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Revision: 1.3
Committed: Mon Oct 28 15:29:28 2013 UTC (10 years, 8 months ago) by root
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# Content
1 NAME
2 Types::Serialiser - simple data types for common serialisation formats
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 DESCRIPTION
6 This module provides some extra datatypes that are used by common
7 serialisation formats such as JSON or CBOR. The idea is to have a
8 repository of simple/small constants and containers that can be shared
9 by different implementations so they become interoperable between each
10 other.
11
12 SIMPLE SCALAR CONSTANTS
13 Simple scalar constants are values that are overloaded to act like
14 simple Perl values, but have (class) type to differentiate them from
15 normal Perl scalars. This is necessary because these have different
16 representations in the serialisation formats.
17
18 BOOLEANS (Types::Serialiser::Boolean class)
19 This type has only two instances, true and false. A natural
20 representation for these in Perl is 1 and 0, but serialisation formats
21 need to be able to differentiate between them and mere numbers.
22
23 $Types::Serialiser::true, Types::Serialiser::true
24 This value represents the "true" value. In most contexts is acts
25 like the number 1. It is up to you whether you use the variable form
26 ($Types::Serialiser::true) or the constant form
27 ("Types::Serialiser::true").
28
29 The constant is represented as a reference to a scalar containing 1
30 - implementations are allowed to directly test for this.
31
32 $Types::Serialiser::false, Types::Serialiser::false
33 This value represents the "false" value. In most contexts is acts
34 like the number 0. It is up to you whether you use the variable form
35 ($Types::Serialiser::false) or the constant form
36 ("Types::Serialiser::false").
37
38 The constant is represented as a reference to a scalar containing 0
39 - implementations are allowed to directly test for this.
40
41 $is_bool = Types::Serialiser::is_bool $value
42 Returns true iff the $value is either $Types::Serialiser::true or
43 $Types::Serialiser::false.
44
45 For example, you could differentiate between a perl true value and a
46 "Types::Serialiser::true" by using this:
47
48 $value && Types::Serialiser::is_bool $value
49
50 $is_true = Types::Serialiser::is_true $value
51 Returns true iff $value is $Types::Serialiser::true.
52
53 $is_false = Types::Serialiser::is_false $value
54 Returns false iff $value is $Types::Serialiser::false.
55
56 ERROR (Types::Serialiser::Error class)
57 This class has only a single instance, "error". It is used to signal an
58 encoding or decoding error. In CBOR for example, and object that
59 couldn't be encoded will be represented by a CBOR undefined value, which
60 is represented by the error value in Perl.
61
62 $Types::Serialiser::error, Types::Serialiser::error
63 This value represents the "error" value. Accessing values of this
64 type will throw an exception.
65
66 The constant is represented as a reference to a scalar containing
67 "undef" - implementations are allowed to directly test for this.
68
69 $is_error = Types::Serialiser::is_error $value
70 Returns false iff $value is $Types::Serialiser::error.
71
72 NOTES FOR XS USERS
73 The recommended way to detect whether a scalar is one of these objects
74 is to check whether the stash is the "Types::Serialiser::Boolean" or
75 "Types::Serialiser::Error" stash, and then follow the scalar reference
76 to see if it's 1 (true), 0 (false) or "undef" (error).
77
78 While it is possible to use an isa test, directly comparing stash
79 pointers is faster and guaranteed to work.
80
81 For historical reasons, the "Types::Serialiser::Boolean" stash is just
82 an alias for "JSON::PP::Boolean". When printed, the classname withh
83 usually be "JSON::PP::Boolean", but isa tests and stash pointer
84 comparison will normally work correctly (i.e. Types::Serialiser::true
85 ISA JSON::PP::Boolean, but also ISA Types::Serialiser::Boolean).
86
87 A GENERIC OBJECT SERIALIATION PROTOCOL
88 This section explains the object serialisation protocol used by
89 CBOR::XS. It is meant to be generic enough to support any kind of
90 generic object serialiser.
91
92 This protocol is called "the Types::Serialiser object serialisation
93 protocol".
94
95 ENCODING
96 When the encoder encounters an object that it cannot otherwise encode
97 (for example, CBOR::XS can encode a few special types itself, and will
98 first attempt to use the special "TO_CBOR" serialisation protocol), it
99 will look up the "FREEZE" method on the object.
100
101 If it exists, it will call it with two arguments: the object to
102 serialise, and a constant string that indicates the name of the
103 serialisationformat. For example CBOR::XS uses "CBOR", and JSON and
104 JSON::XS (or any other JSON serialiser), would use "JSON" as second
105 argument.
106
107 The "FREEZE" method can then return zero or more values to identify the
108 object instance. The serialiser is then supposed to encode the class
109 name and all of these return values (which must be encodable in the
110 format) using the relevant form for perl objects. In CBOR for example,
111 there is a registered tag number for encoded perl objects.
112
113 DECODING
114 When the decoder then encounters such an encoded perl object, it should
115 look up the "THAW" method on the stored classname, and invoke it with
116 the classname, the constant string to identify the format, and all the
117 return values returned by "FREEZE".
118
119 EXAMPLES
120 See the "OBJECT SERIALISATION" section in the CBOR::XS manpage for more
121 details, an example implementation, and code examples.
122
123 Here is an example "FREEZE"/"THAW" method pair:
124
125 sub My::Object::FREEZE {
126 my ($self, $serialiser) = @_;
127
128 ($self->{type}, $self->{id}, $self->{variant})
129 }
130
131 sub My::Object::THAW {
132 my ($class, $serialiser, $type, $id, $variant) = @_;
133
134 $class-<new (type => $type, id => $id, variant => $variant)
135 }
136
137 BUGS
138 The use of overload makes this module much heavier than it should be (on
139 my system, this module: 4kB RSS, overload: 260kB RSS).
140
141 SEE ALSO
142 Currently, JSON::XS and CBOR::XS use these types.
143
144 AUTHOR
145 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
146 http://home.schmorp.de/
147