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nim-json-serialization

License: Apache License: MIT Stability: experimental Github action

Flexible JSON serialization does not rely on run-time type information.

Overview

nim-json-serialization offers rich features on top of nim-serialization framework. The following is available but not an exhaustive list of features:

  • Decode into Nim data types efficiently without an intermediate token.
  • Able to parse full spec of JSON including the notorious JSON number.
  • Support stdlib/JsonNode out of the box.
  • While stdlib/JsonNode does not support the full spec of the Json number, we offer an alternative JsonValueRef.
  • Skipping Json value is an efficient process, no token is generated at all and at the same time, the grammar is checked.
    • Skipping is also free from custom serializer interference.
  • An entire Json value can be parsed into a valid Json document string. This string document can be parsed again without losing any information.
  • Custom serialization is easy and safe to implement with the help of many built-in parsers.
  • Nonstandard features are put behind flags. You can choose which features to switch on or off.
  • Because the intended usage of this library will be in a security-demanding application, we make sure malicious inputs will not crash this library through fuzz tests.
  • The user also can tweak certain limits of the lexer/parser behavior using the configuration object.
  • createJsonFlavor is a powerful way to prevent cross contamination between different subsystem using different custom serializar on the same type.

Spec compliance

nim-json-serialization implements RFC8259 JSON spec and pass these test suites:

Switchable features

Many of these switchable features are widely used features in various projects but are not standard JSON features. But you can access them using the flags:

  • allowUnknownFields[=off]: enable unknown fields to be skipped instead of throwing an error.
  • requireAllFields[=off]: if one of the required fields is missing, the serializer will throw an error.
  • escapeHex[=off]: JSON doesn't support \xHH escape sequence, but it is a common thing in many languages.
  • relaxedEscape[=off]: only '0x00'..'0x1F' can be prepended by escape char \\, turn this on and you can escape any char.
  • portableInt[=off]: set the limit of integer to -2**53 + 1 and +2**53 - 1.
  • trailingComma[=on]: allow the presence of a trailing comma after the last object member or array element.
  • allowComments[=on]: JSOn standard doesn't mention about comments. Turn this on to parse both C style comments of //..EOL and /* .. */.
  • leadingFraction[=on]: something like .123 is not a valid JSON number, but its widespread usage sometimes creeps into Json documents.
  • integerPositiveSign[=on]: +123 is also not a valid JSON number, but since -123 is a valid JSON number, why not parse it safely?

Safety features

You can modify these default configurations to suit your needs.

  • nestedDepthLimit: 512: maximum depth of the nested structure, they are a combination of objects and arrays depth(0=disable).
  • arrayElementsLimit: 0: maximum number of allowed array elements(0=disable).
  • objectMembersLimit: 0: maximum number of key-value pairs in an object(0=disable).
  • integerDigitsLimit: 128: limit the maximum digits of the integer part of JSON number.
  • fractionDigitsLimit: 128: limit the maximum digits of faction part of JSON number.
  • exponentDigitsLimit: 32: limit the maximum digits of the exponent part of JSON number.
  • stringLengthLimit: 0: limit the maximum bytes of string(0=disable).

Special types

  • JsonString: Use this type if you want to parse a Json value to a valid Json document contained in a string.
  • JsonVoid: Use this type to skip a valid Json value.
  • JsonNumber: Use this to parse a valid Json number including the fraction and exponent part.
    • Please note that this type is a generic, it support uint64 and string as generic param.
    • The generic param will define the integer and exponent part as uint64 or string.
    • If the generic param is uint64, overflow can happen, or max digit limit will apply.
    • If the generic param is string, the max digit limit will apply.
    • The fraction part is always a string to keep the leading zero of the fractional number.
  • JsonValueRef: Use this type to parse any valid Json value into something like stdlib/JsonNode.
    • JsonValueRef is using JsonNumber instead of int or float like stdlib/JsonNode.

Flavor

While flags and limits are runtime configuration, flavor is a powerful compile time mechanism to prevent cross contamination between different custom serializer operated the same type. For example, json-rpc subsystem dan json-rest subsystem maybe have different custom serializer for the same UInt256.

Json-Flavor will make sure, the compiler picks the right serializer for the right subsystem. You can use useDefaultSerializationIn to add serializers of a flavor to a specific type.

# These are the parameters you can pass to `createJsonFlavor` to create a new flavor.

  FlavorName: untyped
  mimeTypeValue = "application/json"
  automaticObjectSerialization = false
  requireAllFields = true
  omitOptionalFields = true
  allowUnknownFields = true
  skipNullFields = false
type
  OptionalFields = object
    one: Opt[string]
    two: Option[int]

createJsonFlavor OptJson
OptionalFields.useDefaultSerializationIn OptJson

omitOptionalFields is used by the Writer to ignore fields with null value. skipNullFields is used by the Reader to ignore fields with null value.

Decoder example

  type
    NimServer = object
      name: string
      port: int

    MixedServer = object
      name: JsonValueRef
      port: int

    StringServer = object
      name: JsonString
      port: JsonString

  # decode into native Nim
  var nim_native = Json.decode(rawJson, NimServer)

  # decode into mixed Nim + JsonValueRef
  var nim_mixed = Json.decode(rawJson, MixedServer)

  # decode any value into string
  var nim_string = Json.decode(rawJson, StringServer)

  # decode any valid JSON
  var json_value = Json.decode(rawJson, JsonValueRef)

Load and save

  var server = Json.loadFile("filename.json", Server)
  var server_string = Json.loadFile("filename.json", JsonString)

  Json.saveFile("filename.json", server)

Objects

Decoding an object can be achieved via the parseObject template. To parse the value, you can use one of the helper functions or use readValue. readObject and readObjectFields iterators are also handy when creating a custom object parser.

proc readValue*(r: var JsonReader, table: var Table[string, int]) =
  parseObject(r, key):
    table[key] = r.parseInt(int)

Sets and list-like

Similar to Object, sets and list or array-like data structures can be parsed using parseArray template. It comes in two variations, indexed and non-indexed.

Built-in readValue for regular seq and array is implemented for you. No built-in readValue for set or set-like is provided, you must overload it yourself depending on your need.

type
  HoldArray = object
    data: array[3, int]

  HoldSeq = object
    data: seq[int]

  WelderFlag = enum
    TIG
    MIG
    MMA

  Welder = object
    flags: set[WelderFlag]

proc readValue*(r: var JsonReader, value: var HoldArray) =
  # parseArray with index, `i` can be any valid identifier
  r.parseArray(i):
    value.data[i] = r.parseInt(int)

proc readValue*(r: var JsonReader, value: var HoldSeq) =
  # parseArray without index
  r.parseArray:
    let lastPos = value.data.len
    value.data.setLen(lastPos + 1)
    readValue(r, value.data[lastPos])

proc readValue*(r: var JsonReader, value: var Welder) =
  # populating set also okay
  r.parseArray:
    value.flags.incl r.parseInt(int).WelderFlag

Custom iterators

Using these custom iterators, you can have access to sub-token elements.

customIntValueIt(r: var JsonReader; body: untyped)
customNumberValueIt(r: var JsonReader; body: untyped)
customStringValueIt(r: var JsonReader; limit: untyped; body: untyped)
customStringValueIt(r: var JsonReader; body: untyped)

Convenience iterators

readArray(r: var JsonReader, ElemType: typedesc): ElemType
readObjectFields(r: var JsonReader, KeyType: type): KeyType
readObjectFields(r: var JsonReader): string
readObject(r: var JsonReader, KeyType: type, ValueType: type): (KeyType, ValueType)

Helper procs

When crafting a custom serializer, use these parsers, they are safe and intuitive. Avoid using the lexer directly.

tokKind(r: var JsonReader): JsonValueKind
parseString(r: var JsonReader, limit: int): string
parseString(r: var JsonReader): string
parseBool(r: var JsonReader): bool
parseNull(r: var JsonReader)
parseNumber(r: var JsonReader, T: type): JsonNumber[T: string or uint64]
parseNumber(r: var JsonReader, val: var JsonNumber)
toInt(r: var JsonReader, val: JsonNumber, T: type SomeInteger, portable: bool): T
parseInt(r: var JsonReader, T: type SomeInteger, portable: bool = false): T
toFloat(r: var JsonReader, val: JsonNumber, T: type SomeFloat): T
parseFloat(r: var JsonReader, T: type SomeFloat): T
parseAsString(r: var JsonReader, val: var string)
parseAsString(r: var JsonReader): JsonString
parseValue(r: var JsonReader, T: type): JsonValueRef[T: string or uint64]
parseValue(r: var JsonReader, val: var JsonValueRef)
parseArray(r: var JsonReader; body: untyped)
parseArray(r: var JsonReader; idx: untyped; body: untyped)
parseObject(r: var JsonReader, key: untyped, body: untyped)
parseObjectWithoutSkip(r: var JsonReader, key: untyped, body: untyped)
parseObjectSkipNullFields(r: var JsonReader, key: untyped, body: untyped)
parseObjectCustomKey(r: var JsonReader, keyAction: untyped, body: untyped)
parseJsonNode(r: var JsonReader): JsonNode
skipSingleJsValue(r: var JsonReader)
readRecordValue[T](r: var JsonReader, value: var T)

Helper procs of JsonWriter

beginRecord(w: var JsonWriter, T: type)
beginRecord(w: var JsonWriter)
endRecord(w: var JsonWriter)

writeObject(w: var JsonWriter, T: type)
writeObject(w: var JsonWriter)

writeFieldName(w: var JsonWriter, name: string)
writeField(w: var JsonWriter, name: string, value: auto)

iterator stepwiseArrayCreation[C](w: var JsonWriter, collection: C): auto
writeIterable(w: var JsonWriter, collection: auto)
writeArray[T](w: var JsonWriter, elements: openArray[T])

writeNumber[F,T](w: var JsonWriter[F], value: JsonNumber[T])
writeJsonValueRef[F,T](w: var JsonWriter[F], value: JsonValueRef[T])

Enums

type
  Fruit = enum
    Apple = "Apple"
    Banana = "Banana"
    
  Drawer = enum
    One
    Two
    
  Number = enum
    Three = 3
    Four = 4
    
  Mixed = enum
    Six = 6
    Seven = "Seven"

nim-json-serialization automatically detect which representation an enum should be parsed. The detection occurs when parse json literal and from the enum declaration itself. 'Fruit' expect string literal. 'Drawer' or 'Number' expect numeric literal. 'Mixed' is disallowed. If the json literal does not match the expected enum style, exception will be raised. But you can configure individual enum type with:

configureJsonDeserialization(
    T: type[enum], allowNumericRepr: static[bool] = false,
    stringNormalizer: static[proc(s: string): string] = strictNormalize)
    
# example:
Mixed.configureJsonDeserialization(allowNumericRepr = true) # only at top level

When encode an enum, user is also given flexibility to configure at Flavor level or for individual enum type.

type
  EnumRepresentation* = enum
    EnumAsString
    EnumAsNumber
    EnumAsStringifiedNumber

# examples:

# Flavor level
Json.flavorEnumRep(EnumAsString)   # default flavor, can be called from non top level
Flavor.flavorEnumRep(EnumAsNumber) # custom flavor, can be called from non top level

# individual enum type no matter what flavor
Fruit.configureJsonSerialization(EnumAsNumber) # only at top level

# individual enum type of specific flavor
MyJson.flavorEnumRep(Drawer, EnumAsString) # only at top level

License

Licensed and distributed under either of

or

at your option. These files may not be copied, modified, or distributed except according to those terms.