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168 lines
5.4 KiB
168 lines
5.4 KiB
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JSMN
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====
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jsmn (pronounced like 'jasmine') is a minimalistic JSON parser in C. It can be
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easily integrated into resource-limited or embedded projects.
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You can find more information about JSON format at [json.org][1]
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Library sources are available at https://github.com/zserge/jsmn
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The web page with some information about jsmn can be found at
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[http://zserge.com/jsmn.html][2]
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Philosophy
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----------
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Most JSON parsers offer you a bunch of functions to load JSON data, parse it
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and extract any value by its name. jsmn proves that checking the correctness of
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every JSON packet or allocating temporary objects to store parsed JSON fields
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often is an overkill.
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JSON format itself is extremely simple, so why should we complicate it?
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jsmn is designed to be **robust** (it should work fine even with erroneous
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data), **fast** (it should parse data on the fly), **portable** (no superfluous
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dependencies or non-standard C extensions). An of course, **simplicity** is a
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key feature - simple code style, simple algorithm, simple integration into
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other projects.
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Features
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--------
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* compatible with C89
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* no dependencies (even libc!)
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* highly portable (tested on x86/amd64, ARM, AVR)
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* about 200 lines of code
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* extremely small code footprint
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* API contains only 2 functions
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* no dynamic memory allocation
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* incremental single-pass parsing
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* library code is covered with unit-tests
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Design
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------
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The rudimentary jsmn object is a **token**. Let's consider a JSON string:
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'{ "name" : "Jack", "age" : 27 }'
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It holds the following tokens:
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* Object: `{ "name" : "Jack", "age" : 27}` (the whole object)
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* Strings: `"name"`, `"Jack"`, `"age"` (keys and some values)
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* Number: `27`
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In jsmn, tokens do not hold any data, but point to token boundaries in JSON
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string instead. In the example above jsmn will create tokens like: Object
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[0..31], String [3..7], String [12..16], String [20..23], Number [27..29].
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Every jsmn token has a type, which indicates the type of corresponding JSON
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token. jsmn supports the following token types:
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* Object - a container of key-value pairs, e.g.:
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`{ "foo":"bar", "x":0.3 }`
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* Array - a sequence of values, e.g.:
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`[ 1, 2, 3 ]`
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* String - a quoted sequence of chars, e.g.: `"foo"`
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* Primitive - a number, a boolean (`true`, `false`) or `null`
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Besides start/end positions, jsmn tokens for complex types (like arrays
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or objects) also contain a number of child items, so you can easily follow
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object hierarchy.
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This approach provides enough information for parsing any JSON data and makes
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it possible to use zero-copy techniques.
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Install
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-------
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To clone the repository you should have Git installed. Just run:
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$ git clone https://github.com/zserge/jsmn
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Repository layout is simple: jsmn.c and jsmn.h are library files, tests are in
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the jsmn\_test.c, you will also find README, LICENSE and Makefile files inside.
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To build the library, run `make`. It is also recommended to run `make test`.
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Let me know, if some tests fail.
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If build was successful, you should get a `libjsmn.a` library.
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The header file you should include is called `"jsmn.h"`.
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API
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---
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Token types are described by `jsmntype_t`:
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typedef enum {
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JSMN_UNDEFINED = 0,
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JSMN_OBJECT = 1,
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JSMN_ARRAY = 2,
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JSMN_STRING = 3,
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JSMN_PRIMITIVE = 4
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} jsmntype_t;
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**Note:** Unlike JSON data types, primitive tokens are not divided into
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numbers, booleans and null, because one can easily tell the type using the
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first character:
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* <code>'t', 'f'</code> - boolean
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* <code>'n'</code> - null
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* <code>'-', '0'..'9'</code> - number
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Token is an object of `jsmntok_t` type:
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typedef struct {
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jsmntype_t type; // Token type
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int start; // Token start position
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int end; // Token end position
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int size; // Number of child (nested) tokens
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} jsmntok_t;
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**Note:** string tokens point to the first character after
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the opening quote and the previous symbol before final quote. This was made
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to simplify string extraction from JSON data.
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All job is done by `jsmn_parser` object. You can initialize a new parser using:
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jsmn_parser parser;
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jsmntok_t tokens[10];
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jsmn_init(&parser);
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// js - pointer to JSON string
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// tokens - an array of tokens available
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// 10 - number of tokens available
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jsmn_parse(&parser, js, strlen(js), tokens, 10);
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This will create a parser, and then it tries to parse up to 10 JSON tokens from
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the `js` string.
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A non-negative return value of `jsmn_parse` is the number of tokens actually
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used by the parser.
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Passing NULL instead of the tokens array would not store parsing results, but
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instead the function will return the value of tokens needed to parse the given
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string. This can be useful if you don't know yet how many tokens to allocate.
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If something goes wrong, you will get an error. Error will be one of these:
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* `JSMN_ERROR_INVAL` - bad token, JSON string is corrupted
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* `JSMN_ERROR_NOMEM` - not enough tokens, JSON string is too large
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* `JSMN_ERROR_PART` - JSON string is too short, expecting more JSON data
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If you get `JSON_ERROR_NOMEM`, you can re-allocate more tokens and call
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`jsmn_parse` once more. If you read json data from the stream, you can
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periodically call `jsmn_parse` and check if return value is `JSON_ERROR_PART`.
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You will get this error until you reach the end of JSON data.
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Other info
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----------
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This software is distributed under [MIT license](http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php),
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so feel free to integrate it in your commercial products.
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[1]: http://www.json.org/
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[2]: http://zserge.com/jsmn.html
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