Dhall is a programmable configuration language that provides a non-repetitive alternative to JSON and YAML.
You can think of Dhall as: JSON + types + imports + functions
For a description of the Dhall language, examples, tutorials, and more, see the language website.
This crate provides support for consuming Dhall files the same way you would consume JSON or YAML. It uses the Serde serialization library to provide drop-in support for Dhall for any datatype that supports serde (and that's a lot of them !).
This library is limited to deserializing (reading) Dhall values; serializing (writing) values to Dhall is not supported.
Basic usage
The main entrypoint of this library is the from_str
function. It reads a string
containing a Dhall expression and deserializes it into any serde-compatible type.
This could mean a common Rust type like HashMap
:
#
or a custom datatype, using serde's derive
mechanism:
#
Replacing serde_json
or serde_yaml
If you used to consume JSON or YAML, you only need to replace serde_json::from_str
or
serde_yaml::from_str
with serde_dhall::from_str(…).parse()
.
Additional Dhall typechecking
When deserializing, normal type checking is done to ensure that the returned value is a valid Dhall value. However types are first-class in Dhall, and this library allows you to additionally check that the input data matches a given Dhall type. That way, a type error will be caught on the Dhall side, and have pretty and explicit errors that point to the source file.
There are two ways to typecheck a Dhall value in this way: you can provide the type manually or you can let Rust infer it for you.
To let Rust infer the appropriate Dhall type, use the StaticType trait.
#
To provide a type manually, you need a SimpleType
value. You
can parse it from some Dhall text like you would parse any other value.
#
Controlling deserialization
If you need more control over the process of reading Dhall values, e.g. disabling
imports, see the Deserializer
methods.