The expression syntax exposes all of the available capabilities of expressions in Automation Assembler templates.
The following syntax is only partly represented in the examples shown in Automation Assembler expressions.
Literals
The following literals are supported:
- Boolean (true or false)
- Integer
- Floating point
- String
Backslash escapes double quote, single quote, and backslash itself:
"
is escaped as\"
'
is escaped as\'
\
is escaped as\\
Quotes only need to be escaped inside a string enclosed with the same type of quote, as shown in the following example.
"I am a \"double quoted\" string inside \"double quotes\"."
- Null
Environment variables
Environment names:
- orgId
- projectId
- projectName
- deploymentId
- deploymentName
- blueprintId
- blueprintVersion
- blueprintName
- requestedBy (user)
- requestedAt (time)
Syntax:
env.ENV_NAME
Example:
${env.blueprintId}
Resource variables
Resource variables let you bind to resource properties from other resources.
Syntax:
resource.RESOURCE_NAME.PROPERTY_NAME
Resource names cannot contain dashes or dots. Underscores are allowed.
Examples:
${resource.db.id}
${resource.db.networks[0].address}
${resource.app.id}
(Return the string for non-clustered resources, where count isn't specified. Return the array for clustered resources.)${resource.app[0].id}
(Return the first entry for clustered resources.)
Resource self variables
Resource self variables are allowed only for resources supporting the allocation phase. Resource self variables are only available (or only have a value set) after the allocation phase is complete.
Syntax:
self.property_name
Example:
${self.address}
(Return the address assigned during the allocation phase.)
Note that for a resource named resource_x
, self.property_name
and resource.resource_x.property_name
are the same and are both considered self-references.
Conditions
Syntax:
- Equality operators are
==
and!=
. - Relational operators are
<
>
<=
and>=
. - Logical operators are
&&
||
and!
. - Conditionals use the pattern:
condition-expression
?
true-expression :false-expression
Examples:
${input.count < 5 && input.size == 'small'}
${input.count < 2 ? "small":"large"}
Cluster count index
Syntax:
count.index
Examples:
- Return the node type for clustered resources:
${count.index == 0 ? "primary":"secondary"}
- Set the size of each disk during allocation:
inputs: disks: type: array minItems: 0 maxItems: 12 items: type: object properties: size: type: integer title: Size (GB) minSize: 1 maxSize: 2048 resources: Cloud_vSphere_Disk_1: type: Cloud.vSphere.Disk allocatePerInstance: true properties: capacityGb: '${input.disks[count.index].size}' count: '${length(input.disks)}'
- For more examples, see Machine and disk clusters in Automation Assembler.
Arithmetic operators
Syntax:
Operators are +
–
/
*
and %
.
Example:
${(input.count + 5) * 2}
String concatenation
Syntax:
${'ABC' + 'DEF'}
evaluates to ABCDEF
.
Operators [ ] and .
The expression follows ECMAScript in unifying the treatment of the [ ] and . operators.
So, expr.identifier
is equivalent to expr["identifier"]
. The identifier is used to construct a literal whose value is the identifier, and then the [ ] operator is used with that value.
Example:
${resource.app.networks[0].address}
In addition, when a property includes a space, delimit with square brackets and double quotes instead of using dot notation.
Incorrect:
input.operating system
Correct:
input["operating system"]
Construction of map
Syntax:
${{'key1':'value1', 'key2':input.key2}}
Construction of array
Syntax:
${['key1','key2']}
Example:
${[1,2,3]}
Functions
Syntax:
${function(arguments...)}
Example:
${to_lower(resource.app.name)}
Function | Description |
---|---|
abs(number) | Absolute number value |
avg(array) | Return average of all values from array of numbers |
base64_decode(string) | Return decoded base64 value |
base64_encode(string) | Return base64 encoded value |
ceil(number) | Returns the smallest (closest to negative infinity) value that is greater than or equal to the argument and is equal to a mathematical integer |
contains(array, value) | Check if array contains a value |
contains(string, value) | Check if string contains a value |
digest(value, type) | Return digest of value using supported type (md5, sha1, sha256, sha384, sha512) |
ends_with(subject, suffix) | Check if subject string ends with suffix string |
filter_by(array, filter) | Return only the array entries that pass the filter operation
returns
returns |
floor(number) | Returns the largest (closest to positive infinity) value that is less than or equal to the argument and is equal to a mathematical integer |
format(format, values...) | Return a formatted string using Java Class Formatter format and values. |
from_json(string) | Parse json string |
join(array, delim) | Join array of strings with a delimiter and return a string |
json_path(value, path) | Evaluate path against value using XPath for JSON. |
keys(map) | Return keys of map |
length(array) | Return array length |
length(string) | Return string length |
map_by(array, operation) | Return each array entry with an operation applied to it
returns
returns
returns |
map_to_object(array, keyname) | Return an array of key:value pairs of the specified key name paired with values from another array
returns an array of key:value pairs that has a key field called source paired with disk ID strings. Note that If multiple arguments are passed to the map_to_object function, then it returns an array of nested objects, where the keys are part of the nested object, and the values are set on the innermost key.
returns an array of objects in the following format: { "ip" : { "addr" : <value> } } The value of the innermost key is paired with the address of a machine in the Cloud_vSphere_Machine_1 cluster. There is one object per machine in the cluster. If there there are three machines in the cluster, then there are three entries in the object: { "ip": { "addr": <value> } , "ip": { "addr": <value> } , "ip": { "addr": <value> } } |
matches(string, regex) | Check if string matches a regex expression |
max(array) | Return maximum value from array of numbers |
merge(map, map) | Return a merged map |
min(array) | Return minimum value from array of numbers |
not_null(array) | Return the first entry which is not null |
now() | Return current time in ISO-8601 format |
range(start, stop) | Return a series of numbers in increments of 1 that begins with the start number and ends just before the stop number |
replace(string, target, replacement) | Replace string containing target string with target string |
reverse(array) | Reverse entries of array |
slice(array, begin, end) | Return slice of array from begin index to end index |
split(string, delim) | Split string with a delimiter and return array of strings |
starts_with(subject, prefix) | Check if subject string starts with prefix string |
substring(string, begin, end) | Return substring of string from begin index until end index |
sum(array) | Return sum of all values from array of numbers |
to_json(value) | Serialize value as json string |
to_lower(str) | Convert string to lower case |
to_number(string) | Parse string as number |
to_string(value) | Return string representation of the value |
to_upper(str) | Convert string to upper case |
trim(string) | Remove leading and trailing spaces |
url_encode(string) | Encode string using url encoding specification |
uuid() | Return randomly generated UUID |
values(map) | Return values of map |
Troubleshooting
The YAML language uses a colon and space (": ") as the separator between key and value in key-value pairs. Expression syntax depends on YAML, so a space after a colon can sometimes cause an expression to fail.
For example, the space between "win" :
and "lin"
in the following expression causes a failure.
${contains(input.image,"Windows") == true ? "win" : "lin"}
The working expression omits the space.
${contains(input.image,"Windows") == true ? "win" :"lin"}
If an expression continues to fail, try enclosing the entire expression in tick marks as shown.
ezOS: '${contains(input.image,"Windows") == true ? "win" :"lin"}'