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jinja-tree

What is it?

jinja-tree is a CLI utility to process jinja (jinja2) templates recursively in a directory tree.

It is very configurable and very easy to extend with its included plugin system.

The default behavior is to recursively search for files with a given extension (.template for example) and to process the context with Jinja (Jinja2) templates engine reading the context variables from:

  • a configuration file
  • environment variables
  • dotenv files

Then, the processed content is written into another file with the same name/path but with the configured extension (.template by default) removed. The original file can also be deleted (but this is not the default behavior).

Full example about overall operation (in default mode)

Note: this is only the default behavior as you can tune this with your own plugins!

Let's imagine the following directory structure:

/foo/
/foo/README.md.template
/foo/bar/baz.py.template
/foo/bar/another.file

And execute jinja-tree /foo with the default configuration.

We get:

/foo/
/foo/README.md.template
/foo/README.md <= NEW FILE FROM README.md.template jinja2 processing
/foo/bar/baz.py.template
/foo/bar/baz.py <= NEW FILE FROM baz.py.template jinja2 processing 
/foo/bar/another.file

What's it for?

Your imagination is your limit 😅 but it's very useful for maintaining DRY documentation (for example your-cli --help output automatically updated in a markdown file), configuration files with default values read in code, including common blocks in different files...

So it's a great tool for maintaining repositories in general.

Note

Another "action" plugin will be soon 🕒 provided to bootstrap directory trees from templates (like with the cookiecutter project).

Features

1️⃣ Easy to extend

jinja-tree includes a plugin system. You can override the default behavior with your own plugins.

There are two extension points:

  • context plugins: to provide context variables to Jinja templates
  • file plugins: to change the way how jinja-tree finds files to process (including target files)

See this specification documentation page for more details.

2️⃣ Very configurable

jinja-tree is very configurable. You can configure global options via CLI options or a configuration file.

Plugins are configurable via the configuration file.

See this specification documentation page for more details.

3️⃣ Embedded extensions

jinja-tree includes some extensions to Jinja templates engine:

Usage examples

shell extension

{{ "date"|shell() }}

=> will render something like: Sun Jan 28 15:11:44 CET 2024

from_json extension

export MYENV='["foo", "bar", "baz"]'

(
    cat <<EOF
{% for item in MYENV|from_json() -%}
- {{ item }}
{% endfor %}
EOF
) | jinja-stdin

=> will render something like:

- foo
- bar
- bar

See this directory for others

4️⃣ Full Jinja / Jinja2 support (including "includes" and "inheritance")

jinja-tree has several options for Jinja "search paths". So you can use Jinja "includes" and "inheritance" features.

Installation

pip install jinja-tree

Tip

If you want to get a better readability of jinja-tree output (colors...), you can also use pip install rich to install this optional dependency.

Note

A docker image is also available. You can use it to avoid any specific installation. See at the end of the "Usage" section for more details.

Usage

Main CLI

jinja-tree .

Note

The . in the previous command in the "root directory" (the directory jinja-tree will explore recursively to find files to process). You can replace it with any directory you want. By using ., you will process all files in the current directory and its subdirectories.

Main CLI options
Usage: jinja-tree [OPTIONS] ROOT_DIR

  Process a directory tree with the Jinja / Jinja2 templating system.

Arguments:
  ROOT_DIR  root directory  [required]

Options:
  --config-file TEXT              config file path (default: first '.jinja-
                                  tree.toml' file found up from current
                                  working dir), can also be see with
                                  JINJA_TREE_CONFIG_FILE env var  [env var:
                                  JINJA_TREE_CONFIG_FILE]
  --log-level TEXT                log level (DEBUG, INFO, WARNING or ERROR)
                                  [default: INFO]
  --verbose / --no-verbose        increase verbosity of the DEBUG log level
                                  (note: this forces log-level = DEBUG)
                                  [default: no-verbose]
  --extra-search-path PATH        Search path to jinja (can be used multiple
                                  times)
  --add-cwd-to-search-path / --no-add-cwd-to-search-path
                                  add current working directory (CWD) to jinja
                                  search path
  --add-root-dir-to-search-path / --no-add-root-dir-to-search-path
                                  add root directory to jinja search path
  --jinja-extension TEXT          jinja extension to load
  --context-plugin TEXT           context plugins (full python class path, can
                                  be used multiple times)
  --action-plugin TEXT            action plugin (full python class path, can
                                  be used multiple times)
  --strict-undefined / --no-strict-undefined
                                  if set, raise an error if a variable does
                                  not exist in context
  --blank-run / --no-blank-run    if set, execute a blank run (without
                                  modifying or deleting anything)  [default:
                                  no-blank-run]
  --disable-embedded-jinja-extensions / --no-disable-embedded-jinja-extensions
                                  disable embedded jinja extensions
  --help                          Show this message and exit.

Bonus CLI (if you want to process only one file but with the same behavior)

cat /path/to/your/file/to/process | jinja-stdin >/path/to/your/processed/file

or (if you want to process only a string):

$ export FOO=bar
$ echo "Hello {{FOO}}" | jinja-stdin
Hello bar
Bonus CLI options
Usage: jinja-stdin [OPTIONS]

  Process the standard input with Jinja templating system and return the
  result on the standard output.

Options:
  --config-file TEXT              config file path (default: first '.jinja-
                                  tree.toml' file found up from current
                                  working dir), can also be see with
                                  JINJA_TREE_CONFIG_FILE env var  [env var:
                                  JINJA_TREE_CONFIG_FILE]
  --log-level TEXT                log level (DEBUG, INFO, WARNING or ERROR)
                                  [default: INFO]
  --verbose / --no-verbose        increase verbosity of the DEBUG log level
                                  (note: this forces log-level = DEBUG)
                                  [default: no-verbose]
  --extra-search-path PATH        Search path to jinja (can be used multiple
                                  times)
  --add-cwd-to-search-path / --no-add-cwd-to-search-path
                                  add current working directory (CWD) to jinja
                                  search path
  --jinja-extension TEXT          jinja extension to load
  --context-plugin TEXT           context plugins (full python class path, can
                                  be used multiple times)
  --strict-undefined / --no-strict-undefined
                                  if set, raise an error if a variable does
                                  not exist in context
  --disable-embedded-jinja-extensions / --no-disable-embedded-jinja-extensions
                                  disable embedded jinja extensions
  --help                          Show this message and exit.

Docker image

A docker image is also available. You can use it this way:

docker run -t -v $(pwd):/workdir --user=$(id -u) ghcr.io/fabien-marty/jinja-tree:latest /workdir

(we mount the current directory in the /workdir directory in the container and execute jinja-tree in this /workdir directory)

Warning

If you plan to use environment variables with the docker image, you will have to use (possibly multiple times) the -e VAR=VALUE option to pass them to the container. With docker, it's more practical to use a .env (dotenv) file as it will be automatically mounted in the container.

If you want to add some CLI options, you can add them like in this example:

docker run -t -v $(pwd):/workdir --user=$(id -u) ghcr.io/fabien-marty/jinja-tree:latest --verbose /workdir

(we added --verbose just before the /workdir argument)

If you want to use the `jinja-stdin` CLI with docker?
echo "FOO {{ BAR }}" |docker run -i -v $(pwd):/workdir -e BAR=BAZ --user=$(id -u) --entrypoint jinja-stdin ghcr.io/fabien-marty/jinja-tree:latest

(it will output FOO BAZ)