npm install -g lookml-parser
git clone <your-lookml-repo>
cd <your-lookml-repo>
lookml-parser --input="*.{view,model}.lkml" --whitespace=2 >> output.json
lookml-parser --interactive
lookml-parser --transform=fps
| Flag | Description |
|---|---|
| f | Drop repetitive file metadata ($file_rel, $file_type, $file_name) |
| p | Add position data |
| s | Remove whitespace information ($strings property) |
const lookmlParser = require('lookml-parser')
const lookml = lookmlParser.parse("view: foo{}")
const positions = lookmlParser.getPositions(lookml)
let project = lookmlParser.parseFiles({
// The source parameter can be a glob string, or an array of objects
// with path (for matching includes) and content properties
source: "*.{view,model,explore}.lkml",
fileOutput: "by-name" // or "array" or "by-type",
globOptions: {},
readFileOptions: {encoding:"utf-8"},
readFileConcurrency: 4,
console: console
})
transformations.addPositions(project)
parseFiles outputs a collection of files, each with their
own parsed contents, as well as models resulting from following includes from model files.
The collection of files is an object by file name, but can be requested in other formats.
If position data is requested, it is added under a separate top-level property named positions,
containing separate sub entries for file and model. Each node in the tree for which position data
is available will have a $p property with the data for that node. In the file section, the property
contains an array consisting of [start line, start character, end line, end character]. In the model
section the property contains an array consisting of [file index, start line, start character, end line, end character].
In this context, the file index refers to an entry in the the model's $file_path array.
If you want to leverage LookML syntax to embed arbitrary other markup/objects that would be rejected by the native IDE, the CLI and parseFiles function now allow this with conditional comments:
view: foo {
# PARSE-ME!
# owner: "Fabio"
# version: {major:1 minor:4 date:"2018-01-01"}
dimension: bar {}
}
> lookml-parser --conditional-comment="PARSE-ME!"
The parseFiles method and CLI will resolve any include statements of the style "//project_foo/..." as "/imported_projects/project_foo/...". Therefore, the parser supports project imports, assuming you have previously copied/cloned the remote project to the appropriate location ahead of invoking the parser.
Since LookML Dashboards are actually YAML, lookml-parser does not handle parsing them. However, this module accepts js-yaml as an optional dependency. If you install js-yaml, lookml-parser will use it to parse LookML dashboards and will include the dashboards into any including models. To use this functionality, make sure to also specify an input argument, as the default input pattern does not include dashboard files.
npm install -g lookml-parser
npm install -g js-yaml
lookml-parser --interactive --file-output=by-name --input="{*.,}{manifest,model,view,explore,dashboard}.{lkml,lookml}"