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Revision: 1.36
Committed: Mon Dec 2 06:37:53 2013 UTC (10 years, 5 months ago) by root
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 CBOR::XS - Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR, RFC7049)
4
5 =encoding utf-8
6
7 =head1 SYNOPSIS
8
9 use CBOR::XS;
10
11 $binary_cbor_data = encode_cbor $perl_value;
12 $perl_value = decode_cbor $binary_cbor_data;
13
14 # OO-interface
15
16 $coder = CBOR::XS->new;
17 $binary_cbor_data = $coder->encode ($perl_value);
18 $perl_value = $coder->decode ($binary_cbor_data);
19
20 # prefix decoding
21
22 my $many_cbor_strings = ...;
23 while (length $many_cbor_strings) {
24 my ($data, $length) = $cbor->decode_prefix ($many_cbor_strings);
25 # data was decoded
26 substr $many_cbor_strings, 0, $length, ""; # remove decoded cbor string
27 }
28
29 =head1 DESCRIPTION
30
31 This module converts Perl data structures to the Concise Binary Object
32 Representation (CBOR) and vice versa. CBOR is a fast binary serialisation
33 format that aims to use an (almost) superset of the JSON data model, i.e.
34 when you can represent something useful in JSON, you should be able to
35 represent it in CBOR.
36
37 In short, CBOR is a faster and quite compact binary alternative to JSON,
38 with the added ability of supporting serialisation of Perl objects. (JSON
39 often compresses better than CBOR though, so if you plan to compress the
40 data later and speed is less important you might want to compare both
41 formats first).
42
43 To give you a general idea about speed, with texts in the megabyte range,
44 C<CBOR::XS> usually encodes roughly twice as fast as L<Storable> or
45 L<JSON::XS> and decodes about 15%-30% faster than those. The shorter the
46 data, the worse L<Storable> performs in comparison.
47
48 Regarding compactness, C<CBOR::XS>-encoded data structures are usually
49 about 20% smaller than the same data encoded as (compact) JSON or
50 L<Storable>.
51
52 In addition to the core CBOR data format, this module implements a
53 number of extensions, to support cyclic and shared data structures
54 (see C<allow_sharing> and C<allow_cycles>), string deduplication (see
55 C<pack_strings>) and scalar references (always enabled).
56
57 The primary goal of this module is to be I<correct> and the secondary goal
58 is to be I<fast>. To reach the latter goal it was written in C.
59
60 See MAPPING, below, on how CBOR::XS maps perl values to CBOR values and
61 vice versa.
62
63 =cut
64
65 package CBOR::XS;
66
67 use common::sense;
68
69 our $VERSION = 1.11;
70 our @ISA = qw(Exporter);
71
72 our @EXPORT = qw(encode_cbor decode_cbor);
73
74 use Exporter;
75 use XSLoader;
76
77 use Types::Serialiser;
78
79 our $MAGIC = "\xd9\xd9\xf7";
80
81 =head1 FUNCTIONAL INTERFACE
82
83 The following convenience methods are provided by this module. They are
84 exported by default:
85
86 =over 4
87
88 =item $cbor_data = encode_cbor $perl_scalar
89
90 Converts the given Perl data structure to CBOR representation. Croaks on
91 error.
92
93 =item $perl_scalar = decode_cbor $cbor_data
94
95 The opposite of C<encode_cbor>: expects a valid CBOR string to parse,
96 returning the resulting perl scalar. Croaks on error.
97
98 =back
99
100
101 =head1 OBJECT-ORIENTED INTERFACE
102
103 The object oriented interface lets you configure your own encoding or
104 decoding style, within the limits of supported formats.
105
106 =over 4
107
108 =item $cbor = new CBOR::XS
109
110 Creates a new CBOR::XS object that can be used to de/encode CBOR
111 strings. All boolean flags described below are by default I<disabled>.
112
113 The mutators for flags all return the CBOR object again and thus calls can
114 be chained:
115
116 my $cbor = CBOR::XS->new->encode ({a => [1,2]});
117
118 =item $cbor = $cbor->max_depth ([$maximum_nesting_depth])
119
120 =item $max_depth = $cbor->get_max_depth
121
122 Sets the maximum nesting level (default C<512>) accepted while encoding
123 or decoding. If a higher nesting level is detected in CBOR data or a Perl
124 data structure, then the encoder and decoder will stop and croak at that
125 point.
126
127 Nesting level is defined by number of hash- or arrayrefs that the encoder
128 needs to traverse to reach a given point or the number of C<{> or C<[>
129 characters without their matching closing parenthesis crossed to reach a
130 given character in a string.
131
132 Setting the maximum depth to one disallows any nesting, so that ensures
133 that the object is only a single hash/object or array.
134
135 If no argument is given, the highest possible setting will be used, which
136 is rarely useful.
137
138 Note that nesting is implemented by recursion in C. The default value has
139 been chosen to be as large as typical operating systems allow without
140 crashing.
141
142 See SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS, below, for more info on why this is useful.
143
144 =item $cbor = $cbor->max_size ([$maximum_string_size])
145
146 =item $max_size = $cbor->get_max_size
147
148 Set the maximum length a CBOR string may have (in bytes) where decoding
149 is being attempted. The default is C<0>, meaning no limit. When C<decode>
150 is called on a string that is longer then this many bytes, it will not
151 attempt to decode the string but throw an exception. This setting has no
152 effect on C<encode> (yet).
153
154 If no argument is given, the limit check will be deactivated (same as when
155 C<0> is specified).
156
157 See SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS, below, for more info on why this is useful.
158
159 =item $cbor = $cbor->allow_unknown ([$enable])
160
161 =item $enabled = $cbor->get_allow_unknown
162
163 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then C<encode> will I<not> throw an
164 exception when it encounters values it cannot represent in CBOR (for
165 example, filehandles) but instead will encode a CBOR C<error> value.
166
167 If C<$enable> is false (the default), then C<encode> will throw an
168 exception when it encounters anything it cannot encode as CBOR.
169
170 This option does not affect C<decode> in any way, and it is recommended to
171 leave it off unless you know your communications partner.
172
173 =item $cbor = $cbor->allow_sharing ([$enable])
174
175 =item $enabled = $cbor->get_allow_sharing
176
177 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then C<encode> will not double-encode
178 values that have been referenced before (e.g. when the same object, such
179 as an array, is referenced multiple times), but instead will emit a
180 reference to the earlier value.
181
182 This means that such values will only be encoded once, and will not result
183 in a deep cloning of the value on decode, in decoders supporting the value
184 sharing extension. This also makes it possible to encode cyclic data
185 structures (which need C<allow_cycles> to ne enabled to be decoded by this
186 module).
187
188 It is recommended to leave it off unless you know your
189 communication partner supports the value sharing extensions to CBOR
190 (L<http://cbor.schmorp.de/value-sharing>), as without decoder support, the
191 resulting data structure might be unusable.
192
193 Detecting shared values incurs a runtime overhead when values are encoded
194 that have a reference counter large than one, and might unnecessarily
195 increase the encoded size, as potentially shared values are encode as
196 shareable whether or not they are actually shared.
197
198 At the moment, only targets of references can be shared (e.g. scalars,
199 arrays or hashes pointed to by a reference). Weirder constructs, such as
200 an array with multiple "copies" of the I<same> string, which are hard but
201 not impossible to create in Perl, are not supported (this is the same as
202 with L<Storable>).
203
204 If C<$enable> is false (the default), then C<encode> will encode shared
205 data structures repeatedly, unsharing them in the process. Cyclic data
206 structures cannot be encoded in this mode.
207
208 This option does not affect C<decode> in any way - shared values and
209 references will always be decoded properly if present.
210
211 =item $cbor = $cbor->allow_cycles ([$enable])
212
213 =item $enabled = $cbor->get_allow_cycles
214
215 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then C<decode> will happily decode
216 self-referential (cyclic) data structures. By default these will not be
217 decoded, as they need manual cleanup to avoid memory leaks, so code that
218 isn't prepared for this will not leak memory.
219
220 If C<$enable> is false (the default), then C<decode> will throw an error
221 when it encounters a self-referential/cyclic data structure.
222
223 This option does not affect C<encode> in any way - shared values and
224 references will always be decoded properly if present.
225
226 =item $cbor = $cbor->pack_strings ([$enable])
227
228 =item $enabled = $cbor->get_pack_strings
229
230 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then C<encode> will try not to encode
231 the same string twice, but will instead encode a reference to the string
232 instead. Depending on your data format, this can save a lot of space, but
233 also results in a very large runtime overhead (expect encoding times to be
234 2-4 times as high as without).
235
236 It is recommended to leave it off unless you know your
237 communications partner supports the stringref extension to CBOR
238 (L<http://cbor.schmorp.de/stringref>), as without decoder support, the
239 resulting data structure might not be usable.
240
241 If C<$enable> is false (the default), then C<encode> will encode strings
242 the standard CBOR way.
243
244 This option does not affect C<decode> in any way - string references will
245 always be decoded properly if present.
246
247 =item $cbor = $cbor->validate_utf8 ([$enable])
248
249 =item $enabled = $cbor->get_validate_utf8
250
251 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then C<decode> will validate that
252 elements (text strings) containing UTF-8 data in fact contain valid UTF-8
253 data (instead of blindly accepting it). This validation obviously takes
254 extra time during decoding.
255
256 The concept of "valid UTF-8" used is perl's concept, which is a superset
257 of the official UTF-8.
258
259 If C<$enable> is false (the default), then C<decode> will blindly accept
260 UTF-8 data, marking them as valid UTF-8 in the resulting data structure
261 regardless of whether thats true or not.
262
263 Perl isn't too happy about corrupted UTF-8 in strings, but should
264 generally not crash or do similarly evil things. Extensions might be not
265 so forgiving, so it's recommended to turn on this setting if you receive
266 untrusted CBOR.
267
268 This option does not affect C<encode> in any way - strings that are
269 supposedly valid UTF-8 will simply be dumped into the resulting CBOR
270 string without checking whether that is, in fact, true or not.
271
272 =item $cbor = $cbor->filter ([$cb->($tag, $value)])
273
274 =item $cb_or_undef = $cbor->get_filter
275
276 Sets or replaces the tagged value decoding filter (when C<$cb> is
277 specified) or clears the filter (if no argument or C<undef> is provided).
278
279 The filter callback is called only during decoding, when a non-enforced
280 tagged value has been decoded (see L<TAG HANDLING AND EXTENSIONS> for a
281 list of enforced tags). For specific tags, it's often better to provide a
282 default converter using the C<%CBOR::XS::FILTER> hash (see below).
283
284 The first argument is the numerical tag, the second is the (decoded) value
285 that has been tagged.
286
287 The filter function should return either exactly one value, which will
288 replace the tagged value in the decoded data structure, or no values,
289 which will result in default handling, which currently means the decoder
290 creates a C<CBOR::XS::Tagged> object to hold the tag and the value.
291
292 When the filter is cleared (the default state), the default filter
293 function, C<CBOR::XS::default_filter>, is used. This function simply looks
294 up the tag in the C<%CBOR::XS::FILTER> hash. If an entry exists it must be
295 a code reference that is called with tag and value, and is responsible for
296 decoding the value. If no entry exists, it returns no values.
297
298 Example: decode all tags not handled internally into C<CBOR::XS::Tagged>
299 objects, with no other special handling (useful when working with
300 potentially "unsafe" CBOR data).
301
302 CBOR::XS->new->filter (sub { })->decode ($cbor_data);
303
304 Example: provide a global filter for tag 1347375694, converting the value
305 into some string form.
306
307 $CBOR::XS::FILTER{1347375694} = sub {
308 my ($tag, $value);
309
310 "tag 1347375694 value $value"
311 };
312
313 =item $cbor_data = $cbor->encode ($perl_scalar)
314
315 Converts the given Perl data structure (a scalar value) to its CBOR
316 representation.
317
318 =item $perl_scalar = $cbor->decode ($cbor_data)
319
320 The opposite of C<encode>: expects CBOR data and tries to parse it,
321 returning the resulting simple scalar or reference. Croaks on error.
322
323 =item ($perl_scalar, $octets) = $cbor->decode_prefix ($cbor_data)
324
325 This works like the C<decode> method, but instead of raising an exception
326 when there is trailing garbage after the CBOR string, it will silently
327 stop parsing there and return the number of characters consumed so far.
328
329 This is useful if your CBOR texts are not delimited by an outer protocol
330 and you need to know where the first CBOR string ends amd the next one
331 starts.
332
333 CBOR::XS->new->decode_prefix ("......")
334 => ("...", 3)
335
336 =back
337
338
339 =head1 MAPPING
340
341 This section describes how CBOR::XS maps Perl values to CBOR values and
342 vice versa. These mappings are designed to "do the right thing" in most
343 circumstances automatically, preserving round-tripping characteristics
344 (what you put in comes out as something equivalent).
345
346 For the more enlightened: note that in the following descriptions,
347 lowercase I<perl> refers to the Perl interpreter, while uppercase I<Perl>
348 refers to the abstract Perl language itself.
349
350
351 =head2 CBOR -> PERL
352
353 =over 4
354
355 =item integers
356
357 CBOR integers become (numeric) perl scalars. On perls without 64 bit
358 support, 64 bit integers will be truncated or otherwise corrupted.
359
360 =item byte strings
361
362 Byte strings will become octet strings in Perl (the Byte values 0..255
363 will simply become characters of the same value in Perl).
364
365 =item UTF-8 strings
366
367 UTF-8 strings in CBOR will be decoded, i.e. the UTF-8 octets will be
368 decoded into proper Unicode code points. At the moment, the validity of
369 the UTF-8 octets will not be validated - corrupt input will result in
370 corrupted Perl strings.
371
372 =item arrays, maps
373
374 CBOR arrays and CBOR maps will be converted into references to a Perl
375 array or hash, respectively. The keys of the map will be stringified
376 during this process.
377
378 =item null
379
380 CBOR null becomes C<undef> in Perl.
381
382 =item true, false, undefined
383
384 These CBOR values become C<Types:Serialiser::true>,
385 C<Types:Serialiser::false> and C<Types::Serialiser::error>,
386 respectively. They are overloaded to act almost exactly like the numbers
387 C<1> and C<0> (for true and false) or to throw an exception on access (for
388 error). See the L<Types::Serialiser> manpage for details.
389
390 =item tagged values
391
392 Tagged items consists of a numeric tag and another CBOR value.
393
394 See L<TAG HANDLING AND EXTENSIONS> and the description of C<< ->filter >>
395 for details on which tags are handled how.
396
397 =item anything else
398
399 Anything else (e.g. unsupported simple values) will raise a decoding
400 error.
401
402 =back
403
404
405 =head2 PERL -> CBOR
406
407 The mapping from Perl to CBOR is slightly more difficult, as Perl is a
408 typeless language. That means this module can only guess which CBOR type
409 is meant by a perl value.
410
411 =over 4
412
413 =item hash references
414
415 Perl hash references become CBOR maps. As there is no inherent ordering in
416 hash keys (or CBOR maps), they will usually be encoded in a pseudo-random
417 order. This order can be different each time a hahs is encoded.
418
419 Currently, tied hashes will use the indefinite-length format, while normal
420 hashes will use the fixed-length format.
421
422 =item array references
423
424 Perl array references become fixed-length CBOR arrays.
425
426 =item other references
427
428 Other unblessed references will be represented using
429 the indirection tag extension (tag value C<22098>,
430 L<http://cbor.schmorp.de/indirection>). CBOR decoders are guaranteed
431 to be able to decode these values somehow, by either "doing the right
432 thing", decoding into a generic tagged object, simply ignoring the tag, or
433 something else.
434
435 =item CBOR::XS::Tagged objects
436
437 Objects of this type must be arrays consisting of a single C<[tag, value]>
438 pair. The (numerical) tag will be encoded as a CBOR tag, the value will
439 be encoded as appropriate for the value. You must use C<CBOR::XS::tag> to
440 create such objects.
441
442 =item Types::Serialiser::true, Types::Serialiser::false, Types::Serialiser::error
443
444 These special values become CBOR true, CBOR false and CBOR undefined
445 values, respectively. You can also use C<\1>, C<\0> and C<\undef> directly
446 if you want.
447
448 =item other blessed objects
449
450 Other blessed objects are serialised via C<TO_CBOR> or C<FREEZE>. See
451 L<TAG HANDLING AND EXTENSIONS> for specific classes handled by this
452 module, and L<OBJECT SERIALISATION> for generic object serialisation.
453
454 =item simple scalars
455
456 Simple Perl scalars (any scalar that is not a reference) are the most
457 difficult objects to encode: CBOR::XS will encode undefined scalars as
458 CBOR null values, scalars that have last been used in a string context
459 before encoding as CBOR strings, and anything else as number value:
460
461 # dump as number
462 encode_cbor [2] # yields [2]
463 encode_cbor [-3.0e17] # yields [-3e+17]
464 my $value = 5; encode_cbor [$value] # yields [5]
465
466 # used as string, so dump as string (either byte or text)
467 print $value;
468 encode_cbor [$value] # yields ["5"]
469
470 # undef becomes null
471 encode_cbor [undef] # yields [null]
472
473 You can force the type to be a CBOR string by stringifying it:
474
475 my $x = 3.1; # some variable containing a number
476 "$x"; # stringified
477 $x .= ""; # another, more awkward way to stringify
478 print $x; # perl does it for you, too, quite often
479
480 You can force whether a string ie encoded as byte or text string by using
481 C<utf8::upgrade> and C<utf8::downgrade>):
482
483 utf8::upgrade $x; # encode $x as text string
484 utf8::downgrade $x; # encode $x as byte string
485
486 Perl doesn't define what operations up- and downgrade strings, so if the
487 difference between byte and text is important, you should up- or downgrade
488 your string as late as possible before encoding.
489
490 You can force the type to be a CBOR number by numifying it:
491
492 my $x = "3"; # some variable containing a string
493 $x += 0; # numify it, ensuring it will be dumped as a number
494 $x *= 1; # same thing, the choice is yours.
495
496 You can not currently force the type in other, less obscure, ways. Tell me
497 if you need this capability (but don't forget to explain why it's needed
498 :).
499
500 Perl values that seem to be integers generally use the shortest possible
501 representation. Floating-point values will use either the IEEE single
502 format if possible without loss of precision, otherwise the IEEE double
503 format will be used. Perls that use formats other than IEEE double to
504 represent numerical values are supported, but might suffer loss of
505 precision.
506
507 =back
508
509 =head2 OBJECT SERIALISATION
510
511 This module implements both a CBOR-specific and the generic
512 L<Types::Serialier> object serialisation protocol. The following
513 subsections explain both methods.
514
515 =head3 ENCODING
516
517 This module knows two way to serialise a Perl object: The CBOR-specific
518 way, and the generic way.
519
520 Whenever the encoder encounters a Perl object that it cannot serialise
521 directly (most of them), it will first look up the C<TO_CBOR> method on
522 it.
523
524 If it has a C<TO_CBOR> method, it will call it with the object as only
525 argument, and expects exactly one return value, which it will then
526 substitute and encode it in the place of the object.
527
528 Otherwise, it will look up the C<FREEZE> method. If it exists, it will
529 call it with the object as first argument, and the constant string C<CBOR>
530 as the second argument, to distinguish it from other serialisers.
531
532 The C<FREEZE> method can return any number of values (i.e. zero or
533 more). These will be encoded as CBOR perl object, together with the
534 classname.
535
536 These methods I<MUST NOT> change the data structure that is being
537 serialised. Failure to comply to this can result in memory corruption -
538 and worse.
539
540 If an object supports neither C<TO_CBOR> nor C<FREEZE>, encoding will fail
541 with an error.
542
543 =head3 DECODING
544
545 Objects encoded via C<TO_CBOR> cannot (normally) be automatically decoded,
546 but objects encoded via C<FREEZE> can be decoded using the following
547 protocol:
548
549 When an encoded CBOR perl object is encountered by the decoder, it will
550 look up the C<THAW> method, by using the stored classname, and will fail
551 if the method cannot be found.
552
553 After the lookup it will call the C<THAW> method with the stored classname
554 as first argument, the constant string C<CBOR> as second argument, and all
555 values returned by C<FREEZE> as remaining arguments.
556
557 =head3 EXAMPLES
558
559 Here is an example C<TO_CBOR> method:
560
561 sub My::Object::TO_CBOR {
562 my ($obj) = @_;
563
564 ["this is a serialised My::Object object", $obj->{id}]
565 }
566
567 When a C<My::Object> is encoded to CBOR, it will instead encode a simple
568 array with two members: a string, and the "object id". Decoding this CBOR
569 string will yield a normal perl array reference in place of the object.
570
571 A more useful and practical example would be a serialisation method for
572 the URI module. CBOR has a custom tag value for URIs, namely 32:
573
574 sub URI::TO_CBOR {
575 my ($self) = @_;
576 my $uri = "$self"; # stringify uri
577 utf8::upgrade $uri; # make sure it will be encoded as UTF-8 string
578 CBOR::XS::tag 32, "$_[0]"
579 }
580
581 This will encode URIs as a UTF-8 string with tag 32, which indicates an
582 URI.
583
584 Decoding such an URI will not (currently) give you an URI object, but
585 instead a CBOR::XS::Tagged object with tag number 32 and the string -
586 exactly what was returned by C<TO_CBOR>.
587
588 To serialise an object so it can automatically be deserialised, you need
589 to use C<FREEZE> and C<THAW>. To take the URI module as example, this
590 would be a possible implementation:
591
592 sub URI::FREEZE {
593 my ($self, $serialiser) = @_;
594 "$self" # encode url string
595 }
596
597 sub URI::THAW {
598 my ($class, $serialiser, $uri) = @_;
599
600 $class->new ($uri)
601 }
602
603 Unlike C<TO_CBOR>, multiple values can be returned by C<FREEZE>. For
604 example, a C<FREEZE> method that returns "type", "id" and "variant" values
605 would cause an invocation of C<THAW> with 5 arguments:
606
607 sub My::Object::FREEZE {
608 my ($self, $serialiser) = @_;
609
610 ($self->{type}, $self->{id}, $self->{variant})
611 }
612
613 sub My::Object::THAW {
614 my ($class, $serialiser, $type, $id, $variant) = @_;
615
616 $class-<new (type => $type, id => $id, variant => $variant)
617 }
618
619
620 =head1 MAGIC HEADER
621
622 There is no way to distinguish CBOR from other formats
623 programmatically. To make it easier to distinguish CBOR from other
624 formats, the CBOR specification has a special "magic string" that can be
625 prepended to any CBOR string without changing its meaning.
626
627 This string is available as C<$CBOR::XS::MAGIC>. This module does not
628 prepend this string to the CBOR data it generates, but it will ignore it
629 if present, so users can prepend this string as a "file type" indicator as
630 required.
631
632
633 =head1 THE CBOR::XS::Tagged CLASS
634
635 CBOR has the concept of tagged values - any CBOR value can be tagged with
636 a numeric 64 bit number, which are centrally administered.
637
638 C<CBOR::XS> handles a few tags internally when en- or decoding. You can
639 also create tags yourself by encoding C<CBOR::XS::Tagged> objects, and the
640 decoder will create C<CBOR::XS::Tagged> objects itself when it hits an
641 unknown tag.
642
643 These objects are simply blessed array references - the first member of
644 the array being the numerical tag, the second being the value.
645
646 You can interact with C<CBOR::XS::Tagged> objects in the following ways:
647
648 =over 4
649
650 =item $tagged = CBOR::XS::tag $tag, $value
651
652 This function(!) creates a new C<CBOR::XS::Tagged> object using the given
653 C<$tag> (0..2**64-1) to tag the given C<$value> (which can be any Perl
654 value that can be encoded in CBOR, including serialisable Perl objects and
655 C<CBOR::XS::Tagged> objects).
656
657 =item $tagged->[0]
658
659 =item $tagged->[0] = $new_tag
660
661 =item $tag = $tagged->tag
662
663 =item $new_tag = $tagged->tag ($new_tag)
664
665 Access/mutate the tag.
666
667 =item $tagged->[1]
668
669 =item $tagged->[1] = $new_value
670
671 =item $value = $tagged->value
672
673 =item $new_value = $tagged->value ($new_value)
674
675 Access/mutate the tagged value.
676
677 =back
678
679 =cut
680
681 sub tag($$) {
682 bless [@_], CBOR::XS::Tagged::;
683 }
684
685 sub CBOR::XS::Tagged::tag {
686 $_[0][0] = $_[1] if $#_;
687 $_[0][0]
688 }
689
690 sub CBOR::XS::Tagged::value {
691 $_[0][1] = $_[1] if $#_;
692 $_[0][1]
693 }
694
695 =head2 EXAMPLES
696
697 Here are some examples of C<CBOR::XS::Tagged> uses to tag objects.
698
699 You can look up CBOR tag value and emanings in the IANA registry at
700 L<http://www.iana.org/assignments/cbor-tags/cbor-tags.xhtml>.
701
702 Prepend a magic header (C<$CBOR::XS::MAGIC>):
703
704 my $cbor = encode_cbor CBOR::XS::tag 55799, $value;
705 # same as:
706 my $cbor = $CBOR::XS::MAGIC . encode_cbor $value;
707
708 Serialise some URIs and a regex in an array:
709
710 my $cbor = encode_cbor [
711 (CBOR::XS::tag 32, "http://www.nethype.de/"),
712 (CBOR::XS::tag 32, "http://software.schmorp.de/"),
713 (CBOR::XS::tag 35, "^[Pp][Ee][Rr][lL]\$"),
714 ];
715
716 Wrap CBOR data in CBOR:
717
718 my $cbor_cbor = encode_cbor
719 CBOR::XS::tag 24,
720 encode_cbor [1, 2, 3];
721
722 =head1 TAG HANDLING AND EXTENSIONS
723
724 This section describes how this module handles specific tagged values
725 and extensions. If a tag is not mentioned here and no additional filters
726 are provided for it, then the default handling applies (creating a
727 CBOR::XS::Tagged object on decoding, and only encoding the tag when
728 explicitly requested).
729
730 Tags not handled specifically are currently converted into a
731 L<CBOR::XS::Tagged> object, which is simply a blessed array reference
732 consisting of the numeric tag value followed by the (decoded) CBOR value.
733
734 Future versions of this module reserve the right to special case
735 additional tags (such as base64url).
736
737 =head2 ENFORCED TAGS
738
739 These tags are always handled when decoding, and their handling cannot be
740 overriden by the user.
741
742 =over 4
743
744 =item 26 (perl-object, L<http://cbor.schmorp.de/perl-object>)
745
746 These tags are automatically created (and decoded) for serialisable
747 objects using the C<FREEZE/THAW> methods (the L<Types::Serialier> object
748 serialisation protocol). See L<OBJECT SERIALISATION> for details.
749
750 =item 28, 29 (shareable, sharedref, L <http://cbor.schmorp.de/value-sharing>)
751
752 These tags are automatically decoded when encountered (and they do not
753 result in a cyclic data structure, see C<allow_cycles>), resulting in
754 shared values in the decoded object. They are only encoded, however, when
755 C<allow_sharing> is enabled.
756
757 Not all shared values can be successfully decoded: values that reference
758 themselves will I<currently> decode as C<undef> (this is not the same
759 as a reference pointing to itself, which will be represented as a value
760 that contains an indirect reference to itself - these will be decoded
761 properly).
762
763 Note that considerably more shared value data structures can be decoded
764 than will be encoded - currently, only values pointed to by references
765 will be shared, others will not. While non-reference shared values can be
766 generated in Perl with some effort, they were considered too unimportant
767 to be supported in the encoder. The decoder, however, will decode these
768 values as shared values.
769
770 =item 256, 25 (stringref-namespace, stringref, L <http://cbor.schmorp.de/stringref>)
771
772 These tags are automatically decoded when encountered. They are only
773 encoded, however, when C<pack_strings> is enabled.
774
775 =item 22098 (indirection, L<http://cbor.schmorp.de/indirection>)
776
777 This tag is automatically generated when a reference are encountered (with
778 the exception of hash and array refernces). It is converted to a reference
779 when decoding.
780
781 =item 55799 (self-describe CBOR, RFC 7049)
782
783 This value is not generated on encoding (unless explicitly requested by
784 the user), and is simply ignored when decoding.
785
786 =back
787
788 =head2 NON-ENFORCED TAGS
789
790 These tags have default filters provided when decoding. Their handling can
791 be overriden by changing the C<%CBOR::XS::FILTER> entry for the tag, or by
792 providing a custom C<filter> callback when decoding.
793
794 When they result in decoding into a specific Perl class, the module
795 usually provides a corresponding C<TO_CBOR> method as well.
796
797 When any of these need to load additional modules that are not part of the
798 perl core distribution (e.g. L<URI>), it is (currently) up to the user to
799 provide these modules. The decoding usually fails with an exception if the
800 required module cannot be loaded.
801
802 =over 4
803
804 =item 0, 1 (date/time string, seconds since the epoch)
805
806 These tags are decoded into L<Time::Piece> objects. The corresponding
807 C<Time::Piece::TO_CBOR> method always encodes into tag 1 values currently.
808
809 The L<Time::Piece> API is generally surprisingly bad, and fractional
810 seconds are only accidentally kept intact, so watch out. On the plus side,
811 the module comes with perl since 5.10, which has to count for something.
812
813 =item 2, 3 (positive/negative bignum)
814
815 These tags are decoded into L<Math::BigInt> objects. The corresponding
816 C<Math::BigInt::TO_CBOR> method encodes "small" bigints into normal CBOR
817 integers, and others into positive/negative CBOR bignums.
818
819 =item 4, 5 (decimal fraction/bigfloat)
820
821 Both decimal fractions and bigfloats are decoded into L<Math::BigFloat>
822 objects. The corresponding C<Math::BigFloat::TO_CBOR> method I<always>
823 encodes into a decimal fraction.
824
825 CBOR cannot represent bigfloats with I<very> large exponents - conversion
826 of such big float objects is undefined.
827
828 Also, NaN and infinities are not encoded properly.
829
830 =item 21, 22, 23 (expected later JSON conversion)
831
832 CBOR::XS is not a CBOR-to-JSON converter, and will simply ignore these
833 tags.
834
835 =item 32 (URI)
836
837 These objects decode into L<URI> objects. The corresponding
838 C<URI::TO_CBOR> method again results in a CBOR URI value.
839
840 =back
841
842 =cut
843
844 our %FILTER = (
845 # 0 # rfc4287 datetime, utf-8
846 # 1 # unix timestamp, any
847
848 2 => sub { # pos bigint
849 require Math::BigInt;
850 Math::BigInt->new ("0x" . unpack "H*", pop)
851 },
852
853 3 => sub { # neg bigint
854 require Math::BigInt;
855 -Math::BigInt->new ("0x" . unpack "H*", pop)
856 },
857
858 4 => sub { # decimal fraction, array
859 require Math::BigFloat;
860 Math::BigFloat->new ($_[1][1] . "E" . $_[1][0])
861 },
862
863 5 => sub { # bigfloat, array
864 require Math::BigFloat;
865 scalar Math::BigFloat->new ($_[1][1])->blsft ($_[1][0], 2)
866 },
867
868 21 => sub { pop }, # expected conversion to base64url encoding
869 22 => sub { pop }, # expected conversion to base64 encoding
870 23 => sub { pop }, # expected conversion to base16 encoding
871
872 # 24 # embedded cbor, byte string
873
874 32 => sub {
875 require URI;
876 URI->new (pop)
877 },
878
879 # 33 # base64url rfc4648, utf-8
880 # 34 # base64 rfc46484, utf-8
881 # 35 # regex pcre/ecma262, utf-8
882 # 36 # mime message rfc2045, utf-8
883 );
884
885
886 =head1 CBOR and JSON
887
888 CBOR is supposed to implement a superset of the JSON data model, and is,
889 with some coercion, able to represent all JSON texts (something that other
890 "binary JSON" formats such as BSON generally do not support).
891
892 CBOR implements some extra hints and support for JSON interoperability,
893 and the spec offers further guidance for conversion between CBOR and
894 JSON. None of this is currently implemented in CBOR, and the guidelines
895 in the spec do not result in correct round-tripping of data. If JSON
896 interoperability is improved in the future, then the goal will be to
897 ensure that decoded JSON data will round-trip encoding and decoding to
898 CBOR intact.
899
900
901 =head1 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
902
903 When you are using CBOR in a protocol, talking to untrusted potentially
904 hostile creatures requires relatively few measures.
905
906 First of all, your CBOR decoder should be secure, that is, should not have
907 any buffer overflows. Obviously, this module should ensure that and I am
908 trying hard on making that true, but you never know.
909
910 Second, you need to avoid resource-starving attacks. That means you should
911 limit the size of CBOR data you accept, or make sure then when your
912 resources run out, that's just fine (e.g. by using a separate process that
913 can crash safely). The size of a CBOR string in octets is usually a good
914 indication of the size of the resources required to decode it into a Perl
915 structure. While CBOR::XS can check the size of the CBOR text, it might be
916 too late when you already have it in memory, so you might want to check
917 the size before you accept the string.
918
919 Third, CBOR::XS recurses using the C stack when decoding objects and
920 arrays. The C stack is a limited resource: for instance, on my amd64
921 machine with 8MB of stack size I can decode around 180k nested arrays but
922 only 14k nested CBOR objects (due to perl itself recursing deeply on croak
923 to free the temporary). If that is exceeded, the program crashes. To be
924 conservative, the default nesting limit is set to 512. If your process
925 has a smaller stack, you should adjust this setting accordingly with the
926 C<max_depth> method.
927
928 Something else could bomb you, too, that I forgot to think of. In that
929 case, you get to keep the pieces. I am always open for hints, though...
930
931 Also keep in mind that CBOR::XS might leak contents of your Perl data
932 structures in its error messages, so when you serialise sensitive
933 information you might want to make sure that exceptions thrown by CBOR::XS
934 will not end up in front of untrusted eyes.
935
936 =head1 CBOR IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
937
938 This section contains some random implementation notes. They do not
939 describe guaranteed behaviour, but merely behaviour as-is implemented
940 right now.
941
942 64 bit integers are only properly decoded when Perl was built with 64 bit
943 support.
944
945 Strings and arrays are encoded with a definite length. Hashes as well,
946 unless they are tied (or otherwise magical).
947
948 Only the double data type is supported for NV data types - when Perl uses
949 long double to represent floating point values, they might not be encoded
950 properly. Half precision types are accepted, but not encoded.
951
952 Strict mode and canonical mode are not implemented.
953
954
955 =head1 LIMITATIONS ON PERLS WITHOUT 64-BIT INTEGER SUPPORT
956
957 On perls that were built without 64 bit integer support (these are rare
958 nowadays, even on 32 bit architectures), support for any kind of 64 bit
959 integer in CBOR is very limited - most likely, these 64 bit values will
960 be truncated, corrupted, or otherwise not decoded correctly. This also
961 includes string, array and map sizes that are stored as 64 bit integers.
962
963
964 =head1 THREADS
965
966 This module is I<not> guaranteed to be thread safe and there are no
967 plans to change this until Perl gets thread support (as opposed to the
968 horribly slow so-called "threads" which are simply slow and bloated
969 process simulations - use fork, it's I<much> faster, cheaper, better).
970
971 (It might actually work, but you have been warned).
972
973
974 =head1 BUGS
975
976 While the goal of this module is to be correct, that unfortunately does
977 not mean it's bug-free, only that I think its design is bug-free. If you
978 keep reporting bugs they will be fixed swiftly, though.
979
980 Please refrain from using rt.cpan.org or any other bug reporting
981 service. I put the contact address into my modules for a reason.
982
983 =cut
984
985 our %FILTER = (
986 0 => sub { # rfc4287 datetime, utf-8
987 require Time::Piece;
988 # Time::Piece::Strptime uses the "incredibly flexible date parsing routine"
989 # from FreeBSD, which can't parse ISO 8601, RFC3339, RFC4287 or much of anything
990 # else either. Whats incredibe over standard strptime totally escapes me.
991 # doesn't do fractional times, either. sigh.
992 # In fact, it's all a lie, it uses whatever strptime it wants, and of course,
993 # they are all incomptible. The openbsd one simply ignores %z (but according to the
994 # docs, it would be much more incredibly flexible).
995 scalar eval {
996 my $s = $_[1];
997
998 $s =~ s/Z$/+00:00/;
999 $s =~ s/(\.[0-9]+)?([+-][0-9][0-9]):([0-9][0-9])$//
1000 or die;
1001
1002 my $b = $1 - ($2 * 60 + $3) * 60; # fractional part + offset. hopefully
1003 my $d = Time::Piece->strptime ($s, "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S");
1004
1005 Time::Piece::gmtime ($d->epoch + $b)
1006 } || die "corrupted CBOR date/time string ($_[0])";
1007 },
1008
1009 1 => sub { # seconds since the epoch, possibly fractional
1010 require Time::Piece;
1011 scalar Time::Piece::gmtime (pop)
1012 },
1013
1014 2 => sub { # pos bigint
1015 require Math::BigInt;
1016 Math::BigInt->new ("0x" . unpack "H*", pop)
1017 },
1018
1019 3 => sub { # neg bigint
1020 require Math::BigInt;
1021 -Math::BigInt->new ("0x" . unpack "H*", pop)
1022 },
1023
1024 4 => sub { # decimal fraction, array
1025 require Math::BigFloat;
1026 Math::BigFloat->new ($_[1][1] . "E" . $_[1][0])
1027 },
1028
1029 5 => sub { # bigfloat, array
1030 require Math::BigFloat;
1031 scalar Math::BigFloat->new ($_[1][1])->blsft ($_[1][0], 2)
1032 },
1033
1034 21 => sub { pop }, # expected conversion to base64url encoding
1035 22 => sub { pop }, # expected conversion to base64 encoding
1036 23 => sub { pop }, # expected conversion to base16 encoding
1037
1038 # 24 # embedded cbor, byte string
1039
1040 32 => sub {
1041 require URI;
1042 URI->new (pop)
1043 },
1044
1045 # 33 # base64url rfc4648, utf-8
1046 # 34 # base64 rfc46484, utf-8
1047 # 35 # regex pcre/ecma262, utf-8
1048 # 36 # mime message rfc2045, utf-8
1049 );
1050
1051 sub CBOR::XS::default_filter {
1052 &{ $FILTER{$_[0]} or return }
1053 }
1054
1055 sub URI::TO_CBOR {
1056 my $uri = $_[0]->as_string;
1057 utf8::upgrade $uri;
1058 tag 32, $uri
1059 }
1060
1061 sub Math::BigInt::TO_CBOR {
1062 if ($_[0] >= -2147483648 && $_[0] <= 2147483647) {
1063 $_[0]->numify
1064 } else {
1065 my $hex = substr $_[0]->as_hex, 2;
1066 $hex = "0$hex" if 1 & length $hex; # sigh
1067 tag $_[0] >= 0 ? 2 : 3, pack "H*", $hex
1068 }
1069 }
1070
1071 sub Math::BigFloat::TO_CBOR {
1072 my ($m, $e) = $_[0]->parts;
1073 tag 4, [$e->numify, $m]
1074 }
1075
1076 sub Time::Piece::TO_CBOR {
1077 tag 1, $_[0]->epoch
1078 }
1079
1080 XSLoader::load "CBOR::XS", $VERSION;
1081
1082 =head1 SEE ALSO
1083
1084 The L<JSON> and L<JSON::XS> modules that do similar, but human-readable,
1085 serialisation.
1086
1087 The L<Types::Serialiser> module provides the data model for true, false
1088 and error values.
1089
1090 =head1 AUTHOR
1091
1092 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
1093 http://home.schmorp.de/
1094
1095 =cut
1096
1097 1
1098