headson
Head/tail for JSON — but structure‑aware. Get a compact preview that shows both the shape and representative values of your data, all within a strict character budget.
Available as:
- CLI (see Usage)
- Python library (see Python Bindings)
Install
Using Cargo:
cargo install headson
From source:
cargo build --release
target/release/headson --help
Features
- Budgeted output: specify exactly how much JSON you want to see
- Multiple output formats :
json(machine‑readable),pseudo(human‑friendly),js(valid JavaScript, most detailed metadata). - Multiple inputs: preview many files at once with a shared or per‑file budget.
- Fast: can process gigabyte-scale files in seconds (mostly disk-constrained)
- Available as a CLI app and as a Python library
Fits into command line workflows
If you’re comfortable with tools like head and tail, use headson when you want a quick, structured peek into a JSON file without dumping the entire thing.
head/tailoperate on bytes/lines - their output is not optimized for tree structuresjqyou need to craft filters to preview large JSON filesheadsonis like head/tail for trees: zero config but it keeps structure and represents content as much as possible
Usage
headson [FLAGS] [INPUT...]
- INPUT (optional, repeatable): file path(s). If omitted, reads JSON from stdin. Multiple input files are supported.
- Prints the preview to stdout. On parse errors, exits non‑zero and prints an error to stderr.
Common flags:
-n, --budget <BYTES>: per‑file output budget. When multiple input files are provided, the total budget equals<BYTES> * number_of_inputs.-N, --global-budget <BYTES>: total output budget across all inputs. Useful when you want a fixed-size preview across many files (may omit entire files). Mutually exclusive with--budget.-f, --template <json|pseudo|js>: output style (default:pseudo)-m, --compact: no indentation, no spaces, no newlines--no-newline: single line output--no-space: no space after:in objects--indent <STR>: indentation unit (default: two spaces)--string-cap <N>: max graphemes to consider per string (default: 500)--tail: prefer the end of arrays when truncating. Strings are unaffected. Inpseudo/jstemplates the omission marker appears at the start;jsonremains strict JSON with no annotations.
Notes:
- With multiple input files:
- JSON template outputs a single JSON object keyed by the input file paths.
- Pseudo and JS templates render file sections with human-readable headers when newlines are enabled.
- If you use
--compactor--no-newline(both disable newlines), fileset output falls back to standard inline rendering (no per-file headers) to remain compact.
- If you use
- Using
--global-budgetmay truncate or omit entire files to respect the total budget. - The tool finds the largest preview that fits the budget; if even the tiniest preview exceeds it, you still get a minimal, valid preview.
- When passing file paths, directories and binary files are ignored; a notice is printed to stderr for each (e.g.,
Ignored binary file: ./path/to/file). Stdin mode reads the stream as-is.
Quick one‑liners:
-
Peek a big JSON stream (keeps structure):
zstdcat huge.json.zst | headson -n 800 -f pseudo -
Many files with a fixed overall size:
headson -N 1200 -f json logs/*.json -
Glance at a file, JavaScript‑style comments for omissions:
headson -n 400 -f js data.json
Show help:
headson --help
Examples: head vs headson
Input:
Naive cut (can break mid‑token):
|
# {"users":[{"id":1,"name":"Ana","roles":["admin","dev"]},{"id":2,"name":"Bo"}],"me
Structured preview with headson (pseudo):
# {
# users: [
# { id: 1, name: "Ana", roles: [ "admin", … ] },
# …
# ]
# meta: { count: 2, … }
# }
Machine‑readable preview (json):
# {"users":[{"id":1,"name":"Ana","roles":["admin"]}],"meta":{"count":2}}
Python Bindings
A thin Python extension module is available on PyPI as headson.
- Install:
pip install headson(ABI3 wheels for Python 3.10+ on Linux/macOS/Windows). - API:
headson.summarize(text: str, *, template: str = "pseudo", character_budget: int | None = None, tail: bool = False) -> strtemplate: one of"json" | "pseudo" | "js"character_budget: maximum output size in characters (default: 500)
tail: prefer the end of arrays when truncating; strings unaffected. Affects only display templates (pseudo/js);jsonremains strict.
Example:
=
=
# Prefer the tail of arrays (annotations show in pseudo/js only)
License
MIT