Go library for the TOML format.
This library supports TOML version v0.4.0
Go-toml provides the following features for using data parsed from TOML documents:
import "github.com/pelletier/go-toml"
Read a TOML document:
config, _ := toml.Load(`
[postgres]
user = "pelletier"
password = "mypassword"`)
// retrieve data directly
user := config.Get("postgres.user").(string)
// or using an intermediate object
postgresConfig := config.Get("postgres").(*toml.Tree)
password := postgresConfig.Get("password").(string)
Or use Unmarshal:
type Postgres struct {
User string
Password string
}
type Config struct {
Postgres Postgres
}
doc := []byte(`
[Postgres]
User = "pelletier"
Password = "mypassword"`)
config := Config{}
toml.Unmarshal(doc, &config)
fmt.Println("user=", config.Postgres.User)
Or use a query:
// use a query to gather elements without walking the tree
q, _ := query.Compile("$..[user,password]")
results := q.Execute(config)
for ii, item := range results.Values() {
fmt.Println("Query result %d: %v", ii, item)
}
The documentation and additional examples are available at godoc.org.
Go-toml provides two handy command line tools:
tomll
: Reads TOML files and lint them.
go install github.com/pelletier/go-toml/cmd/tomll
tomll --help
tomljson
: Reads a TOML file and outputs its JSON representation.
go install github.com/pelletier/go-toml/cmd/tomljson
tomljson --help
Feel free to report bugs and patches using GitHub’s pull requests system on pelletier/go-toml. Any feedback would be much appreciated!
You have to make sure two kind of tests run:
You can run both of them using ./test.sh
.
The script ./fuzz.sh
is available to
run go-fuzz on go-toml.
Go-toml follows Semantic Versioning. The supported version of TOML is indicated at the beginning of this document. The last two major versions of Go are supported (see Go Release Policy).
The MIT License (MIT). Read LICENSE.