JsonPeek 1.1.5
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package JsonPeek --version 1.1.5
NuGet\Install-Package JsonPeek -Version 1.1.5
<PackageReference Include="JsonPeek" Version="1.1.5" />
paket add JsonPeek --version 1.1.5
#r "nuget: JsonPeek, 1.1.5"
// Install JsonPeek as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=JsonPeek&version=1.1.5 // Install JsonPeek as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=JsonPeek&version=1.1.5
Usage:
<JsonPeek ContentPath="[JSON_FILE]" Query="[JSONPath]">
<Output TaskParameter="Result" PropertyName="Value" />
</JsonPeek>
<JsonPeek Content="[JSON]" Query="[JSONPath]">
<Output TaskParameter="Result" ItemName="Values" />
</JsonPeek>
You can either provide the path to a JSON file via ContentPath
or
provide the straight JSON content to Content
. The Query
is a
JSONPath expression that is evaluated
and returned via the Result
task parameter. You can assign the resulting
value to either a property (i.e. for a single value) or an item name (i.e.
for multiple results).
JSON object properties are automatically projected as item metadata when assigning the resulting value to an item. For example, given the following JSON:
{
"http": {
"host": "localhost",
"port": 80,
"ssl": true
}
}
You can read the entire http
value as an item with each property as a metadata
value with:
<JsonPeek ContentPath="host.json" Query="$.http">
<Output TaskParameter="Result" ItemName="Http" />
</JsonPeek>
The Http
item will have the following values (if it were declared in MSBuild):
<ItemGroup>
<Http Include="[item raw json]">
<host>localhost</host>
<port>80</port>
<ssl>true</ssl>
</Http>
</ItemGroup>
These item metadata values could be read as MSBuild properties as follows, for example:
<PropertyGroup>
<Host>@(Http -> '%(host)')</Host>
<Port>@(Http -> '%(port)')</Port>
<Ssl>@(Http -> '%(ssl)')</Ssl>
</PropertyGroup>
In addition to the explicitly opted in object properties, the entire node is available
as raw JSON via the special _
(single underscore) metadata item.
If the matched value is empty, no items (because items cannot be constructed with empty
identity) or property value will be returned. This makes it difficult to distinguish a
successfully matched empty value from no value matched at all. For these cases, it's
possible to specify an Empty
value to stand-in for an empty (but successful) matched
result instead, which allow to distinguish both scenarios:
<JsonPeek Content="$(Json)" Empty="$empty" Query="$(Query)">
<Output TaskParameter="Result" PropertyName="Value" />
</JsonPeek>
<Error Condition="'$(Value)' == '$empty'" Text="The element $(Query) cannot have an empty value." />
Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
Content | Optional string parameter.<br/>Specifies the JSON input as a string. |
ContentPath | Optional ITaskItem parameter.<br/>Specifies the JSON input as a file path. |
Empty | Optional string parameter.<br/>Value to use as a replacement for empty values matched in JSON. |
Query | Required string parameter.<br/>Specifies the JSONPath expression. |
Result | Output ITaskItem[] parameter.<br/>Contains the results that are returned by the task. |
Sponsors
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.
This package has no dependencies.
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