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Revision: 1.38
Committed: Wed Jun 6 18:16:52 2007 UTC (16 years, 11 months ago) by root
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CVS Tags: rel-1_23
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# User Rev Content
1 root 1.1 =head1 NAME
2    
3     JSON::XS - JSON serialising/deserialising, done correctly and fast
4    
5     =head1 SYNOPSIS
6    
7     use JSON::XS;
8    
9 root 1.22 # exported functions, they croak on error
10     # and expect/generate UTF-8
11 root 1.12
12     $utf8_encoded_json_text = to_json $perl_hash_or_arrayref;
13     $perl_hash_or_arrayref = from_json $utf8_encoded_json_text;
14    
15 root 1.22 # objToJson and jsonToObj aliases to to_json and from_json
16     # are exported for compatibility to the JSON module,
17     # but should not be used in new code.
18 root 1.21
19 root 1.22 # OO-interface
20 root 1.12
21     $coder = JSON::XS->new->ascii->pretty->allow_nonref;
22     $pretty_printed_unencoded = $coder->encode ($perl_scalar);
23     $perl_scalar = $coder->decode ($unicode_json_text);
24    
25 root 1.1 =head1 DESCRIPTION
26    
27 root 1.2 This module converts Perl data structures to JSON and vice versa. Its
28     primary goal is to be I<correct> and its secondary goal is to be
29     I<fast>. To reach the latter goal it was written in C.
30    
31     As this is the n-th-something JSON module on CPAN, what was the reason
32     to write yet another JSON module? While it seems there are many JSON
33     modules, none of them correctly handle all corner cases, and in most cases
34     their maintainers are unresponsive, gone missing, or not listening to bug
35     reports for other reasons.
36    
37     See COMPARISON, below, for a comparison to some other JSON modules.
38    
39 root 1.10 See MAPPING, below, on how JSON::XS maps perl values to JSON values and
40     vice versa.
41    
42 root 1.2 =head2 FEATURES
43    
44 root 1.1 =over 4
45    
46 root 1.21 =item * correct unicode handling
47 root 1.2
48 root 1.10 This module knows how to handle Unicode, and even documents how and when
49     it does so.
50 root 1.2
51     =item * round-trip integrity
52    
53     When you serialise a perl data structure using only datatypes supported
54     by JSON, the deserialised data structure is identical on the Perl level.
55 root 1.21 (e.g. the string "2.0" doesn't suddenly become "2" just because it looks
56     like a number).
57 root 1.2
58     =item * strict checking of JSON correctness
59    
60 root 1.16 There is no guessing, no generating of illegal JSON texts by default,
61 root 1.10 and only JSON is accepted as input by default (the latter is a security
62     feature).
63 root 1.2
64     =item * fast
65    
66 root 1.10 Compared to other JSON modules, this module compares favourably in terms
67     of speed, too.
68 root 1.2
69     =item * simple to use
70    
71     This module has both a simple functional interface as well as an OO
72     interface.
73    
74     =item * reasonably versatile output formats
75    
76 root 1.10 You can choose between the most compact guarenteed single-line format
77 root 1.21 possible (nice for simple line-based protocols), a pure-ascii format
78     (for when your transport is not 8-bit clean, still supports the whole
79     unicode range), or a pretty-printed format (for when you want to read that
80     stuff). Or you can combine those features in whatever way you like.
81 root 1.2
82     =back
83    
84 root 1.1 =cut
85    
86     package JSON::XS;
87    
88 root 1.20 use strict;
89    
90 root 1.1 BEGIN {
91 root 1.38 our $VERSION = '1.23';
92 root 1.20 our @ISA = qw(Exporter);
93 root 1.1
94 root 1.21 our @EXPORT = qw(to_json from_json objToJson jsonToObj);
95 root 1.1 require Exporter;
96    
97     require XSLoader;
98     XSLoader::load JSON::XS::, $VERSION;
99     }
100    
101 root 1.2 =head1 FUNCTIONAL INTERFACE
102    
103     The following convinience methods are provided by this module. They are
104     exported by default:
105    
106     =over 4
107    
108 root 1.16 =item $json_text = to_json $perl_scalar
109 root 1.2
110     Converts the given Perl data structure (a simple scalar or a reference to
111     a hash or array) to a UTF-8 encoded, binary string (that is, the string contains
112     octets only). Croaks on error.
113    
114 root 1.16 This function call is functionally identical to:
115 root 1.2
116 root 1.16 $json_text = JSON::XS->new->utf8->encode ($perl_scalar)
117    
118     except being faster.
119    
120     =item $perl_scalar = from_json $json_text
121 root 1.2
122     The opposite of C<to_json>: expects an UTF-8 (binary) string and tries to
123 root 1.16 parse that as an UTF-8 encoded JSON text, returning the resulting simple
124 root 1.2 scalar or reference. Croaks on error.
125    
126 root 1.16 This function call is functionally identical to:
127    
128     $perl_scalar = JSON::XS->new->utf8->decode ($json_text)
129    
130     except being faster.
131 root 1.2
132     =back
133    
134 root 1.23
135 root 1.2 =head1 OBJECT-ORIENTED INTERFACE
136    
137     The object oriented interface lets you configure your own encoding or
138     decoding style, within the limits of supported formats.
139    
140     =over 4
141    
142     =item $json = new JSON::XS
143    
144     Creates a new JSON::XS object that can be used to de/encode JSON
145     strings. All boolean flags described below are by default I<disabled>.
146 root 1.1
147 root 1.2 The mutators for flags all return the JSON object again and thus calls can
148     be chained:
149    
150 root 1.16 my $json = JSON::XS->new->utf8->space_after->encode ({a => [1,2]})
151 root 1.3 => {"a": [1, 2]}
152 root 1.2
153 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->ascii ([$enable])
154 root 1.2
155 root 1.16 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will not
156     generate characters outside the code range C<0..127> (which is ASCII). Any
157     unicode characters outside that range will be escaped using either a
158     single \uXXXX (BMP characters) or a double \uHHHH\uLLLLL escape sequence,
159 root 1.32 as per RFC4627. The resulting encoded JSON text can be treated as a native
160     unicode string, an ascii-encoded, latin1-encoded or UTF-8 encoded string,
161     or any other superset of ASCII.
162 root 1.2
163     If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will not escape Unicode
164 root 1.33 characters unless required by the JSON syntax or other flags. This results
165     in a faster and more compact format.
166    
167     The main use for this flag is to produce JSON texts that can be
168     transmitted over a 7-bit channel, as the encoded JSON texts will not
169     contain any 8 bit characters.
170 root 1.2
171 root 1.16 JSON::XS->new->ascii (1)->encode ([chr 0x10401])
172     => ["\ud801\udc01"]
173 root 1.3
174 root 1.33 =item $json = $json->latin1 ([$enable])
175    
176     If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will encode
177     the resulting JSON text as latin1 (or iso-8859-1), escaping any characters
178     outside the code range C<0..255>. The resulting string can be treated as a
179     latin1-encoded JSON text or a native unicode string. The C<decode> method
180     will not be affected in any way by this flag, as C<decode> by default
181     expects unicode, which is a strict superset of latin1.
182    
183     If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will not escape Unicode
184     characters unless required by the JSON syntax or other flags.
185    
186     The main use for this flag is efficiently encoding binary data as JSON
187     text, as most octets will not be escaped, resulting in a smaller encoded
188     size. The disadvantage is that the resulting JSON text is encoded
189     in latin1 (and must correctly be treated as such when storing and
190     transfering), a rare encoding for JSON. It is therefore most useful when
191     you want to store data structures known to contain binary data efficiently
192     in files or databases, not when talking to other JSON encoders/decoders.
193    
194     JSON::XS->new->latin1->encode (["\x{89}\x{abc}"]
195     => ["\x{89}\\u0abc"] # (perl syntax, U+abc escaped, U+89 not)
196    
197 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->utf8 ([$enable])
198 root 1.2
199 root 1.7 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will encode
200 root 1.16 the JSON result into UTF-8, as required by many protocols, while the
201 root 1.7 C<decode> method expects to be handled an UTF-8-encoded string. Please
202     note that UTF-8-encoded strings do not contain any characters outside the
203 root 1.16 range C<0..255>, they are thus useful for bytewise/binary I/O. In future
204     versions, enabling this option might enable autodetection of the UTF-16
205     and UTF-32 encoding families, as described in RFC4627.
206 root 1.2
207     If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will return the JSON
208     string as a (non-encoded) unicode string, while C<decode> expects thus a
209     unicode string. Any decoding or encoding (e.g. to UTF-8 or UTF-16) needs
210     to be done yourself, e.g. using the Encode module.
211    
212 root 1.16 Example, output UTF-16BE-encoded JSON:
213    
214     use Encode;
215     $jsontext = encode "UTF-16BE", JSON::XS->new->encode ($object);
216    
217     Example, decode UTF-32LE-encoded JSON:
218    
219     use Encode;
220     $object = JSON::XS->new->decode (decode "UTF-32LE", $jsontext);
221 root 1.12
222 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->pretty ([$enable])
223 root 1.2
224     This enables (or disables) all of the C<indent>, C<space_before> and
225 root 1.3 C<space_after> (and in the future possibly more) flags in one call to
226 root 1.2 generate the most readable (or most compact) form possible.
227    
228 root 1.12 Example, pretty-print some simple structure:
229    
230 root 1.3 my $json = JSON::XS->new->pretty(1)->encode ({a => [1,2]})
231     =>
232     {
233     "a" : [
234     1,
235     2
236     ]
237     }
238    
239 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->indent ([$enable])
240 root 1.2
241 root 1.7 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will use a multiline
242 root 1.2 format as output, putting every array member or object/hash key-value pair
243     into its own line, identing them properly.
244    
245     If C<$enable> is false, no newlines or indenting will be produced, and the
246 root 1.16 resulting JSON text is guarenteed not to contain any C<newlines>.
247 root 1.2
248 root 1.16 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts.
249 root 1.2
250 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->space_before ([$enable])
251 root 1.2
252 root 1.7 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will add an extra
253 root 1.2 optional space before the C<:> separating keys from values in JSON objects.
254    
255     If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will not add any extra
256     space at those places.
257    
258 root 1.16 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts. You will also
259     most likely combine this setting with C<space_after>.
260 root 1.2
261 root 1.12 Example, space_before enabled, space_after and indent disabled:
262    
263     {"key" :"value"}
264    
265 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->space_after ([$enable])
266 root 1.2
267 root 1.7 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will add an extra
268 root 1.2 optional space after the C<:> separating keys from values in JSON objects
269     and extra whitespace after the C<,> separating key-value pairs and array
270     members.
271    
272     If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will not add any extra
273     space at those places.
274    
275 root 1.16 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts.
276 root 1.2
277 root 1.12 Example, space_before and indent disabled, space_after enabled:
278    
279     {"key": "value"}
280    
281 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->canonical ([$enable])
282 root 1.2
283 root 1.7 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will output JSON objects
284 root 1.2 by sorting their keys. This is adding a comparatively high overhead.
285    
286     If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will output key-value
287     pairs in the order Perl stores them (which will likely change between runs
288     of the same script).
289    
290     This option is useful if you want the same data structure to be encoded as
291 root 1.16 the same JSON text (given the same overall settings). If it is disabled,
292 root 1.2 the same hash migh be encoded differently even if contains the same data,
293     as key-value pairs have no inherent ordering in Perl.
294    
295 root 1.16 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts.
296 root 1.2
297 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->allow_nonref ([$enable])
298 root 1.3
299 root 1.7 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method can convert a
300 root 1.3 non-reference into its corresponding string, number or null JSON value,
301     which is an extension to RFC4627. Likewise, C<decode> will accept those JSON
302     values instead of croaking.
303    
304     If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will croak if it isn't
305 root 1.16 passed an arrayref or hashref, as JSON texts must either be an object
306 root 1.3 or array. Likewise, C<decode> will croak if given something that is not a
307     JSON object or array.
308    
309 root 1.12 Example, encode a Perl scalar as JSON value with enabled C<allow_nonref>,
310     resulting in an invalid JSON text:
311    
312     JSON::XS->new->allow_nonref->encode ("Hello, World!")
313     => "Hello, World!"
314    
315 root 1.7 =item $json = $json->shrink ([$enable])
316    
317     Perl usually over-allocates memory a bit when allocating space for
318 root 1.24 strings. This flag optionally resizes strings generated by either
319 root 1.7 C<encode> or C<decode> to their minimum size possible. This can save
320 root 1.16 memory when your JSON texts are either very very long or you have many
321 root 1.8 short strings. It will also try to downgrade any strings to octet-form
322     if possible: perl stores strings internally either in an encoding called
323     UTF-X or in octet-form. The latter cannot store everything but uses less
324 root 1.24 space in general (and some buggy Perl or C code might even rely on that
325     internal representation being used).
326 root 1.7
327 root 1.24 The actual definition of what shrink does might change in future versions,
328     but it will always try to save space at the expense of time.
329    
330     If C<$enable> is true (or missing), the string returned by C<encode> will
331     be shrunk-to-fit, while all strings generated by C<decode> will also be
332     shrunk-to-fit.
333 root 1.7
334     If C<$enable> is false, then the normal perl allocation algorithms are used.
335     If you work with your data, then this is likely to be faster.
336    
337     In the future, this setting might control other things, such as converting
338     strings that look like integers or floats into integers or floats
339     internally (there is no difference on the Perl level), saving space.
340    
341 root 1.23 =item $json = $json->max_depth ([$maximum_nesting_depth])
342    
343 root 1.28 Sets the maximum nesting level (default C<512>) accepted while encoding
344 root 1.23 or decoding. If the JSON text or Perl data structure has an equal or
345     higher nesting level then this limit, then the encoder and decoder will
346     stop and croak at that point.
347    
348     Nesting level is defined by number of hash- or arrayrefs that the encoder
349     needs to traverse to reach a given point or the number of C<{> or C<[>
350     characters without their matching closing parenthesis crossed to reach a
351     given character in a string.
352    
353     Setting the maximum depth to one disallows any nesting, so that ensures
354     that the object is only a single hash/object or array.
355    
356     The argument to C<max_depth> will be rounded up to the next nearest power
357     of two.
358    
359     See SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS, below, for more info on why this is useful.
360    
361 root 1.16 =item $json_text = $json->encode ($perl_scalar)
362 root 1.2
363     Converts the given Perl data structure (a simple scalar or a reference
364     to a hash or array) to its JSON representation. Simple scalars will be
365     converted into JSON string or number sequences, while references to arrays
366     become JSON arrays and references to hashes become JSON objects. Undefined
367     Perl values (e.g. C<undef>) become JSON C<null> values. Neither C<true>
368     nor C<false> values will be generated.
369 root 1.1
370 root 1.16 =item $perl_scalar = $json->decode ($json_text)
371 root 1.1
372 root 1.16 The opposite of C<encode>: expects a JSON text and tries to parse it,
373 root 1.2 returning the resulting simple scalar or reference. Croaks on error.
374 root 1.1
375 root 1.2 JSON numbers and strings become simple Perl scalars. JSON arrays become
376     Perl arrayrefs and JSON objects become Perl hashrefs. C<true> becomes
377     C<1>, C<false> becomes C<0> and C<null> becomes C<undef>.
378 root 1.1
379 root 1.34 =item ($perl_scalar, $characters) = $json->decode_prefix ($json_text)
380    
381     This works like the C<decode> method, but instead of raising an exception
382     when there is trailing garbage after the first JSON object, it will
383     silently stop parsing there and return the number of characters consumed
384     so far.
385    
386     This is useful if your JSON texts are not delimited by an outer protocol
387     (which is not the brightest thing to do in the first place) and you need
388     to know where the JSON text ends.
389    
390     JSON::XS->new->decode_prefix ("[1] the tail")
391     => ([], 3)
392    
393 root 1.1 =back
394    
395 root 1.23
396 root 1.10 =head1 MAPPING
397    
398     This section describes how JSON::XS maps Perl values to JSON values and
399     vice versa. These mappings are designed to "do the right thing" in most
400     circumstances automatically, preserving round-tripping characteristics
401     (what you put in comes out as something equivalent).
402    
403     For the more enlightened: note that in the following descriptions,
404     lowercase I<perl> refers to the Perl interpreter, while uppcercase I<Perl>
405     refers to the abstract Perl language itself.
406    
407     =head2 JSON -> PERL
408    
409     =over 4
410    
411     =item object
412    
413     A JSON object becomes a reference to a hash in Perl. No ordering of object
414 root 1.14 keys is preserved (JSON does not preserver object key ordering itself).
415 root 1.10
416     =item array
417    
418     A JSON array becomes a reference to an array in Perl.
419    
420     =item string
421    
422     A JSON string becomes a string scalar in Perl - Unicode codepoints in JSON
423     are represented by the same codepoints in the Perl string, so no manual
424     decoding is necessary.
425    
426     =item number
427    
428     A JSON number becomes either an integer or numeric (floating point)
429     scalar in perl, depending on its range and any fractional parts. On the
430     Perl level, there is no difference between those as Perl handles all the
431     conversion details, but an integer may take slightly less memory and might
432     represent more values exactly than (floating point) numbers.
433    
434     =item true, false
435    
436     These JSON atoms become C<0>, C<1>, respectively. Information is lost in
437     this process. Future versions might represent those values differently,
438     but they will be guarenteed to act like these integers would normally in
439     Perl.
440    
441     =item null
442    
443     A JSON null atom becomes C<undef> in Perl.
444    
445     =back
446    
447     =head2 PERL -> JSON
448    
449     The mapping from Perl to JSON is slightly more difficult, as Perl is a
450     truly typeless language, so we can only guess which JSON type is meant by
451     a Perl value.
452    
453     =over 4
454    
455     =item hash references
456    
457     Perl hash references become JSON objects. As there is no inherent ordering
458 root 1.25 in hash keys (or JSON objects), they will usually be encoded in a
459     pseudo-random order that can change between runs of the same program but
460     stays generally the same within a single run of a program. JSON::XS can
461     optionally sort the hash keys (determined by the I<canonical> flag), so
462     the same datastructure will serialise to the same JSON text (given same
463     settings and version of JSON::XS), but this incurs a runtime overhead
464     and is only rarely useful, e.g. when you want to compare some JSON text
465     against another for equality.
466 root 1.10
467     =item array references
468    
469     Perl array references become JSON arrays.
470    
471 root 1.25 =item other references
472    
473     Other unblessed references are generally not allowed and will cause an
474     exception to be thrown, except for references to the integers C<0> and
475     C<1>, which get turned into C<false> and C<true> atoms in JSON. You can
476     also use C<JSON::XS::false> and C<JSON::XS::true> to improve readability.
477    
478     to_json [\0,JSON::XS::true] # yields [false,true]
479    
480 root 1.10 =item blessed objects
481    
482     Blessed objects are not allowed. JSON::XS currently tries to encode their
483     underlying representation (hash- or arrayref), but this behaviour might
484     change in future versions.
485    
486     =item simple scalars
487    
488     Simple Perl scalars (any scalar that is not a reference) are the most
489     difficult objects to encode: JSON::XS will encode undefined scalars as
490     JSON null value, scalars that have last been used in a string context
491     before encoding as JSON strings and anything else as number value:
492    
493     # dump as number
494     to_json [2] # yields [2]
495     to_json [-3.0e17] # yields [-3e+17]
496     my $value = 5; to_json [$value] # yields [5]
497    
498     # used as string, so dump as string
499     print $value;
500     to_json [$value] # yields ["5"]
501    
502     # undef becomes null
503     to_json [undef] # yields [null]
504    
505     You can force the type to be a string by stringifying it:
506    
507     my $x = 3.1; # some variable containing a number
508     "$x"; # stringified
509     $x .= ""; # another, more awkward way to stringify
510     print $x; # perl does it for you, too, quite often
511    
512     You can force the type to be a number by numifying it:
513    
514     my $x = "3"; # some variable containing a string
515     $x += 0; # numify it, ensuring it will be dumped as a number
516     $x *= 1; # same thing, the choise is yours.
517    
518     You can not currently output JSON booleans or force the type in other,
519     less obscure, ways. Tell me if you need this capability.
520    
521     =back
522    
523 root 1.23
524 root 1.3 =head1 COMPARISON
525    
526     As already mentioned, this module was created because none of the existing
527     JSON modules could be made to work correctly. First I will describe the
528     problems (or pleasures) I encountered with various existing JSON modules,
529 root 1.4 followed by some benchmark values. JSON::XS was designed not to suffer
530     from any of these problems or limitations.
531 root 1.3
532     =over 4
533    
534 root 1.5 =item JSON 1.07
535 root 1.3
536     Slow (but very portable, as it is written in pure Perl).
537    
538     Undocumented/buggy Unicode handling (how JSON handles unicode values is
539     undocumented. One can get far by feeding it unicode strings and doing
540     en-/decoding oneself, but unicode escapes are not working properly).
541    
542     No roundtripping (strings get clobbered if they look like numbers, e.g.
543     the string C<2.0> will encode to C<2.0> instead of C<"2.0">, and that will
544     decode into the number 2.
545    
546 root 1.5 =item JSON::PC 0.01
547 root 1.3
548     Very fast.
549    
550     Undocumented/buggy Unicode handling.
551    
552     No roundtripping.
553    
554 root 1.4 Has problems handling many Perl values (e.g. regex results and other magic
555     values will make it croak).
556 root 1.3
557     Does not even generate valid JSON (C<{1,2}> gets converted to C<{1:2}>
558 root 1.16 which is not a valid JSON text.
559 root 1.3
560     Unmaintained (maintainer unresponsive for many months, bugs are not
561     getting fixed).
562    
563 root 1.5 =item JSON::Syck 0.21
564 root 1.3
565     Very buggy (often crashes).
566    
567 root 1.4 Very inflexible (no human-readable format supported, format pretty much
568     undocumented. I need at least a format for easy reading by humans and a
569     single-line compact format for use in a protocol, and preferably a way to
570 root 1.16 generate ASCII-only JSON texts).
571 root 1.3
572     Completely broken (and confusingly documented) Unicode handling (unicode
573     escapes are not working properly, you need to set ImplicitUnicode to
574     I<different> values on en- and decoding to get symmetric behaviour).
575    
576     No roundtripping (simple cases work, but this depends on wether the scalar
577     value was used in a numeric context or not).
578    
579     Dumping hashes may skip hash values depending on iterator state.
580    
581     Unmaintained (maintainer unresponsive for many months, bugs are not
582     getting fixed).
583    
584     Does not check input for validity (i.e. will accept non-JSON input and
585     return "something" instead of raising an exception. This is a security
586     issue: imagine two banks transfering money between each other using
587     JSON. One bank might parse a given non-JSON request and deduct money,
588     while the other might reject the transaction with a syntax error. While a
589     good protocol will at least recover, that is extra unnecessary work and
590     the transaction will still not succeed).
591    
592 root 1.5 =item JSON::DWIW 0.04
593 root 1.3
594     Very fast. Very natural. Very nice.
595    
596     Undocumented unicode handling (but the best of the pack. Unicode escapes
597     still don't get parsed properly).
598    
599     Very inflexible.
600    
601     No roundtripping.
602    
603 root 1.16 Does not generate valid JSON texts (key strings are often unquoted, empty keys
604 root 1.4 result in nothing being output)
605    
606 root 1.3 Does not check input for validity.
607    
608     =back
609    
610     =head2 SPEED
611    
612 root 1.4 It seems that JSON::XS is surprisingly fast, as shown in the following
613     tables. They have been generated with the help of the C<eg/bench> program
614     in the JSON::XS distribution, to make it easy to compare on your own
615     system.
616    
617 root 1.37 First comes a comparison between various modules using a very short
618     single-line JSON string:
619 root 1.18
620 root 1.37 {"method": "handleMessage", "params": ["user1", "we were just talking"], \
621 root 1.38 "id": null, "array":[1,11,234,-5,1e5,1e7, true, false]}
622 root 1.18
623     It shows the number of encodes/decodes per second (JSON::XS uses the
624     functional interface, while JSON::XS/2 uses the OO interface with
625     pretty-printing and hashkey sorting enabled). Higher is better:
626 root 1.4
627     module | encode | decode |
628     -----------|------------|------------|
629 root 1.38 JSON | 7645.468 | 4208.613 |
630     JSON::DWIW | 68534.379 | 79437.576 |
631     JSON::PC | 65948.176 | 78251.940 |
632     JSON::Syck | 23379.621 | 28416.694 |
633     JSON::XS | 388361.481 | 199728.762 |
634     JSON::XS/2 | 218453.333 | 192399.266 |
635     JSON::XS/3 | 338250.323 | 192399.266 |
636     Storable | 15732.573 | 28571.553 |
637 root 1.4 -----------+------------+------------+
638    
639 root 1.37 That is, JSON::XS is about five times faster than JSON::DWIW on encoding,
640 root 1.38 about three times faster on decoding, and over fourty times faster
641 root 1.37 than JSON, even with pretty-printing and key sorting. It also compares
642     favourably to Storable for small amounts of data.
643 root 1.4
644 root 1.13 Using a longer test string (roughly 18KB, generated from Yahoo! Locals
645 root 1.4 search API (http://nanoref.com/yahooapis/mgPdGg):
646    
647     module | encode | decode |
648     -----------|------------|------------|
649 root 1.37 JSON | 254.685 | 37.665 |
650     JSON::DWIW | 1014.244 | 1087.678 |
651     JSON::PC | 3602.116 | 2307.352 |
652     JSON::Syck | 558.035 | 776.263 |
653     JSON::XS | 5747.196 | 3543.684 |
654     JSON::XS/2 | 3968.121 | 3589.170 |
655     JSON::XS/3 | 6105.246 | 3561.134 |
656     Storable | 4456.337 | 5320.020 |
657 root 1.4 -----------+------------+------------+
658    
659 root 1.18 Again, JSON::XS leads by far.
660 root 1.4
661 root 1.18 On large strings containing lots of high unicode characters, some modules
662     (such as JSON::PC) seem to decode faster than JSON::XS, but the result
663     will be broken due to missing (or wrong) unicode handling. Others refuse
664     to decode or encode properly, so it was impossible to prepare a fair
665     comparison table for that case.
666 root 1.13
667 root 1.11
668 root 1.23 =head1 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
669    
670     When you are using JSON in a protocol, talking to untrusted potentially
671     hostile creatures requires relatively few measures.
672    
673     First of all, your JSON decoder should be secure, that is, should not have
674     any buffer overflows. Obviously, this module should ensure that and I am
675     trying hard on making that true, but you never know.
676    
677     Second, you need to avoid resource-starving attacks. That means you should
678     limit the size of JSON texts you accept, or make sure then when your
679     resources run out, thats just fine (e.g. by using a separate process that
680     can crash safely). The size of a JSON text in octets or characters is
681     usually a good indication of the size of the resources required to decode
682     it into a Perl structure.
683    
684     Third, JSON::XS recurses using the C stack when decoding objects and
685     arrays. The C stack is a limited resource: for instance, on my amd64
686 root 1.28 machine with 8MB of stack size I can decode around 180k nested arrays but
687     only 14k nested JSON objects (due to perl itself recursing deeply on croak
688     to free the temporary). If that is exceeded, the program crashes. to be
689     conservative, the default nesting limit is set to 512. If your process
690     has a smaller stack, you should adjust this setting accordingly with the
691     C<max_depth> method.
692 root 1.23
693     And last but least, something else could bomb you that I forgot to think
694 root 1.30 of. In that case, you get to keep the pieces. I am always open for hints,
695 root 1.23 though...
696    
697 root 1.11
698 root 1.4 =head1 BUGS
699    
700     While the goal of this module is to be correct, that unfortunately does
701     not mean its bug-free, only that I think its design is bug-free. It is
702 root 1.23 still relatively early in its development. If you keep reporting bugs they
703     will be fixed swiftly, though.
704 root 1.4
705 root 1.2 =cut
706    
707 root 1.25 sub true() { \1 }
708     sub false() { \0 }
709    
710 root 1.2 1;
711    
712 root 1.1 =head1 AUTHOR
713    
714     Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
715     http://home.schmorp.de/
716    
717     =cut
718