# HCL HCL (HashiCorp Configuration Language) is a configuration language built by HashiCorp. The goal of HCL is to build a structured configuration language that is both human and machine friendly for use with command-line tools, but specifically targeted towards DevOps tools, servers, etc. HCL is also fully JSON compatible. That is, JSON can be used as completely valid input to a system expecting HCL. This helps makes systems interoperable with other systems. HCL is heavily inspired by [libucl](https://github.com/vstakhov/libucl), nginx configuration, and others similar. ## Why? A common question when viewing HCL is to ask the question: why not JSON, YAML, etc.? Prior to HCL, the tools we built at [HashiCorp](http://www.hashicorp.com) used a variety of configuration languages from full programming languages such as Ruby to complete data structure languages such as JSON. What we learned is that some people wanted human-friendly configuration languages and some people wanted machine-friendly languages. JSON fits a nice balance in this, but is fairly verbose and most importantly doesn't support comments. With YAML, we found that beginners had a really hard time determining what the actual structure was, and ended up guessing more than not whether to use a hyphen, colon, etc. in order to represent some configuration key. Full programming languages such as Ruby enable complex behavior a configuration language shouldn't usually allow, and also forces people to learn some set of Ruby. Because of this, we decided to create our own configuration language that is JSON-compatible. Our configuration language (HCL) is designed to be written and modified by humans. The API for HCL allows JSON as an input so that it is also machine-friendly (machines can generate JSON instead of trying to generate HCL). Our goal with HCL is not to alienate other configuration languages. It is instead to provide HCL as a specialized language for our tools, and JSON as the interoperability layer. ## Syntax The complete grammar [can be found here](https://github.com/hashicorp/hcl/blob/master/hcl/parse.y), if you're more comfortable reading specifics, but a high-level overview of the syntax and grammar are listed here. * Single line comments start with `#` or `//` * Multi-line comments are wrapped in `/*` and `*/`. Nested block comments are not allowed. A multi-line comment (also known as a block comment) terminates at the first `*/` found. * Values are assigned with the syntax `key = value` (whitespace doesn't matter). The value can be any primitive: a string, number, boolean, object, or list. * Strings are double-quoted and can contain any UTF-8 characters. Example: `"Hello, World"` * Numbers are assumed to be base 10. If you prefix a number with 0x, it is treated as a hexadecimal. If it is prefixed with 0, it is treated as an octal. Numbers can be in scientific notation: "1e10". * Boolean values: `true`, `false` * Arrays can be made by wrapping it in `[]`. Example: `["foo", "bar", 42]`. Arrays can contain primitives and other arrays, but cannot contain objects. Objects must use the block syntax shown below. Objects and nested objects are created using the structure shown below: ``` variable "ami" { description = "the AMI to use" } ```