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Revision: 1.16
Committed: Sat Mar 24 02:23:51 2007 UTC (17 years, 1 month ago) by root
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# Content
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 # exported functions, croak on error
10
11 $utf8_encoded_json_text = to_json $perl_hash_or_arrayref;
12 $perl_hash_or_arrayref = from_json $utf8_encoded_json_text;
13
14 # oo-interface
15
16 $coder = JSON::XS->new->ascii->pretty->allow_nonref;
17 $pretty_printed_unencoded = $coder->encode ($perl_scalar);
18 $perl_scalar = $coder->decode ($unicode_json_text);
19
20 =head1 DESCRIPTION
21
22 This module converts Perl data structures to JSON and vice versa. Its
23 primary goal is to be I<correct> and its secondary goal is to be
24 I<fast>. To reach the latter goal it was written in C.
25
26 As this is the n-th-something JSON module on CPAN, what was the reason
27 to write yet another JSON module? While it seems there are many JSON
28 modules, none of them correctly handle all corner cases, and in most cases
29 their maintainers are unresponsive, gone missing, or not listening to bug
30 reports for other reasons.
31
32 See COMPARISON, below, for a comparison to some other JSON modules.
33
34 See MAPPING, below, on how JSON::XS maps perl values to JSON values and
35 vice versa.
36
37 =head2 FEATURES
38
39 =over 4
40
41 =item * correct handling of unicode issues
42
43 This module knows how to handle Unicode, and even documents how and when
44 it does so.
45
46 =item * round-trip integrity
47
48 When you serialise a perl data structure using only datatypes supported
49 by JSON, the deserialised data structure is identical on the Perl level.
50 (e.g. the string "2.0" doesn't suddenly become "2").
51
52 =item * strict checking of JSON correctness
53
54 There is no guessing, no generating of illegal JSON texts by default,
55 and only JSON is accepted as input by default (the latter is a security
56 feature).
57
58 =item * fast
59
60 Compared to other JSON modules, this module compares favourably in terms
61 of speed, too.
62
63 =item * simple to use
64
65 This module has both a simple functional interface as well as an OO
66 interface.
67
68 =item * reasonably versatile output formats
69
70 You can choose between the most compact guarenteed single-line format
71 possible (nice for simple line-based protocols), a pure-ascii format (for
72 when your transport is not 8-bit clean), or a pretty-printed format (for
73 when you want to read that stuff). Or you can combine those features in
74 whatever way you like.
75
76 =back
77
78 =cut
79
80 package JSON::XS;
81
82 BEGIN {
83 $VERSION = '0.31';
84 @ISA = qw(Exporter);
85
86 @EXPORT = qw(to_json from_json);
87 require Exporter;
88
89 require XSLoader;
90 XSLoader::load JSON::XS::, $VERSION;
91 }
92
93 =head1 FUNCTIONAL INTERFACE
94
95 The following convinience methods are provided by this module. They are
96 exported by default:
97
98 =over 4
99
100 =item $json_text = to_json $perl_scalar
101
102 Converts the given Perl data structure (a simple scalar or a reference to
103 a hash or array) to a UTF-8 encoded, binary string (that is, the string contains
104 octets only). Croaks on error.
105
106 This function call is functionally identical to:
107
108 $json_text = JSON::XS->new->utf8->encode ($perl_scalar)
109
110 except being faster.
111
112 =item $perl_scalar = from_json $json_text
113
114 The opposite of C<to_json>: expects an UTF-8 (binary) string and tries to
115 parse that as an UTF-8 encoded JSON text, returning the resulting simple
116 scalar or reference. Croaks on error.
117
118 This function call is functionally identical to:
119
120 $perl_scalar = JSON::XS->new->utf8->decode ($json_text)
121
122 except being faster.
123
124 =back
125
126 =head1 OBJECT-ORIENTED INTERFACE
127
128 The object oriented interface lets you configure your own encoding or
129 decoding style, within the limits of supported formats.
130
131 =over 4
132
133 =item $json = new JSON::XS
134
135 Creates a new JSON::XS object that can be used to de/encode JSON
136 strings. All boolean flags described below are by default I<disabled>.
137
138 The mutators for flags all return the JSON object again and thus calls can
139 be chained:
140
141 my $json = JSON::XS->new->utf8->space_after->encode ({a => [1,2]})
142 => {"a": [1, 2]}
143
144 =item $json = $json->ascii ([$enable])
145
146 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will not
147 generate characters outside the code range C<0..127> (which is ASCII). Any
148 unicode characters outside that range will be escaped using either a
149 single \uXXXX (BMP characters) or a double \uHHHH\uLLLLL escape sequence,
150 as per RFC4627.
151
152 If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will not escape Unicode
153 characters unless required by the JSON syntax. This results in a faster
154 and more compact format.
155
156 JSON::XS->new->ascii (1)->encode ([chr 0x10401])
157 => ["\ud801\udc01"]
158
159 =item $json = $json->utf8 ([$enable])
160
161 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will encode
162 the JSON result into UTF-8, as required by many protocols, while the
163 C<decode> method expects to be handled an UTF-8-encoded string. Please
164 note that UTF-8-encoded strings do not contain any characters outside the
165 range C<0..255>, they are thus useful for bytewise/binary I/O. In future
166 versions, enabling this option might enable autodetection of the UTF-16
167 and UTF-32 encoding families, as described in RFC4627.
168
169 If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will return the JSON
170 string as a (non-encoded) unicode string, while C<decode> expects thus a
171 unicode string. Any decoding or encoding (e.g. to UTF-8 or UTF-16) needs
172 to be done yourself, e.g. using the Encode module.
173
174 Example, output UTF-16BE-encoded JSON:
175
176 use Encode;
177 $jsontext = encode "UTF-16BE", JSON::XS->new->encode ($object);
178
179 Example, decode UTF-32LE-encoded JSON:
180
181 use Encode;
182 $object = JSON::XS->new->decode (decode "UTF-32LE", $jsontext);
183
184 =item $json = $json->pretty ([$enable])
185
186 This enables (or disables) all of the C<indent>, C<space_before> and
187 C<space_after> (and in the future possibly more) flags in one call to
188 generate the most readable (or most compact) form possible.
189
190 Example, pretty-print some simple structure:
191
192 my $json = JSON::XS->new->pretty(1)->encode ({a => [1,2]})
193 =>
194 {
195 "a" : [
196 1,
197 2
198 ]
199 }
200
201 =item $json = $json->indent ([$enable])
202
203 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will use a multiline
204 format as output, putting every array member or object/hash key-value pair
205 into its own line, identing them properly.
206
207 If C<$enable> is false, no newlines or indenting will be produced, and the
208 resulting JSON text is guarenteed not to contain any C<newlines>.
209
210 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts.
211
212 =item $json = $json->space_before ([$enable])
213
214 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will add an extra
215 optional space before the C<:> separating keys from values in JSON objects.
216
217 If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will not add any extra
218 space at those places.
219
220 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts. You will also
221 most likely combine this setting with C<space_after>.
222
223 Example, space_before enabled, space_after and indent disabled:
224
225 {"key" :"value"}
226
227 =item $json = $json->space_after ([$enable])
228
229 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will add an extra
230 optional space after the C<:> separating keys from values in JSON objects
231 and extra whitespace after the C<,> separating key-value pairs and array
232 members.
233
234 If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will not add any extra
235 space at those places.
236
237 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts.
238
239 Example, space_before and indent disabled, space_after enabled:
240
241 {"key": "value"}
242
243 =item $json = $json->canonical ([$enable])
244
245 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method will output JSON objects
246 by sorting their keys. This is adding a comparatively high overhead.
247
248 If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will output key-value
249 pairs in the order Perl stores them (which will likely change between runs
250 of the same script).
251
252 This option is useful if you want the same data structure to be encoded as
253 the same JSON text (given the same overall settings). If it is disabled,
254 the same hash migh be encoded differently even if contains the same data,
255 as key-value pairs have no inherent ordering in Perl.
256
257 This setting has no effect when decoding JSON texts.
258
259 =item $json = $json->allow_nonref ([$enable])
260
261 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), then the C<encode> method can convert a
262 non-reference into its corresponding string, number or null JSON value,
263 which is an extension to RFC4627. Likewise, C<decode> will accept those JSON
264 values instead of croaking.
265
266 If C<$enable> is false, then the C<encode> method will croak if it isn't
267 passed an arrayref or hashref, as JSON texts must either be an object
268 or array. Likewise, C<decode> will croak if given something that is not a
269 JSON object or array.
270
271 Example, encode a Perl scalar as JSON value with enabled C<allow_nonref>,
272 resulting in an invalid JSON text:
273
274 JSON::XS->new->allow_nonref->encode ("Hello, World!")
275 => "Hello, World!"
276
277 =item $json = $json->shrink ([$enable])
278
279 Perl usually over-allocates memory a bit when allocating space for
280 strings. This flag optionally resizes strings generated by either
281 C<encode> or C<decode> to their minimum size possible. This can save
282 memory when your JSON texts are either very very long or you have many
283 short strings. It will also try to downgrade any strings to octet-form
284 if possible: perl stores strings internally either in an encoding called
285 UTF-X or in octet-form. The latter cannot store everything but uses less
286 space in general.
287
288 If C<$enable> is true (or missing), the string returned by C<encode> will be shrunk-to-fit,
289 while all strings generated by C<decode> will also be shrunk-to-fit.
290
291 If C<$enable> is false, then the normal perl allocation algorithms are used.
292 If you work with your data, then this is likely to be faster.
293
294 In the future, this setting might control other things, such as converting
295 strings that look like integers or floats into integers or floats
296 internally (there is no difference on the Perl level), saving space.
297
298 =item $json_text = $json->encode ($perl_scalar)
299
300 Converts the given Perl data structure (a simple scalar or a reference
301 to a hash or array) to its JSON representation. Simple scalars will be
302 converted into JSON string or number sequences, while references to arrays
303 become JSON arrays and references to hashes become JSON objects. Undefined
304 Perl values (e.g. C<undef>) become JSON C<null> values. Neither C<true>
305 nor C<false> values will be generated.
306
307 =item $perl_scalar = $json->decode ($json_text)
308
309 The opposite of C<encode>: expects a JSON text and tries to parse it,
310 returning the resulting simple scalar or reference. Croaks on error.
311
312 JSON numbers and strings become simple Perl scalars. JSON arrays become
313 Perl arrayrefs and JSON objects become Perl hashrefs. C<true> becomes
314 C<1>, C<false> becomes C<0> and C<null> becomes C<undef>.
315
316 =back
317
318 =head1 MAPPING
319
320 This section describes how JSON::XS maps Perl values to JSON values and
321 vice versa. These mappings are designed to "do the right thing" in most
322 circumstances automatically, preserving round-tripping characteristics
323 (what you put in comes out as something equivalent).
324
325 For the more enlightened: note that in the following descriptions,
326 lowercase I<perl> refers to the Perl interpreter, while uppcercase I<Perl>
327 refers to the abstract Perl language itself.
328
329 =head2 JSON -> PERL
330
331 =over 4
332
333 =item object
334
335 A JSON object becomes a reference to a hash in Perl. No ordering of object
336 keys is preserved (JSON does not preserver object key ordering itself).
337
338 =item array
339
340 A JSON array becomes a reference to an array in Perl.
341
342 =item string
343
344 A JSON string becomes a string scalar in Perl - Unicode codepoints in JSON
345 are represented by the same codepoints in the Perl string, so no manual
346 decoding is necessary.
347
348 =item number
349
350 A JSON number becomes either an integer or numeric (floating point)
351 scalar in perl, depending on its range and any fractional parts. On the
352 Perl level, there is no difference between those as Perl handles all the
353 conversion details, but an integer may take slightly less memory and might
354 represent more values exactly than (floating point) numbers.
355
356 =item true, false
357
358 These JSON atoms become C<0>, C<1>, respectively. Information is lost in
359 this process. Future versions might represent those values differently,
360 but they will be guarenteed to act like these integers would normally in
361 Perl.
362
363 =item null
364
365 A JSON null atom becomes C<undef> in Perl.
366
367 =back
368
369 =head2 PERL -> JSON
370
371 The mapping from Perl to JSON is slightly more difficult, as Perl is a
372 truly typeless language, so we can only guess which JSON type is meant by
373 a Perl value.
374
375 =over 4
376
377 =item hash references
378
379 Perl hash references become JSON objects. As there is no inherent ordering
380 in hash keys, they will usually be encoded in a pseudo-random order that
381 can change between runs of the same program but stays generally the same
382 within a single run of a program. JSON::XS can optionally sort the hash
383 keys (determined by the I<canonical> flag), so the same datastructure
384 will serialise to the same JSON text (given same settings and version of
385 JSON::XS), but this incurs a runtime overhead.
386
387 =item array references
388
389 Perl array references become JSON arrays.
390
391 =item blessed objects
392
393 Blessed objects are not allowed. JSON::XS currently tries to encode their
394 underlying representation (hash- or arrayref), but this behaviour might
395 change in future versions.
396
397 =item simple scalars
398
399 Simple Perl scalars (any scalar that is not a reference) are the most
400 difficult objects to encode: JSON::XS will encode undefined scalars as
401 JSON null value, scalars that have last been used in a string context
402 before encoding as JSON strings and anything else as number value:
403
404 # dump as number
405 to_json [2] # yields [2]
406 to_json [-3.0e17] # yields [-3e+17]
407 my $value = 5; to_json [$value] # yields [5]
408
409 # used as string, so dump as string
410 print $value;
411 to_json [$value] # yields ["5"]
412
413 # undef becomes null
414 to_json [undef] # yields [null]
415
416 You can force the type to be a string by stringifying it:
417
418 my $x = 3.1; # some variable containing a number
419 "$x"; # stringified
420 $x .= ""; # another, more awkward way to stringify
421 print $x; # perl does it for you, too, quite often
422
423 You can force the type to be a number by numifying it:
424
425 my $x = "3"; # some variable containing a string
426 $x += 0; # numify it, ensuring it will be dumped as a number
427 $x *= 1; # same thing, the choise is yours.
428
429 You can not currently output JSON booleans or force the type in other,
430 less obscure, ways. Tell me if you need this capability.
431
432 =item circular data structures
433
434 Those will be encoded until memory or stackspace runs out.
435
436 =back
437
438 =head1 COMPARISON
439
440 As already mentioned, this module was created because none of the existing
441 JSON modules could be made to work correctly. First I will describe the
442 problems (or pleasures) I encountered with various existing JSON modules,
443 followed by some benchmark values. JSON::XS was designed not to suffer
444 from any of these problems or limitations.
445
446 =over 4
447
448 =item JSON 1.07
449
450 Slow (but very portable, as it is written in pure Perl).
451
452 Undocumented/buggy Unicode handling (how JSON handles unicode values is
453 undocumented. One can get far by feeding it unicode strings and doing
454 en-/decoding oneself, but unicode escapes are not working properly).
455
456 No roundtripping (strings get clobbered if they look like numbers, e.g.
457 the string C<2.0> will encode to C<2.0> instead of C<"2.0">, and that will
458 decode into the number 2.
459
460 =item JSON::PC 0.01
461
462 Very fast.
463
464 Undocumented/buggy Unicode handling.
465
466 No roundtripping.
467
468 Has problems handling many Perl values (e.g. regex results and other magic
469 values will make it croak).
470
471 Does not even generate valid JSON (C<{1,2}> gets converted to C<{1:2}>
472 which is not a valid JSON text.
473
474 Unmaintained (maintainer unresponsive for many months, bugs are not
475 getting fixed).
476
477 =item JSON::Syck 0.21
478
479 Very buggy (often crashes).
480
481 Very inflexible (no human-readable format supported, format pretty much
482 undocumented. I need at least a format for easy reading by humans and a
483 single-line compact format for use in a protocol, and preferably a way to
484 generate ASCII-only JSON texts).
485
486 Completely broken (and confusingly documented) Unicode handling (unicode
487 escapes are not working properly, you need to set ImplicitUnicode to
488 I<different> values on en- and decoding to get symmetric behaviour).
489
490 No roundtripping (simple cases work, but this depends on wether the scalar
491 value was used in a numeric context or not).
492
493 Dumping hashes may skip hash values depending on iterator state.
494
495 Unmaintained (maintainer unresponsive for many months, bugs are not
496 getting fixed).
497
498 Does not check input for validity (i.e. will accept non-JSON input and
499 return "something" instead of raising an exception. This is a security
500 issue: imagine two banks transfering money between each other using
501 JSON. One bank might parse a given non-JSON request and deduct money,
502 while the other might reject the transaction with a syntax error. While a
503 good protocol will at least recover, that is extra unnecessary work and
504 the transaction will still not succeed).
505
506 =item JSON::DWIW 0.04
507
508 Very fast. Very natural. Very nice.
509
510 Undocumented unicode handling (but the best of the pack. Unicode escapes
511 still don't get parsed properly).
512
513 Very inflexible.
514
515 No roundtripping.
516
517 Does not generate valid JSON texts (key strings are often unquoted, empty keys
518 result in nothing being output)
519
520 Does not check input for validity.
521
522 =back
523
524 =head2 SPEED
525
526 It seems that JSON::XS is surprisingly fast, as shown in the following
527 tables. They have been generated with the help of the C<eg/bench> program
528 in the JSON::XS distribution, to make it easy to compare on your own
529 system.
530
531 First comes a comparison between various modules using a very short JSON
532 string (83 bytes), showing the number of encodes/decodes per second
533 (JSON::XS is the functional interface, while JSON::XS/2 is the OO
534 interface with pretty-printing and hashkey sorting enabled). Higher is
535 better:
536
537 module | encode | decode |
538 -----------|------------|------------|
539 JSON | 14006 | 6820 |
540 JSON::DWIW | 200937 | 120386 |
541 JSON::PC | 85065 | 129366 |
542 JSON::Syck | 59898 | 44232 |
543 JSON::XS | 1171478 | 342435 |
544 JSON::XS/2 | 730760 | 328714 |
545 -----------+------------+------------+
546
547 That is, JSON::XS is 6 times faster than than JSON::DWIW and about 80
548 times faster than JSON, even with pretty-printing and key sorting.
549
550 Using a longer test string (roughly 18KB, generated from Yahoo! Locals
551 search API (http://nanoref.com/yahooapis/mgPdGg):
552
553 module | encode | decode |
554 -----------|------------|------------|
555 JSON | 673 | 38 |
556 JSON::DWIW | 5271 | 770 |
557 JSON::PC | 9901 | 2491 |
558 JSON::Syck | 2360 | 786 |
559 JSON::XS | 37398 | 3202 |
560 JSON::XS/2 | 13765 | 3153 |
561 -----------+------------+------------+
562
563 Again, JSON::XS leads by far in the encoding case, while still beating
564 every other module in the decoding case.
565
566 On large strings containing lots of unicode characters, some modules
567 (such as JSON::PC) decode faster than JSON::XS, but the result will be
568 broken due to missing unicode handling. Others refuse to decode or encode
569 properly, so it was impossible to prepare a fair comparison table for that
570 case.
571
572 =head1 RESOURCE LIMITS
573
574 JSON::XS does not impose any limits on the size of JSON texts or Perl
575 values they represent - if your machine can handle it, JSON::XS will
576 encode or decode it. Future versions might optionally impose structure
577 depth and memory use resource limits.
578
579 =head1 BUGS
580
581 While the goal of this module is to be correct, that unfortunately does
582 not mean its bug-free, only that I think its design is bug-free. It is
583 still very young and not well-tested. If you keep reporting bugs they will
584 be fixed swiftly, though.
585
586 =cut
587
588 1;
589
590 =head1 AUTHOR
591
592 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
593 http://home.schmorp.de/
594
595 =cut
596