jk
is still in very early stages. The standard library API isn't frozen and will most likely change. Feedback is most definitely welcome!
jk
is a data templating tool designed to help writing structured
configuration files.
The main idea behind jk
is to use a general purpose language for this task.
They offer mature tooling, great runtimes, a well established ecosystem and
many learning resources. jk
uses Javascript and a runtime tailored for
configuration.
A good way to start with jk
is to read our introduction tutorial.
For more context head to our introduction blog post!
jk
itself is a Javascript runtime written in Go and embedding v8. It
uses Ryan Dahl's v8worker2 to embed v8 and
flatbuffers for the v8 ⟷ Go communication.
While a general purpose language is great, configuration code can be made
more maintainable by restricting what it can do. A nice property jk
has to
offer is being hermetic: if you clone a git repository
and execute a jk
script, the resulting files should be the same on any
machine. To give concrete examples, this means the jk
standard library
doesn't support environment variables nor has any networking capability.
jk
provides an unopinionated data templating layer. On top of the jk
runtime, libraries provide APIs for users to write configuration.
- mixins: build and compose configuration objects
- kubernetes: build Kubernetes objects
This project is still in early stages but future (exciting!) plans include:
- Reach the state of having Kubernetes examples working and well documented.
- Work on hermeticity. (eg. #110, #44, topic/hermeticity).
- Native typescript support (#54).
- HCL support (#94).
When contributing to this repository, please first discuss the change you wish to make via issue with the owners of this repository before making a change.
The jk
executable itself is written in Go, but the JavaScript part of this project requires NodeJS.
Prerequisites:
go
1.11.4 or later (modules support)nodejs
,npm
make
pkg-config
First off, clone this repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/jkcfg/jk.git
# or with hub:
$ hub clone jkcfg/jk
$ cd ./jk
Then pull most of the dependencies using the Makefile
:
$ make dep
jk
is linked against v8worker2
. As building V8 takes ~30 minutes, prebuilt versions are provided for linux/amd64
and darwin/amd64
. This also includes flatc
from flatbuffers
:
# download the prebuilt artifacts from GitHub:
$ git clone https://github.com/jkcfg/prebuilt.git
$ cd ./prebuilt
# x64 Linux:
$ make install-linux-amd64
# x64 macOS:
$ make install-darwin-amd64
After setting up the environment, the jk
binary can be built:
$ make jk
$ ./jk --help # confirm it works
Additionally, on Linux, it's possible to use a docker container to build the project instead of installing the prebuilt libraries and binaries:
$ ./run-in-docker.sh make dep jk