README.md 15.1 KB
Newer Older
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
# cJSON

Ultralightweight JSON parser in ANSI C.

## Table of contents
* [License](#license)
* [Usage](#usage)
  * [Welcome to cJSON](#welcome-to-cjson)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
9
  * [Building](#building)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
10 11
  * [Some JSON](#some-json)
  * [Here's the structure](#heres-the-structure)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
12
  * [Caveats](#caveats)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
13 14 15 16
  * [Enjoy cJSON!](#enjoy-cjson)

## License

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
17 18 19
MIT License

>  Copyright (c) 2009-2017 Dave Gamble and cJSON contributors
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41
>
>  Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
>  of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
>  in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
>  to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
>  copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
>  furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
>
>  The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
>  all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
>
>  THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
>  IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
>  FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
>  AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
>  LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
>  OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
>  THE SOFTWARE.

## Usage

### Welcome to cJSON.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57

cJSON aims to be the dumbest possible parser that you can get your job done with.
It's a single file of C, and a single header file.

JSON is described best here: http://www.json.org/
It's like XML, but fat-free. You use it to move data around, store things, or just
generally represent your program's state.

As a library, cJSON exists to take away as much legwork as it can, but not get in your way.
As a point of pragmatism (i.e. ignoring the truth), I'm going to say that you can use it
in one of two modes: Auto and Manual. Let's have a quick run-through.

I lifted some JSON from this page: http://www.json.org/fatfree.html
That page inspired me to write cJSON, which is a parser that tries to share the same
philosophy as JSON itself. Simple, dumb, out of the way.

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67
### Building

There are several ways to incorporate cJSON into your project.

#### copying the source
Because the entire library is only one C file and one header file, you can just copy `cJSON.h` and `cJSON.c` to your projects source and start using it.

cJSON is written in ANSI C (C89) in order to support as many platforms and compilers as possible.

#### CMake
68
With CMake, cJSON supports a full blown build system. This way you get the most features. CMake with an equal or higher version than 2.8.5 is supported. With CMake it is recommended to do an out of tree build, meaning the compiled files are put in a directory separate from the source files. So in order to build cJSON with CMake on a Unix platform, make a `build` directory and run CMake inside it.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84

```
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
```

This will create a Makefile and a bunch of other files. You can then compile it:

```
make
```

And install it with `make install` if you want. By default it installs the headers `/usr/local/include/cjson` and the libraries to `/usr/local/lib`. It also installs files for pkg-config to make it easier to detect and use an existing installation of CMake. And it installs CMake config files, that can be used by other CMake based projects to discover the library.

You can change the build process with a list of different options that you can pass to CMake. Turn them on with `On` and off with `Off`:
R
Romain Porte 已提交
85
* `-DENABLE_CJSON_TEST=On`: Enable building the tests. (on by default)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
86 87
* `-DENABLE_CJSON_UTILS=On`: Enable building cJSON_Utils. (off by default)
* `-DENABLE_TARGET_EXPORT=On`: Enable the export of CMake targets. Turn off if it makes problems. (on by default)
88
* `-DENABLE_CUSTOM_COMPILER_FLAGS=On`: Enable custom compiler flags (currently for Clang and GCC). Turn off if it makes problems. (on by default)
89 90
* `-DENABLE_VALGRIND=On`: Run tests with [valgrind](http://valgrind.org). (off by default)
* `-DENABLE_SANITIZERS=On`: Compile cJSON with [AddressSanitizer](https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizer) and [UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer](https://clang.llvm.org/docs/UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer.html) enabled (if possible). (off by default)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
91
* `-DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=On`: Build the shared libraries. (on by default)
92
* `-DBUILD_SHARED_AND_STATIC_LIBS=On`: Build both shared and static libraries. (off by default)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
93 94 95 96 97 98
* `-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr`: Set a prefix for the installation.

If you are packaging cJSON for a distribution of Linux, you would probably take these steps for example:
```
mkdir build
cd build
R
Romain Porte 已提交
99
cmake .. -DENABLE_CJSON_UTILS=On -DENABLE_CJSON_TEST=Off -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
100 101 102 103 104
make
make DESTDIR=$pkgdir install
```

#### Makefile
105
If you don't have CMake available, but still have GNU make. You can use the makefile to build cJSON:
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114

Run this command in the directory with the source code and it will automatically compile static and shared libraries and a little test program.

```
make all
```

If you want, you can install the compiled library to your system using `make install`. By default it will install the headers in `/usr/local/include/cjson` and the libraries in `/usr/local/lib`. But you can change this behavior by setting the `PREFIX` and `DESTDIR` variables: `make PREFIX=/usr DESTDIR=temp install`.

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125
### Some JSON:

```json
{
    "name": "Jack (\"Bee\") Nimble",
    "format": {
        "type":       "rect",
        "width":      1920,
        "height":     1080,
        "interlace":  false,
        "frame rate": 24
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
126
    }
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
127 128
}
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
129 130

Assume that you got this from a file, a webserver, or magic JSON elves, whatever,
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
131
you have a `char *` to it. Everything is a `cJSON` struct.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
132
Get it parsed:
133

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
134 135 136
```c
cJSON * root = cJSON_Parse(my_json_string);
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
137 138 139 140

This is an object. We're in C. We don't have objects. But we do have structs.
What's the framerate?

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
141
```c
142 143
cJSON *format = cJSON_GetObjectItemCaseSensitive(root, "format");
cJSON *framerate_item = cJSON_GetObjectItemCaseSensitive(format, "frame rate");
144 145 146 147 148
double framerate = 0;
if (cJSON_IsNumber(framerate_item))
{
  framerate = framerate_item->valuedouble;
}
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
149
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
150 151

Want to change the framerate?
152

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
153
```c
154
cJSON *framerate_item = cJSON_GetObjectItemCaseSensitive(format, "frame rate");
155
cJSON_SetNumberValue(framerate_item, 25);
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
156
```
157

K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
158
Back to disk?
159

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
160
```c
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
161
char *rendered = cJSON_Print(root);
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
162
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
163 164

Finished? Delete the root (this takes care of everything else).
165

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
166 167 168
```c
cJSON_Delete(root);
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
169 170 171

That's AUTO mode. If you're going to use Auto mode, you really ought to check pointers
before you dereference them. If you want to see how you'd build this struct in code?
172

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
173
```c
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
174 175
cJSON *root;
cJSON *fmt;
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184
root = cJSON_CreateObject();
cJSON_AddItemToObject(root, "name", cJSON_CreateString("Jack (\"Bee\") Nimble"));
cJSON_AddItemToObject(root, "format", fmt = cJSON_CreateObject());
cJSON_AddStringToObject(fmt, "type", "rect");
cJSON_AddNumberToObject(fmt, "width", 1920);
cJSON_AddNumberToObject(fmt, "height", 1080);
cJSON_AddFalseToObject (fmt, "interlace");
cJSON_AddNumberToObject(fmt, "frame rate", 24);
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
185 186

Hopefully we can agree that's not a lot of code? There's no overhead, no unnecessary setup.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
187
Look at `test.c` for a bunch of nice examples, mostly all ripped off the [json.org](http://json.org) site, and
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
188 189 190
a few from elsewhere.

What about manual mode? First up you need some detail.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
191
Let's cover how the `cJSON` objects represent the JSON data.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
192
cJSON doesn't distinguish arrays from objects in handling; just type.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
193
Each `cJSON` has, potentially, a child, siblings, value, a name.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
194

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202
* The `root` object has: *Object* Type and a Child
* The Child has name "name", with value "Jack ("Bee") Nimble", and a sibling:
* Sibling has type *Object*, name "format", and a child.
* That child has type *String*, name "type", value "rect", and a sibling:
* Sibling has type *Number*, name "width", value 1920, and a sibling:
* Sibling has type *Number*, name "height", value 1080, and a sibling:
* Sibling has type *False*, name "interlace", and a sibling:
* Sibling has type *Number*, name "frame rate", value 24
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
203

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
204
### Here's the structure:
205

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
206 207
```c
typedef struct cJSON {
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
208 209
    struct cJSON *next,*prev;
    struct cJSON *child;
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
210

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
211
    int type;
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
212

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
213
    char *valuestring;
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
214
    int valueint; /* writing to valueint is DEPRECATED, please use cJSON_SetNumberValue instead */
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
215
    double valuedouble;
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
216

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
217
    char *string;
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
218 219
} cJSON;
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
220 221 222

By default all values are 0 unless set by virtue of being meaningful.

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
223 224 225 226 227 228
`next`/`prev` is a doubly linked list of siblings. `next` takes you to your sibling,
`prev` takes you back from your sibling to you.
Only objects and arrays have a `child`, and it's the head of the doubly linked list.
A `child` entry will have `prev == 0`, but next potentially points on. The last sibling has `next == 0`.
The type expresses *Null*/*True*/*False*/*Number*/*String*/*Array*/*Object*, all of which are `#defined` in
`cJSON.h`.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
229

230
A *Number* has `valueint` and `valuedouble`. `valueint` is a relict of the past, so always use `valuedouble`.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
231

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
232 233 234
Any entry which is in the linked list which is the child of an object will have a `string`
which is the "name" of the entry. When I said "name" in the above example, that's `string`.
`string` is the JSON name for the 'variable name' if you will.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
235 236

Now you can trivially walk the lists, recursively, and parse as you please.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
237
You can invoke `cJSON_Parse` to get cJSON to parse for you, and then you can take
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
238 239 240 241
the root object, and traverse the structure (which is, formally, an N-tree),
and tokenise as you please. If you wanted to build a callback style parser, this is how
you'd do it (just an example, since these things are very specific):

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
242
```c
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
243
void parse_and_callback(cJSON *item, const char *prefix)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
244
{
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
245 246
    while (item)
    {
247 248
        char *newprefix = malloc(strlen(prefix) + strlen(item->string) + 2);
        sprintf(newprefix, "%s/%s", prefix, item->string);
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256
        int dorecurse = callback(newprefix, item->type, item);
        if (item->child && dorecurse)
        {
            parse_and_callback(item->child, newprefix);
        }
        item = item->next;
        free(newprefix);
    }
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
257 258
}
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
259

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
260 261
The `prefix` process will build you a separated list, to simplify your callback handling.
The `dorecurse` flag would let the callback decide to handle sub-arrays on it's own, or
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
262 263
let you invoke it per-item. For the item above, your callback might look like this:

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
264
```c
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
265 266 267 268 269 270
int callback(const char *name, int type, cJSON *item)
{
    if (!strcmp(name, "name"))
    {
        /* populate name */
    }
271
    else if (!strcmp(name, "format/type"))
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
272 273
    {
        /* handle "rect" */ }
274
    else if (!strcmp(name, "format/width"))
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
275 276 277
    {
        /* 800 */
    }
278
    else if (!strcmp(name, "format/height"))
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
279 280 281
    {
        /* 600 */
    }
282
    else if (!strcmp(name, "format/interlace"))
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
283 284 285
    {
        /* false */
    }
286
    else if (!strcmp(name, "format/frame rate"))
287
    {
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
288
        /* 24 */
289
    }
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
290 291 292

    return 1;
}
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
293
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
294 295 296 297

Alternatively, you might like to parse iteratively.
You'd use:

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
298 299 300
```c
void parse_object(cJSON *item)
{
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
301 302 303 304 305 306
    int i;
    for (i = 0; i < cJSON_GetArraySize(item); i++)
    {
        cJSON *subitem = cJSON_GetArrayItem(item, i);
        // handle subitem
    }
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
307 308
}
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
309 310 311

Or, for PROPER manual mode:

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
312
```c
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
313
void parse_object(cJSON *item)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
314
{
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325
    cJSON *subitem = item->child;
    while (subitem)
    {
        // handle subitem
        if (subitem->child)
        {
            parse_object(subitem->child);
        }

        subitem = subitem->next;
    }
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
326 327
}
```
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339

Of course, this should look familiar, since this is just a stripped-down version
of the callback-parser.

This should cover most uses you'll find for parsing. The rest should be possible
to infer.. and if in doubt, read the source! There's not a lot of it! ;)

In terms of constructing JSON data, the example code above is the right way to do it.
You can, of course, hand your sub-objects to other functions to populate.
Also, if you find a use for it, you can manually build the objects.
For instance, suppose you wanted to build an array of objects?

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
340
```c
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
341
cJSON *objects[24];
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
342

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
343
cJSON *Create_array_of_anything(cJSON **items, int num)
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
344
{
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363
    int i;
    cJSON *prev;
    cJSON *root = cJSON_CreateArray();
    for (i = 0; i < 24; i++)
    {
        if (!i)
        {
            root->child = objects[i];
        }
        else
        {
            prev->next = objects[i];
            objects[i]->prev = prev;
        }

        prev = objects[i];
    }

    return root;
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
364 365 366 367
}
```

and simply: `Create_array_of_anything(objects, 24);`
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
368 369 370 371 372

cJSON doesn't make any assumptions about what order you create things in.
You can attach the objects, as above, and later add children to each
of those objects.

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
373
As soon as you call `cJSON_Print`, it renders the structure to text.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
374

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
375 376 377
The `test.c` code shows how to handle a bunch of typical cases. If you uncomment
the code, it'll load, parse and print a bunch of test files, also from [json.org](http://json.org),
which are more complex than I'd care to try and stash into a `const char array[]`.
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
378

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
379 380
### Caveats

381 382 383 384
#### Zero Character

cJSON doesn't support strings that contain the zero character `'\0'` or `\u0000`. This is impossible with the current API because strings are zero terminated.

385 386
#### Character Encoding

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
387
cJSON only supports UTF-8 encoded input. In most cases it doesn't reject invalid UTF-8 as input though, it just propagates it through as is. As long as the input doesn't contain invalid UTF-8, the output will always be valid UTF-8.
388

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
389 390 391 392
#### C Standard

cJSON is written in ANSI C (or C89, C90). If your compiler or C library doesn't follow this standard, correct behavior is not guaranteed.

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
393
NOTE: ANSI C is not C++ therefore it shouldn't be compiled with a C++ compiler. You can compile it with a C compiler and link it with your C++ code however. Although compiling with a C++ compiler might work, correct behavior is not guaranteed.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
394 395 396

#### Floating Point Numbers

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
397
cJSON does not officially support any `double` implementations other than IEEE754 double precision floating point numbers. It might still work with other implementations but bugs with these will be considered invalid.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
398 399 400

The maximum length of a floating point literal that cJSON supports is currently 63 characters.

401 402 403 404
#### Deep Nesting Of Arrays And Objects

cJSON doesn't support arrays and objects that are nested too deeply because this would result in a stack overflow. To prevent this cJSON limits the depth to `CJSON_NESTING_LIMIT` which is 1000 by default but can be changed at compile time.

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
405 406 407 408 409
#### Thread Safety

In general cJSON is **not thread safe**.

However it is thread safe under the following conditions:
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
410 411 412
* `cJSON_GetErrorPtr` is never used (the `return_parse_end` parameter of `cJSON_ParseWithOpts` can be used instead)
* `cJSON_InitHooks` is only ever called before using cJSON in any threads.
* `setlocale` is never called before all calls to cJSON functions have returned.
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
413

414 415 416 417
#### Case Sensitivity

When cJSON was originally created, it didn't follow the JSON standard and didn't make a distinction between uppercase and lowercase letters. If you want the correct, standard compliant, behavior, you need to use the `CaseSensitive` functions where available.

M
Max Bruckner 已提交
418
# Enjoy cJSON!
K
Kevin Branigan 已提交
419

I
IvanVoid 已提交
420
- Dave Gamble, Aug 2009
M
Max Bruckner 已提交
421
- [cJSON contributors](CONTRIBUTORS.md)