left
(yamlfragment
or scalar) — the potential match/target noderight
(yamlfragment
or scalar) — the value of the annotated node in the overlay- returns
True
ifleft
should be considered a match;False
otherwise.
Most custom matchers can be written as a Lambda expression.
Lambda expressions start with the keyword lambda
, followed by a parameter list, then a :
, and a single expression that is the body of the function.
Examples:
Example 1: Key presence or partial string match
left
contains right
:
lambda indexOrKey, left, right: right in left
Returns True
when right
is “a member of” left
(see also: Starlark Spec: Membership tests for more details)
Example 2: Precise string matching
left
contains a key of the same name as the value of right
:
lambda indexOrKey, left, right: left["metadata"]["name"].endswith("server")
See also:
- Language: String for more built-in functions on strings.
- @ytt:regexp Library for regular expression matching.
Example 3: Match on both key and value
Is the map item with key/value of: type: LoadBalancer
.
lambda indexOrKey, left, right: indexOrKey == "type" and left == "LoadBalancer"
@overlay/match-child-defaults ¶
Sets default values for expects
, missing_ok
, or when
for the children of the annotated node.
Does not set these values for the annotated node, itself.
Commonly used to avoid repeating @overlay/match missing_ok=True
on each child node in maps.
Valid on: Document, Map Item, Array Item.
@overlay/match-child-defaults [expects=Int|String|List|Function, missing_ok=Bool, when=Int|String|List]
(see @overlay/match for parameter specifications.)
Examples:
Without the #@overlay/match-child-defaults
, each of the four new annotation would have needed an @overlay/match missing_ok=True
to apply successfully:
---
metadata:
annotations:
ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
#@overlay/match by=overlay.all
---
metadata:
#@overlay/match-child-defaults missing_ok=True
annotations:
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/limit-rps: 2000
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/enable-access-log: "true"
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/canary: "true"
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/client-body-buffer-size: 1M
Action Annotations ¶
The following annotations describe how to modify the matched “left” node.
They are:
@overlay/merge
— (default) combine left and right nodes@overlay/remove
— delete nodes from left@overlay/replace
— replace the left node@overlay/insert
— insert right node into left@overlay/append
— add right node at end of collection on left@overlay/assert
— declare an invariant on the left node
@overlay/merge ¶
Merge the value of “right” node with the corresponding “left” node.
Valid on: Map Item, Array Item.
@overlay/merge
(this annotation has no parameters.)
Note: This is the default action; for each node in an overlay, either the action is explicitly specified or it is merge
.
@overlay/remove ¶
Deletes the matched “left” node.
Valid on: Document, Map Item, Array Item.
@overlay/remove
(this annotation has no parameters.)
@overlay/replace ¶
Substitutes matched “left” node with the value of the “right” node (or by that of a provided function).
Valid on: Document, Map Item, Array Item.
@overlay/replace [via=Function]
via=
Function(left, right): (any)
(optional) determines the value to substitute in. If omitted, the value isright
.left
(yamlfragment
or scalar) — the matched node’s valueright
(yamlfragment
or scalar) — the value of the annotated node
History:
- v0.26.0 — works with
yamlfragment
values.
Examples:
Example 1: Use value from “right”
Replaces the corresponding “left” with the value "v1"
#@overlay/replace
apiVersion: v1
Example 2: Edit string value
#@overlay/replace via=lambda left, right: "prefix-"+left
See also:
ytt
modules that export functions useful for manipulating values:- Language: String for built-in string functions.
- Other Starlark language features that manipulate values:
@overlay/insert ¶
Inserts “right” node before/after the matched “left” node.
Valid on: Document, Array Item.
@overlay/insert [before=Bool, after=Bool]
before=
Bool
whether to insert the “right” node immediately in front of the matched “left” node.after=
Bool
whether to insert the “right” node immediately following the matched “left” node.
@overlay/append ¶
Inserts the “right” node after the last “left” node.
Valid on: Document, Array Item.
@overlay/append
(this annotation has no parameters.)
Note: This action implies an @overlay/match
selecting the last node. Any other @overlay/match
annotation is ignored.
History:
- v0.32.0 — omitting
@overlay/append
annotation implies a merge operation and 0 matches, defaulting to insert after the last item.
@overlay/assert ¶
Checks assertion that value of “left” matched node equals that of the annotated “right” node (or a provided predicate).
Valid on: Document, Map Item, Array Item.
@overlay/assert [via=Function]
- Default: checks that the value of the matched “left” node equals the value of the annotated “right” node.
via
=Function(left, right):(Bool|Tuple(Bool|String)|None)
(optional) predicate indicating whether “left” passes the checkleft
(yamlfragment
or scalar) — the matched node’s valueright
(yamlfragment
or scalar) — the value of the annotated node- Return types:
Bool
— ifFalse
, the assertion fails; otherwise, nothing happens.Tuple(Bool|String)
— ifFalse
, the assertion fails and specified string is appended to the resulting error message; otherwise nothing happens.None
— the assertion assumes to succeed. In these situations, the function makes use of the@ytt:assert
module to effect the assertion.
History:
- v0.26.0 — works with
yamlfragment
values. - v0.24.0 — introduced
Examples:
Example 1: Range check
Fails the execution if left
not between 0 and 1000, exclusively.
#@overlay/assert via=lambda left, right: left > 0 and left < 1000
Example 2: Well-formedness check
Fails the execution if left
contains anything other than lowercase letters or numbers.
#@overlay/assert via=lambda left, right: regexp.match("[a-z0-9]+", left)
See also:
ytt
hashing functions from:- Boolean expression operators and built-in functions, including:
- Language: String functions
Functions ¶
The @ytt:overlay
module provides several functions that support overlay use.
To use these functions, include the @ytt:overlay
module:
#@ load("@ytt:overlay", "overlay")
The functions exported by this module are:
- overlay.apply()
- overlay.map_key()
- overlay.index()
- overlay.all()
- overlay.subset()
- overlay.and_op()
- overlay.or_op()
- overlay.not_op()
overlay.apply() ¶
Executes the supplied overlays on top of the given structure.
overlay.apply(left, right1[, rightN...])
left
(yamlfragment
) — the target of the overlaysright1
(yamlfragment
annotated with@overlay/(action)
) — the (first) overlay to apply onleft
.rightN
(yamlfragment
annotated with@overlay/(action)
) — the Nth overlay to apply on the result so far (which reflects the changes made by prior overlays)
Notes:
- For details on how to use
apply()
, see Programmatic access.
Examples:
overlay.apply(left(), right())
overlay.apply(left(), one(), two())
See also: Overlay example in the ytt Playground.
overlay.map_key() ¶
An Overlay matcher function that matches when the collection (i.e. Map or Array) in the “left” contains a map item with the key of name
and value equal to the corresponding map item from the “right.”
overlay.map_key(name)
name
(String
) — the key of the contained map item on which to match
Note: this matcher requires that all items in the target collection have a map item with the key name
; if this requirement cannot be guaranteed, consider using overlay.subset()
, instead.
Examples:
Example 1: Over an Array
With “left” similar to:
clients:
- id: 1
- id: 2
the following matches on the second array item:
clients:
#@overlay/match by=overlay.map_key("id")
- id: 2
Example 2: Over a Map
(as of v0.26.0+)
With “left” similar to:
clients:
clientA:
id: 1
clientB:
id: 2
the following matches on the second map item:
---
clients:
#@overlay/match by=overlay.map_key("id")
_:
id: 2
(note: the key name _
is arbitrary and ignored).
overlay.index() ¶
An Overlay matcher function that matches the array item at the given index
overlay.index(i)
i
(Int
) — the ordinal of the item in the array on the “left” to match (zero-based index)
Example:
#@overlay/match by=overlay.index(0)
- item10
overlay.all() ¶
An Overlay matcher function that matches all contained nodes from the “left”, unconditionally.
overlay.all()
(this function has no parameters.)
Examples:
Example 1: Documents
Matches each and every document:
#@overlay/match by=overlay.all
---
metadata:
annotations: ...
Example 2: Array Items
Matches each and every item in the array contained in items
on the “left”:
items:
#@overlay/match by=overlay.all
- item10
Example 3: Map Items
(as of v0.26.0+)
Matches each and every item in the map contained in items
on the “left”:
items:
#@overlay/match by=overlay.all
_:
name: item10
(note: the key name _
is arbitrary and ignored)
overlay.subset() ¶
An Overlay matcher function that matches when the “left” node’s structure and value equals the given target
.
overlay.subset(target)
target
(any
) — value that the “left” node must equal.
Examples
Example 1: Scalar
To match, scalar values must be equal.
#@overlay/match by=overlay.subset(1)
#@overlay/match by=overlay.subset("Entire string must match")
#@overlay/match by=overlay.subset(True)
(if a partial match is required, consider writing a Custom Overlay Matcher function)
Example 2: Dict (aka “map”)
To match, dictionary literals must match the structure and value of left
.
#@overlay/match by=overlay.subset({"kind": "Deployment"})
#@overlay/match by=overlay.subset({"metadata": {"name": "istio-system"}})
Example 3: YAML Fragment
To match, yamlfragment
’s must match structure and value of left
.
#@ def resource(kind, name):
kind: #@ kind
metadata:
name: #@ name
#@ end
#@overlay/match by=overlay.subset(resource("Deployment", "istio-system"))
overlay.and_op() ¶
(as of v0.26.0+)
An Overlay matcher function that matches when all given matchers return True
.
overlay.and_op(matcher1, matcher2, ...)
matcher1
,matcher2
, … — one or more other Overlay matcher functions.
Examples:
#@ not_sa = overlay.not_op(overlay.subset({"kind": "ServiceAccount"}))
#@ inside_ns = overlay.subset({"metadata": {"namespace": "some-ns"}})
#@overlay/match by=overlay.and_op(not_sa, inside_ns),expects="1+"
overlay.or_op() ¶
(as of v0.26.0+)
An Overlay matcher function that matches when at least one of the given matchers return True
.
overlay.or_op(matcher1, matcher2, ...)
matcher1
,matcher2
, … — one or more other Overlay matcher functions.
Examples:
#@ config_maps = overlay.subset({"kind": "ConfigMap"})
#@ secrets = overlay.subset({"kind": "Secret"})
#@overlay/match by=overlay.or_op(config_maps, secrets)
overlay.not_op() ¶
(as of v0.26.0+)
An Overlay matcher function that matches when the given matcher does not.
not_op(matcher)
matcher
— another Overlay matcher function.
#@overlay/match by=overlay.not_op(overlay.subset({"metadata": {"namespace": "app"}}))
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