libyang is a YANG data modelling language parser and toolkit written (and providing API) in C. The library is used e.g. in libnetconf2, Netopeer2 or sysrepo projects.
If you are interested in future plans announcements, please subscribe to the Future Plans issue.
Look into the documentation and the section Transition Manual
. That should help with basic migration and the
ability to compile a project. But to actually make use of the new features, it is required to read through
the whole documentation and the API.
- Parsing (and validating) schemas in YANG format.
- Parsing (and validating) schemas in YIN format.
- Parsing, validating and printing instance data in XML format.
- Parsing, validating and printing instance data in JSON format (RFC 7951).
- Manipulation with the instance data.
- Support for default values in the instance data (RFC 6243).
- Support for YANG extensions.
- Support for YANG Metadata (RFC 7952).
- yanglint - feature-rich YANG tool.
Current implementation covers YANG 1.0 (RFC 6020) as well as YANG 1.1 (RFC 7950).
- C compiler
- cmake >= 2.8.12
- libpcre2 >= 10.21 (including devel package)
- note, that PCRE is supposed to be compiled with unicode support (configure's options
--enable-utf
and--enable-unicode-properties
)
- doxygen (for generating documentation)
- cmocka >= 1.0.0 (for tests)
- valgrind (for enhanced testing)
- gcov (for code coverage)
- lcov (for code coverage)
- genhtml (for code coverage)
- libpcre2 >= 10.21
$ mkdir build; cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make
# make install
Set CC
variable:
$ CC=/usr/bin/clang cmake ..
To change the prefix where the library, headers and any other files are installed,
set CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
variable:
$ cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=/usr ..
Default prefix is /usr/local
.
There are two build modes:
- Release. This generates library for the production use without any debug information.
- Debug. This generates library with the debug information and disables optimization of the code.
The Debug
mode is currently used as the default one. to switch to the
Release
mode, enter at the command line:
$ cmake -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE:String="Release" ..
As for YANG extensions, libyang allows loading extension plugins. By default, the directory to store the plugins is LIBDIR/libyang. To change it, use the following cmake option with the value specifying the desired directory:
$ cmake -DPLUGINS_DIR:PATH=`pwd`"/src/extensions/" ..
The directory path can be also changed runtime via environment variable, e.g.:
$ LIBYANG_EXTENSIONS_PLUGINS_DIR=`pwd`/my/relative/path yanglint
Whenever the latest revision of a schema is supposed to be loaded (import without specific revision), it is performed in the standard way, the first time. By default, every other time when the latest revision of the same schema is needed, the one initially loaded is reused. If you know this can cause problems meaning the latest available revision of a schema can change during operation, you can force libyang to always search for the schema anew by:
$ cmake -DENABLE_LATEST_REVISIONS=OFF ..
Note that, with CMake, if you want to change the compiler or its options after you already ran CMake, you need to clear its cache first - the most simple way to do it is to remove all content from the 'build' directory.
All libyang functions are available via the main header:
#include <libyang/libyang.h>
To compile your program with libyang, it is necessary to link it with libyang using the following linker parameters:
-lyang
Note, that it may be necessary to call ldconfig(8)
after library installation and if the
library was installed into a non-standard path, the path to libyang must be specified to the
linker. To help with setting all the compiler's options, there is libyang.pc
file for
pkg-config(1)
available in the source tree. The file is installed with the library.
If you are using cmake
in you project, it is also possible to use the provided
FindLibYANG.cmake
file to detect presence of the libyang library in the system.
There are no bindings for other languages directly in this project but they are available separately.
libyang project includes a feature-rich tool called yanglint(1)
for validation
and conversion of the schemas and YANG modeled data. The source codes are
located at /tools/lint
and can be used to explore how an
application is supposed to use the libyang library. yanglint(1)
binary as
well as its man page are installed together with the library itself.
There is also README describing some examples of
using yanglint
.
libyang includes several tests built with cmocka. The tests
can be found in tests
subdirectory and they are designed for checking library
functionality after code changes. Additional regression tests done with
a corpus of fuzzing inputs that previously caused crashes are done.
Those are available in tests/fuzz
and are built automatically with the
cmocka unit tests.
The tests are by default built in the Debug
build mode by running
$ make
In case of the Release
mode, the tests are not built by default (it requires
additional dependency), but they can be enabled via cmake option:
$ cmake -DENABLE_BUILD_TESTS=ON ..
Note that if the necessary cmocka headers are not present in the system include paths, tests are not available despite the build mode or cmake's options.
Tests can be run by the make's test
target:
$ make test
Based on the tests run, it is possible to generate code coverage report via the
make's coverage
target:
$ make coverage
Multiple YANG fuzzing targets and fuzzing instructions are available in the
tests/fuzz
directory.
All of the targets can be fuzzed with LLVM's LibFuzzer and AFL, and new targets can easily be added. Asciinema examples which describe the fuzzing setup for both AFL (https://asciinema.org/a/311060) and LibFuzzer (https://asciinema.org/a/311035) are available.