Schema Definition
The core scenario of KCL is write configurations and constraints. and a core feature of KCL is modeling. The keyword schema
in KCL can be used to define structures and constraints, such as attribute types, default values, range check, and various other constraints. In addition, structures defined with KCL schema can be used in turn to verify implementation, validate input (JSON, YAML and other structured data) or generate code (multilingual structures, OpenAPI, and so on).
Define Structures and Constraints
For example, we have the KCL file (main.k) defined below. In it, we use the schema
keyword to define three models App
, Service
and Volume
. The App
model has four attributes domainType
, containerPort
, volumes
and services
, where
- The type of
domainType
is a string literal union type, similar to an "enumeration", which means that the value ofdomainType
can only take one of"Standard"
,"Customized"
and"Global"
. - The type of
containerPort
is an integer (int
). In addition, we use thecheck
keyword to define its value range from 1 to 65535. - The type of
services
isService
schema list type, and we use?
to mark it as an optional attribute. - The type of
volumes
is aVolume
schema list type, and we use?
to mark it as an optional attribute.
schema App:
domainType: "Standard" | "Customized" | "Global"
containerPort: int
services?: [Service] # `?` specifies a optional attribute
volumes?: [Volume] # `?` specifies a optional attribute
check:
1 <= containerPort <= 65535 # `containerPort` must be in range [1, 65535]
schema Service:
clusterIP: str
$type: str
check:
clusterIP == "None" if $type == "ClusterIP" # When `type` is "ClusterIP", `clusterIP` must be `"None"`
schema Volume:
container: str = "*" # The default value of `container` is "*"
mountPath: str
check:
mountPath not in ["/", "/boot", "/home", "dev", "/etc", "/root"] # `mountPath` must not be one of the list `["/", "/boot", "/home", "dev", "/etc", "/root"]`
app: App {
domainType = "Standard"
containerPort = 80
volumes = [
{
mountPath = "/tmp"
}
]
services = [
{
clusterIP = "None"
$type = "ClusterIP"
}
]
}
We can get the YAML output of the app
instance by using the following command line
$ kcl main.k
app:
domainType: Standard
containerPort: 80
volumes:
- container: '*'
mountPath: /tmp
services:
- clusterIP: None
type: ClusterIP
In addition, we can put the app
model into a separate app_module.k
, then we can use the import
keyword in main.k
for modular management, such as the following file structure
.
├── app_module.k
└── main.k
The content of app_module.k
is
schema App:
domainType: "Standard" | "Customized" | "Global"
containerPort: int
volumes: [Volume]
services: [Service]
check:
1 <= containerPort <= 65535
schema Service:
clusterIP: str
$type: str
check:
clusterIP == "None" if $type == "ClusterIP"
schema Volume:
container: str = "*" # The default value of `container` is "*"
mountPath: str
check:
mountPath not in ["/", "/boot", "/home", "dev", "/etc", "/root"]
The content of main.k
is
import .app_module # A relative path import
app: app_module.App {
domainType = "Standard"
containerPort = 80
volumes = [
{
mountPath = "/tmp"
}
]
services = [
{
clusterIP = "None"
$type = "ClusterIP"
}
]
}
We can still get the YAML output of the app
instance by using the following command line
$ kcl main.k
app:
domainType: Standard
containerPort: 80
volumes:
- container: '*'
mountPath: /tmp
services:
- clusterIP: None
type: ClusterIP