- Small, ~1k lines of code, embedded-friendly
- No dependencies
- State machine parser, no allocations, no recursion
- High level API - fetch from JSON directly into C/C++ by jsonpath
- Low level SAX API
- Flexible JSON generation API - print to buffer, file, socket, etc
- JSON-RPC client/server. Connects any microcontroller online via https://vcon.io
const char *s = "{\"a\":1,\"b\":[2,false]}"; // {"a":1,"b":[2,false]}
// Extract value of `a` into a variable `val` and print its value
double val;
if (mjson_get_number(s, strlen(s), "$.a", &val)) printf("a: %g\n", val);
// Extract sub-object `b` and print it:
const char *sub;
int len;
if (mjson_find(s, strlen(s), "$.b", &sub, &len)) printf("%.*s\n", len, sub);
// Extract `false`:
int boolval;
if (mjson_get_bool(s, strlen(s), "$.b[1]", &boolval)) printf("%d\n", boolval);
Print into a dynamically-allocated string:
char *result = NULL; // It's important to initialise it to NULL
mjson_printf(mjson_print_dynamic_buffer, &result, "{%Q:%d}", "a", (int) 123);
printf("%s\n", result); // {"a":123}
free(result); // Caller must deallocate result
Print into some custom target, for example, a network socket:
// A custom "printer" function
static int myprint(const char *buf, int len, void *userdata) {
int fd = * (int *) userdata;
return send(fd, buf, len, 0);
}
// Print into file descriptor `fd` a string `{"data":"aGkh"}`
mjson_printf(myprint, &fd, "{%Q:%V}", "data", 3, "hi!");
In the following example, we initialize JSON-RPC context, and call
a couple of JSON-RPC methods: a built-in rpc.list
method which lists
all registered methods, and our own foo
method.
The sender()
implementation just prints the reply to the standard output,
but in real life it should send a reply to the real remote peer - UART, socket,
or whatever else.
#include "mjson.h"
// A custom RPC handler. Many handlers can be registered.
static void foo(struct jsonrpc_request *r) {
double x;
mjson_get_number(r->params, r->params_len, "$[1]", &x);
jsonrpc_return_success(r, "{%Q:%g,%Q:%Q}", "x", x, "ud", r->userdata);
}
// Sender function receives a reply frame and must forward it to the peer.
static int sender(char *frame, int frame_len, void *privdata) {
printf("%.*s\n", frame_len, frame); // Print the JSON-RPC reply to stdout
return frame_len;
}
int main(void) {
jsonrpc_init(NULL, NULL);
// Call rpc.list
char request1[] = "{\"id\": 1, \"method\": \"rpc.list\"}";
jsonrpc_process(request1, strlen(request1), sender, NULL);
// Call non-existent method
char request2[] = "{\"id\": 1, \"method\": \"foo\"}";
jsonrpc_process(request2, strlen(request2), sender, NULL);
// Register our own function
char request3[] = "{\"id\": 2, \"method\": \"foo\",\"params\":[0,1.23]}";
jsonrpc_export("foo", foo, (void *) "hi");
jsonrpc_process(request3, strlen(request3), sender, NULL);
return 0;
}
-D MJSON_ENABLE_PRINT=0
disable emitting functionality, default: enabled-D MJSON_IMPLEMENT_STRTOD=1
use ownstrtod()
, default: stdlib is used-D MJSON_MAX_DEPTH=30
define max object depth, default: 20-D MJSON_ENABLE_BASE64=0
disable base64 parsing/printing, default: enabled-D MJSON_ENABLE_RPC=0
disable RPC functionality, default: enabled-D MJSON_RPC_IN_BUF_SIZE=4096
sets JSON-RPC input buffer size, default: 256-D MJSON_ENABLE_PRETTY=1
enablemjson_pretty()
, default: disabled-D MJSON_ENABLE_MERGE=1
enablemjson_merge()
, default: disabled-D MJSON_ENABLE_NEXT=1
enablemjson_next()
, default: disabled
enum mjson_tok mjson_find(const char *s, int len, const char *path,
const char **tokptr, int *toklen);
In a JSON string s
, len
, find an element by its JSONPATH path
.
Save found element in tokptr
, toklen
.
If not found, return JSON_TOK_INVALID
. If found, return one of:
MJSON_TOK_STRING
, MJSON_TOK_NUMBER
, MJSON_TOK_TRUE
, MJSON_TOK_FALSE
,
MJSON_TOK_NULL
, MJSON_TOK_ARRAY
, MJSON_TOK_OBJECT
. Example:
// s, len is a JSON string: {"foo": { "bar": [ 1, 2, 3] }, "baz": true}
char *p;
int n;
assert(mjson_find(s, len, "$.foo.bar[1]", &p, &n) == MJSON_TOK_NUMBER);
assert(mjson_find(s, len, "$.baz", &p, &n) == MJSON_TOK_TRUE);
assert(mjson_find(s, len, "$", &p, &n) == MJSON_TOK_OBJECT);
int mjson_get_number(const char *s, int len, const char *path, double *v);
In a JSON string s
, len
, find a number value by its JSONPATH path
and
store into v
. Return 0 if the value was not found, non-0 if found and stored.
Example:
// s, len is a JSON string: {"foo": { "bar": [ 1, 2, 3] }, "baz": true}
double v = 0;
mjson_get_number(s, len, "$.foo.bar[1]", &v); // v now holds 2
int mjson_get_bool(const char *s, int len, const char *path, int *v);
In a JSON string s
, len
, store value of a boolean by its JSONPATH path
into a variable v
. Return 0 if not found, non-0 otherwise. Example:
// s, len is a JSON string: {"foo": { "bar": [ 1, 2, 3] }, "baz": true}
bool v = mjson_get_bool(s, len, "$.baz", false); // Assigns to true
int mjson_get_string(const char *s, int len, const char *path, char *to, int sz);
In a JSON string s
, len
, find a string by its JSONPATH path
and unescape
it into a buffer to
, sz
with terminating \0
.
If a string is not found, return -1.
If a string is found, return the length of unescaped string. Example:
// s, len is a JSON string [ "abc", "de\r\n" ]
char buf[100];
int n = mjson_get_string(s, len, "$[1]", buf, sizeof(buf)); // Assigns to 4
int mjson_get_hex(const char *s, int len, const char *path, char *to, int sz);
In a JSON string s
, len
, find a string by its JSONPATH path
and
hex decode it into a buffer to
, sz
with terminating \0
.
If a string is not found, return -1.
If a string is found, return the length of decoded string.
The hex string should be lowercase, e.g. string Hello
is hex-encoded as
"48656c6c6f"
. Example:
// s, len is a JSON string [ "48656c6c6f" ]
char buf[100];
int n = mjson_get_hex(s, len, "$[0]", buf, sizeof(buf)); // Assigns to 5
int mjson_get_base64(const char *s, int len, const char *path, char *to, int sz);
In a JSON string s
, len
, find a string by its JSONPATH path
and
base64 decode it into a buffer to
, sz
with terminating \0
.
If a string is not found, return 0.
If a string is found, return the length of decoded string. Example:
// s, len is a JSON string [ "MA==" ]
char buf[100];
int n = mjson_get_base64(s, len, "$[0]", buf, sizeof(buf)); // Assigns to 1
int mjson(const char *s, int len, mjson_cb_t cb, void *cbdata);
Parse JSON string s
, len
, calling callback cb
for each token. This
is a low-level SAX API, intended for fancy stuff like pretty printing, etc.
int mjson_next(const char *s, int n, int off, int *koff, int *klen, int *voff,
int *vlen, int *vtype);
NOTE: to enable this function, use -D MJSON_ENABLE_NEXT=1
.
Assuming that JSON string s
, n
contains JSON object or JSON array,
return the next key/value pair starting from offset off
.
key is returned as koff
(key offset), klen
(key length), value is returned as voff
(value offset),
vlen
(value length), vtype
(value type). Pointers could be NULL.
Return next offset. When iterating over the array, koff
will hold value
index inside an array, and klen
will be 0
. Therefore, if klen
holds
0
, we're iterating over an array, otherwise over an object.
Note: initial offset should be 0.
Usage example:
const char *s = "{\"a\":123,\"b\":[1,2,3,{\"c\":1}],\"d\":null}";
int koff, klen, voff, vlen, vtype, off;
for (off = 0; (off = mjson_next(s, strlen(s), off, &koff, &klen,
&voff, &vlen, &vtype)) != 0; ) {
printf("key: %.*s, value: %.*s\n", klen, s + koff, vlen, s + voff);
}
The emitting API is flexible and can print to anything: fixed buffer, dynamic growing buffer, FILE *, network socket, etc etc. The printer function gets the pointer to the buffer to print, and a user-specified data:
typedef int (*mjson_print_fn_t)(const char *buf, int len, void *userdata);
mjson library defines the following built-in printer functions:
struct mjson_fixedbuf {
char *ptr;
int size, len;
};
int mjson_print_fixed_buf(const char *ptr, int len, void *userdata);
int mjson_print_file(const char *ptr, int len, void *userdata);
int mjson_print_dynamic_buf(const char *ptr, int len, void *userdata);
If you want to print to something else, for example to a network socket,
define your own printing function. If you want to see usage examples
for the built-in printing functions, see unit_test.c
file.
int mjson_vprintf(mjson_print_fn_t, void *, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
int mjson_printf(mjson_print_fn_t, void *, const char *fmt, ...);
Print using printf()
-like format string. Supported specifiers are:
%Q
print quoted escaped string. Expect NUL-terminatedchar *
%.*Q
print quoted escaped string. Expectint, char *
%s
print string as is. Expect NUL-terminatedchar *
%.*s
print string as is. Expectint, char *
%g
,%f
print floating point number. Expectdouble
%d
,%u
print signed/unsigned integer. Expectint
%ld
,%lu
print signed/unsigned long integer. Expectlong
%B
printtrue
orfalse
. Expectint
%V
print quoted base64-encoded string. Expectint, char *
%H
print quoted hex-encoded string. Expectint, char *
%M
print using custom print function. Expectint (*)(mjson_print_fn_t, void *, va_list *)
The following example produces {"a":1, "b":[1234]}
into the
dynamically-growing string s
.
Note that the array is printed using a custom printer function:
static int m_printer(mjson_print_fn_t fn, void *fndata, va_list *ap) {
int value = va_arg(*ap, int);
return mjson_printf(fn, fndata, "[%d]", value);
}
...
char *s = NULL;
mjson_printf(&mjson_print_dynamic_buf, &s, "{%Q:%d, %Q:%M}", "a", 1, "b", m_printer, 1234);
/* At this point `s` contains: {"a":1, "b":[1234]} */
free(s);
int mjson_pretty(const char *s, int n, const char *pad,
mjson_print_fn_t fn, void *userdata);
NOTE: to enable this function, use -D MJSON_ENABLE_PRETTY=1
.
Pretty-print JSON string s
, n
using padding pad
. If pad
is ""
,
then a resulting string is terse one-line. Return length of the printed string.
int mjson_merge(const char *s, int n, const char *s2, int n2,
mjson_print_fn_t fn, void *fndata);
NOTE: to enable this function, use -D MJSON_ENABLE_MERGE=1
.
Merge JSON string s2
,n2
into the original string s
,n
. Both strings
are assumed to hold objects. The result is printed using fn
,fndata
.
Return value: number of bytes printed.
In order to delete the key in the original string, set that key to null
in the s2
,n2
.
NOTE: both strings must not contain arrays, as merging arrays is not supported.
For the example, see unit_test.c :: test_rpc()
function.
void jsonrpc_init(void (*response_cb)(const char *, int, void *),
void *privdata);
Initialize JSON-RPC context. The sender()
function must be provided
by the caller, and it is responsible to send the prepared JSON-RPC
reply to the remote side - to the UART, or socket, or whatever.
The sender()
function receives the full frame to send, and the privdata
poitner.
The response_cb()
function could be left NULL. If it is non-NULL, it will
be called for all received responses generated by the jsonrpc_call()
.
The response_cb()
function receives full response frame, and the privdata
pointer.
jsonrpc_process(const char *frame, int frame_len, jsonrpc_sender_t fn, void *fdata);
Parse JSON-RPC frame contained in frame
, and invoke a registered handler.
#define jsonrpc_export(const char *name,
void (*handler)(struct jsonrpc_request *),
void *handler_data);
Export JSON-RPC function. A function gets called by jsonrpc_process()
,
which parses an incoming frame and calls a registered handler.
A handler()
receives struct jsonrpc_request *
. It could use
jsonrpc_return_error()
or jsonrpc_return_success()
for returning the result.
NOTE: a name
is a glob pattern that follows these rules:
*
matches 0 or more characters, excluding/
?
matches any character#
matches 0 or more characters- any other character matches itself
For example, after jsonrpc_export("Foo.*", my_func, my_data);
,
the server triggers my_func
on Foo.Bar
, Foo.Baz
, etc.
struct jsonrpc_request {
const char *params; // Points to the "params" in the request frame
int params_len; // Length of the "params"
const char *id; // Points to the "id" in the request frame
int id_len; // Length of the "id"
mjson_print_fn_t fn; // Printer function
void *fndata; // Printer function data
void *userdata; // Callback's user data as specified at export time
};
This structure gets passed to the method callback.
void jsonrpc_return_success(struct jsonrpc_request *r, const char *result_fmt, ...);
Return result from the method handler. NOTE: if the request frame ID is not specified, this function does nothing.
void jsonrpc_return_error(struct jsonrpc_request *r, int code, const char *message, const char *data_fmt, ...);
Return error from the method handler. JSON-RPC error frame looks like this:
{"id":1, "error": {"code": -32602, "message": "Invalid params", "data": {"foo": "bar"}}}
The frame contains a error
object with numeric code
and string message
keys, and an optional data
which can be arbitrary - a simple JSON type,
or an array/object. In the optional data
, you can pass some extra information
about the error, for example a faulty request.
NOTE: if the request frame ID is not specified, this function does nothing.
#include "mjson.h" // Sketch -> Add file -> add mjson.h
// Gets called by the RPC engine to send a reply frame
static int sender(const char *frame, int frame_len, void *privdata) {
return Serial.write(frame, frame_len);
}
// RPC handler for "Sum". Expect an array of two integers in "params"
static void sum(struct jsonrpc_request *r) {
int a = mjson_get_number(r->params, r->params_len, "$[0]", 0);
int b = mjson_get_number(r->params, r->params_len, "$[1]", 0);
jsonrpc_return_success(r, "%d", a + b);
}
void setup() {
jsonrpc_init(NULL, NULL); // Initialise the library
jsonrpc_export("Sum", sum, NULL); // Export "Sum" function
Serial.begin(115200); // Setup serial port
}
void loop() {
if (Serial.available() > 0) jsonrpc_process_byte(Serial.read(), sender, NULL);
}
When this sketch is compiled and flashed on an Arduino
board, start Arduino Serial Monitor, type
{"id": 1, "method": "Sum", "params": [2,3]}
and hit enter. You should
see an answer frame:
See https://vcon.io for more information.
Please visit https://vcon.io/contact.html