On Thu, Apr 23, 2020 at 3:50 PM Jo-Philipp Wich <j...@mein.io> wrote:
> Hi, > > > [...] > > What I want to do is return a JSON string with this representation: > > [ > > { "interface" : "lan", "uptime" : 11111 }, > > ... > > ] > > > > E.g., I want to filter the json not down to a single value, but to a > > collection of key-value pairs by excluding items that don't match. > > that is not directly possible. You can use the shell export mode together > with > the field separator to build a list of tuples safe for processing, printf > the > intermediate fields and finally use the array mode to build a proper list: > > -- 8< -- > eval $(ubus call network.interface dump | \ > jsonfilter -F ': ' -e > 'tuples=@.interface[@.up=true]["interface","uptime"]') > > for tuple in $tuples; do > printf '{ "%s": %d }\n' "${tuple%:*}" "${tuple#*:}" > done | jsonfilter -a -e @ > -- >8 -- > > Will result in something like the output below: > > [ { "lan": 4409874 }, { "loopback": 4409873 }, { "modem": 803939 }, { > "wan": > 4040845 }, { "wan6": 2681477 } ] > > > Returning subsets of objects is not directly supported unfortunately but > I'll > think about how to add something like this if I find the time. > > ~ Jo > > Thank you very much for the suggestion on using the -F flag, and the printf command. This is less verbose than the jshn.sh script that I wrote in my followup email, so it will probably be what I use for now. Please let me know if I can help with adding more capabilities to the jsonfilter program.
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