You can use:
jq 'keys' file.json
Complete example
$ cat file.json
{ "Archiver-Version" : "Plexus Archiver", "Build-Id" : "", "Build-Jdk" : "1.7.0_07", "Build-Number" : "", "Build-Tag" : "", "Built-By" : "cporter", "Created-By" : "Apache Maven", "Implementation-Title" : "northstar", "Implementation-Vendor-Id" : "com.test.testPack", "Implementation-Version" : "testBox", "Manifest-Version" : "1.0", "appname" : "testApp", "build-date" : "02-03-2014-13:41", "version" : "testBox" }
$ jq 'keys' file.json
[
"Archiver-Version",
"Build-Id",
"Build-Jdk",
"Build-Number",
"Build-Tag",
"Built-By",
"Created-By",
"Implementation-Title",
"Implementation-Vendor-Id",
"Implementation-Version",
"Manifest-Version",
"appname",
"build-date",
"version"
]
UPDATE: To create a BASH array using these keys:
Using BASH 4+:
mapfile -t arr < <(jq -r 'keys[]' ms.json)
On older BASH you can do:
arr=()
while IFS='' read -r line; do
arr+=("$line")
done < <(jq 'keys[]' ms.json)
Then print it:
printf "%s
" ${arr[@]}
"Archiver-Version"
"Build-Id"
"Build-Jdk"
"Build-Number"
"Build-Tag"
"Built-By"
"Created-By"
"Implementation-Title"
"Implementation-Vendor-Id"
"Implementation-Version"
"Manifest-Version"
"appname"
"build-date"
"version"
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