The documentation here is for an unreleased version of Recyclarr.
Visit the documentation site for the Current Version instead.Schema Validation
Various YAML files in Recyclarr have accompanying schema files that can be used to validate changes. This is incredibly useful for debugging issues with those YAML files as well as making editing them much easier. You should be interested in this topic if any of the following points apply to you:
- You like to edit your YAML files in Visual Studio Code.
- You want in-editor documentation for various YAML elements as well as which properties can be used where.
- You'd like auto-completion of YAML properties and objects.
- You want to easily spot errors in your YAML documents in response to parsing errors when running Recyclarr or in real time as you edit.
A schema, in this case, defines the shape that YAML must conform to. It's a JSON file that describes the different parts of YAML settings, configuration, and other files that Recyclarr uses.
Schema validation refers to the process of using the schema itself to check for issues in your YAML files.
If you're not a techy-type and any of that makes you dizzy, that's OK. You don't need to worry too much about the specifics. Use the sections below to set up schema validation in VS Code that will help you get all the benefits listed above.
Setting Up VS Code
First you must prepare Visual Studio Code for editing YAML and validating using schemas.
- If you don't already have it, install VS Code. It's available on most platforms.
- Install the YAML Extension in VS Code. Don't know how to install extensions? Watch this.
Enable Schema Validation
To enable schema validation for a particular YAML file that Recyclarr uses, you must add a comment to the very top (line 1) of the file you're editing. This comment will be different depending on the type of YAML file. To find the correct comment to use, refer to the respective YAML reference page linked below.
- Configuration YAML — Applies to
recyclarr.yml
or any YAML files under theconfigs
subdirectory - Settings YAML — Applies to
settings.yml
After adding the comment to the top, you should begin to see contextual editing features as you edit. It will suggest properties you can use and show you documentation for each without having to reference the corresponding reference page.
Custom YAML Tags
If you are editing YAML in VS Code and using custom tags like !secret
or !env_var
, you will get
"Unknown Tag" errors. Remove them by adding the following to VS Code's settings.json
file:
"yaml.customTags": [
"!secret scalar",
"!env_var scalar"
]
The yaml.customTags
setting is documented here.