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JSON Icon JsonPeek and JsonPoke MSBuild Tasks

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JsonPeek Icon JsonPeek

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Read values from JSON using JSONPath.

Usage:

  <JsonPeek ContentPath="[JSON_FILE]" Query="[JSONPath]">
    <Output TaskParameter="Result" PropertyName="Value" />
  </JsonPeek>
  <JsonPeek Content="[JSON]" Query="[JSONPath]">
    <Output TaskParameter="Result" ItemName="Values" />
  </JsonPeek>

Parameters:

Parameter Description
Content Optional string parameter.
Specifies the JSON input as a string.
ContentPath Optional ITaskItem parameter.
Specifies the JSON input as a file path.
Empty Optional string parameter.
Value to use as a replacement for empty values matched in JSON.
Query Required string parameter.
Specifies the JSONPath expression.
Result Output ITaskItem[] parameter.
Contains the results that are returned by the task.

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." />

JsonPoke Icon JsonPoke

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Write values to JSON nodes selected with JSONPath

Usage:

  <JsonPoke ContentPath="[JSON_FILE]" Query="[JSONPath]" Value="[VALUE]" />
  <JsonPoke ContentPath="[JSON_FILE]" Query="[JSONPath]" RawValue="[JSON]" />
  <JsonPoke Content="[JSON]" Query="[JSONPath]" Value="[VALUE]" />

Parameters:

Parameter Description
Content Optional string input/output parameter.
Specifies the JSON input as a string and contains the updated
JSON after successful task execution.
ContentPath Optional ITaskItem parameter.
Specifies the JSON input as a file path.
Query Required string parameter.
Specifies the JSONPath expression.
Value Optional ITaskItem[] parameter.
Specifies the value(s) to be inserted into the specified path.
RawValue Optional string parameter.
Specifies the raw (JSON) value to be inserted into the specified path.

You must either provide the path to a JSON file via ContentPath or raw JSON content via Content.

The Value can be an item group, and in that case, it will be inserted into the JSON node matching the JSONPath expression Query as an array. RawValue can be used to provide an entire JSON fragment as a string, with no conversion to an MSBuild item at all.

The existing JSON node will determine the data type of the value being written, so as to preserve the original document. Numbers, booleans and DateTimes are properly parsed before serializing to the node.

    <PropertyGroup>
      <Json>
{
  "http": {
    "host": "localhost",
    "port": 80,
    "ssl": true
  }
}
      </Json>
    </PropertyGroup>

    <JsonPoke Content="$(Json)" Query="$.http.host" Value="example.com">
      <Output TaskParameter="Content" PropertyName="Json" />
    </JsonPoke>

    <JsonPoke Content="$(Json)" Query="$.http.port" Value="80">
      <Output TaskParameter="Content" PropertyName="Json" />
    </JsonPoke>

    <JsonPoke Content="$(Json)" Query="$.http.ssl" Value="true">
      <Output TaskParameter="Content" PropertyName="Json" />
    </JsonPoke>

    <Message Importance="high" Text="$(Json)" />

Note how we update multiple values and assign the updated content to the same $(Json) property so it can be used in subsequent updates. The last Message task will render the following JSON:

{
  "http": {
    "host": "example.com",
    "port": 80,
    "ssl": true
  }
}

NOTE: The port number was preserved as a number, as is the ssl boolean.

To force a value to be interpreted as a string, you can surround it with double or single quotes. For example, given the following JSON file:

{
    "http": {
        "ports": [
            "80"
        ]
    }
}

We can replace the ports array with string values as follows (without the explicit quotes, the values would be interpreted as numbers otherwise):

  <ItemGroup>
    <HttpPort Include="'8080'" />
    <HttpPort Include="'1080'" />
  </ItemGroup>

  <JsonPoke ContentPath="http.json" Query="$.http.ports" Value="@(HttpPort)" />

Result:

{
    "http": {
        "ports": [
            "8080", 
            "1080"
        ]
    }
}

It's also possible to write a complex object based on MSBuild item metadata:

   <ItemGroup>
     <Http Include="Value">
       <host>localhost</host>
       <port>80</port>
       <ssl>true</ssl>
     </Value>
   </ItemGroup>

   <JsonPoke ContentPath="http.json" Query="$.http" Value="@(Http)" Properties="host;port;ssl" />

Result:

{
    "http": {
        "host": "localhost",
        "port": 80,
        "ssl": true
    }
}

Note how the native JSON type was automatically inferred, even though everything is basically a string in MSBuild. As noted above, you can surround any of the item metadata values in double or single quotes to force them to be written as strings instead.

The task can create entire object hierarchies if any segment of the path expression is not found, which makes it very easy to create complex structures by assigning a single value. For example, if the http section in the examples above didn't exist at all, the following task would add it automatically, prior to assigning the ssl property to true:

<JsonPoke ContentPath="http.json" Query="$.http.ssl" Value="true" />

This also works for indexed queries, such as adding launch profile to launchSettings.json by simply assigning a value:

<JsonPoke ContentPath="Properties\launchSettings.json" Query="$.profiles['IIS Express'].commandName" Value="IISExpress" />

which would create the following entry:

{
  "profiles": {
    "IIS Express": {
      "commandName": "IISExpress",
    }
  }
}

Array index is also supported as part of the query, to modify existing values. If the array is empty or non-existent, it's also possible to just use the index [0] to denote the new node should be the sole element in the new array, like for adding a new watch file value to host.json:

<JsonPoke ContentPath="host.json" Query="$.watchFiles[0]" Value="myFile.txt" />

Which results in:

{
  ...
  "watchFiles": [ "myFile.txt" ]
}

It's quite common to want to add entries to an existing array, usually at the end of the array. The JSONPath syntax supports indexes that start from the end of the array (such as [-1:]), but if the array had any values already, that would match whichever is the last element, meaning in an update to that element's value. Since we need a different syntax for inserting a new node, starting from the end of the list, we leverage the C# syntax ^n where n is the position starting from the end. To add a new element at the end of the list, the index [^1] can be used. ^2 means prior to last and so on.

For example, to add a new watched file to the array in the example above, we could use:

<JsonPoke ContentPath="host.json" Query="$.watchFiles[^1]" Value="myOtherFile.txt" />

Given an existing host.json file like the one above, we would get a new file added like so:

{
  ...
  "watchFiles": [ "myFile.txt", "myOtherFile.txt" ]
}

If the watchFiles property didn't exit at all or had no elements, the result would be the same as if we used [0], but this makes the code more flexible if needed.

The modified JSON nodes can be assigned to an item name using the Result task property, and will contain the item path (matching the Query plus the index if multiple nodes were modified) as well as the Value item metadata containing the raw JSON that was written.

Dogfooding

CI Version Build

We also produce CI packages from branches and pull requests so you can dogfood builds as quickly as they are produced.

The CI feed is https://pkg.kzu.io/index.json.

The versioning scheme for packages is:

  • PR builds: 42.42.42-pr[NUMBER]
  • Branch builds: 42.42.42-[BRANCH].[COMMITS]

Sponsors

Clarius Org Kirill Osenkov MFB Technologies, Inc. Stephen Shaw Torutek DRIVE.NET, Inc. Ashley Medway Keith Pickford Thomas Bolon Kori Francis Toni Wenzel Giorgi Dalakishvili Uno Platform Dan Siegel Reuben Swartz Jacob Foshee Eric Johnson Ix Technologies B.V. David JENNI Jonathan Oleg Kyrylchuk Charley Wu Jakob Tikjøb Andersen Seann Alexander Tino Hager Mark Seemann Ken Bonny Simon Cropp agileworks-eu sorahex Zheyu Shen Vezel ChilliCream 4OTC

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