| /* |
| * $Id: json_object.h,v 1.12 2006/01/30 23:07:57 mclark Exp $ |
| * |
| * Copyright (c) 2004, 2005 Metaparadigm Pte. Ltd. |
| * Michael Clark <michael@metaparadigm.com> |
| * Copyright (c) 2009 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. |
| * |
| * This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| * it under the terms of the MIT license. See COPYING for details. |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * @file |
| * @brief Core json-c API. Start here, or with json_tokener.h |
| */ |
| #ifndef _json_object_h_ |
| #define _json_object_h_ |
| |
| #ifdef __GNUC__ |
| #define JSON_C_CONST_FUNCTION(func) func __attribute__((const)) |
| #else |
| #define JSON_C_CONST_FUNCTION(func) func |
| #endif |
| |
| #include "json_inttypes.h" |
| #include "json_types.h" |
| #include "printbuf.h" |
| |
| #include <stddef.h> |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| extern "C" { |
| #endif |
| |
| #define JSON_OBJECT_DEF_HASH_ENTRIES 16 |
| |
| /** |
| * A flag for the json_object_to_json_string_ext() and |
| * json_object_to_file_ext() functions which causes the output |
| * to have no extra whitespace or formatting applied. |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_TO_STRING_PLAIN 0 |
| /** |
| * A flag for the json_object_to_json_string_ext() and |
| * json_object_to_file_ext() functions which causes the output to have |
| * minimal whitespace inserted to make things slightly more readable. |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_TO_STRING_SPACED (1 << 0) |
| /** |
| * A flag for the json_object_to_json_string_ext() and |
| * json_object_to_file_ext() functions which causes |
| * the output to be formatted. |
| * |
| * See the "Two Space Tab" option at https://jsonformatter.curiousconcept.com/ |
| * for an example of the format. |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_TO_STRING_PRETTY (1 << 1) |
| /** |
| * A flag for the json_object_to_json_string_ext() and |
| * json_object_to_file_ext() functions which causes |
| * the output to be formatted. |
| * |
| * Instead of a "Two Space Tab" this gives a single tab character. |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_TO_STRING_PRETTY_TAB (1 << 3) |
| /** |
| * A flag to drop trailing zero for float values |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_TO_STRING_NOZERO (1 << 2) |
| |
| /** |
| * Don't escape forward slashes. |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_TO_STRING_NOSLASHESCAPE (1 << 4) |
| |
| /** |
| * A flag for the json_object_object_add_ex function which |
| * causes the value to be added without a check if it already exists. |
| * Note: it is the responsibility of the caller to ensure that no |
| * key is added multiple times. If this is done, results are |
| * unpredictable. While this option is somewhat dangerous, it |
| * permits potentially large performance savings in code that |
| * knows for sure the key values are unique (e.g. because the |
| * code adds a well-known set of constant key values). |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_OBJECT_ADD_KEY_IS_NEW (1 << 1) |
| /** |
| * A flag for the json_object_object_add_ex function which |
| * flags the key as being constant memory. This means that |
| * the key will NOT be copied via strdup(), resulting in a |
| * potentially huge performance win (malloc, strdup and |
| * free are usually performance hogs). It is acceptable to |
| * use this flag for keys in non-constant memory blocks if |
| * the caller ensure that the memory holding the key lives |
| * longer than the corresponding json object. However, this |
| * is somewhat dangerous and should only be done if really |
| * justified. |
| * The general use-case for this flag is cases where the |
| * key is given as a real constant value in the function |
| * call, e.g. as in |
| * json_object_object_add_ex(obj, "ip", json, |
| * JSON_C_OBJECT_ADD_CONSTANT_KEY); |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_OBJECT_ADD_CONSTANT_KEY (1 << 2) |
| /** |
| * This flag is an alias to JSON_C_OBJECT_ADD_CONSTANT_KEY. |
| * Historically, this flag was used first and the new name |
| * JSON_C_OBJECT_ADD_CONSTANT_KEY was introduced for version |
| * 0.16.00 in order to have regular naming. |
| * Use of this flag is now legacy. |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_OBJECT_KEY_IS_CONSTANT JSON_C_OBJECT_ADD_CONSTANT_KEY |
| |
| /** |
| * Set the global value of an option, which will apply to all |
| * current and future threads that have not set a thread-local value. |
| * |
| * @see json_c_set_serialization_double_format |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_OPTION_GLOBAL (0) |
| /** |
| * Set a thread-local value of an option, overriding the global value. |
| * This will fail if json-c is not compiled with threading enabled, and |
| * with the __thread specifier (or equivalent) available. |
| * |
| * @see json_c_set_serialization_double_format |
| */ |
| #define JSON_C_OPTION_THREAD (1) |
| |
| /* reference counting functions */ |
| |
| /** |
| * Increment the reference count of json_object, thereby taking ownership of it. |
| * |
| * Cases where you might need to increase the refcount include: |
| * - Using an object field or array index (retrieved through |
| * `json_object_object_get()` or `json_object_array_get_idx()`) |
| * beyond the lifetime of the parent object. |
| * - Detaching an object field or array index from its parent object |
| * (using `json_object_object_del()` or `json_object_array_del_idx()`) |
| * - Sharing a json_object with multiple (not necessarily parallel) threads |
| * of execution that all expect to free it (with `json_object_put()`) when |
| * they're done. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @see json_object_put() |
| * @see json_object_object_get() |
| * @see json_object_array_get_idx() |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_get(struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** |
| * Decrement the reference count of json_object and free if it reaches zero. |
| * |
| * You must have ownership of obj prior to doing this or you will cause an |
| * imbalance in the reference count, leading to a classic use-after-free bug. |
| * In particular, you normally do not need to call `json_object_put()` on the |
| * json_object returned by `json_object_object_get()` or `json_object_array_get_idx()`. |
| * |
| * Just like after calling `free()` on a block of memory, you must not use |
| * `obj` after calling `json_object_put()` on it or any object that it |
| * is a member of (unless you know you've called `json_object_get(obj)` to |
| * explicitly increment the refcount). |
| * |
| * NULL may be passed, which which case this is a no-op. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns 1 if the object was freed. |
| * @see json_object_get() |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_put(struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** |
| * Check if the json_object is of a given type |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param type one of: |
| json_type_null (i.e. obj == NULL), |
| json_type_boolean, |
| json_type_double, |
| json_type_int, |
| json_type_object, |
| json_type_array, |
| json_type_string |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_is_type(const struct json_object *obj, enum json_type type); |
| |
| /** |
| * Get the type of the json_object. See also json_type_to_name() to turn this |
| * into a string suitable, for instance, for logging. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns type being one of: |
| json_type_null (i.e. obj == NULL), |
| json_type_boolean, |
| json_type_double, |
| json_type_int, |
| json_type_object, |
| json_type_array, |
| json_type_string |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT enum json_type json_object_get_type(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Stringify object to json format. |
| * Equivalent to json_object_to_json_string_ext(obj, JSON_C_TO_STRING_SPACED) |
| * The pointer you get is an internal of your json object. You don't |
| * have to free it, later use of json_object_put() should be sufficient. |
| * If you can not ensure there's no concurrent access to *obj use |
| * strdup(). |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns a string in JSON format |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT const char *json_object_to_json_string(struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Stringify object to json format |
| * @see json_object_to_json_string() for details on how to free string. |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param flags formatting options, see JSON_C_TO_STRING_PRETTY and other constants |
| * @returns a string in JSON format |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT const char *json_object_to_json_string_ext(struct json_object *obj, int flags); |
| |
| /** Stringify object to json format |
| * @see json_object_to_json_string() for details on how to free string. |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param flags formatting options, see JSON_C_TO_STRING_PRETTY and other constants |
| * @param length a pointer where, if not NULL, the length (without null) is stored |
| * @returns a string in JSON format and the length if not NULL |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT const char *json_object_to_json_string_length(struct json_object *obj, int flags, |
| size_t *length); |
| |
| /** |
| * Returns the userdata set by json_object_set_userdata() or |
| * json_object_set_serializer() |
| * |
| * @param jso the object to return the userdata for |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT void *json_object_get_userdata(json_object *jso); |
| |
| /** |
| * Set an opaque userdata value for an object |
| * |
| * The userdata can be retrieved using json_object_get_userdata(). |
| * |
| * If custom userdata is already set on this object, any existing user_delete |
| * function is called before the new one is set. |
| * |
| * The user_delete parameter is optional and may be passed as NULL, even if |
| * the userdata parameter is non-NULL. It will be called just before the |
| * json_object is deleted, after it's reference count goes to zero |
| * (see json_object_put()). |
| * If this is not provided, it is up to the caller to free the userdata at |
| * an appropriate time. (i.e. after the json_object is deleted) |
| * |
| * Note: Objects created by parsing strings may have custom serializers set |
| * which expect the userdata to contain specific data (due to use of |
| * json_object_new_double_s()). In this case, json_object_set_serialiser() with |
| * NULL as to_string_func should be used instead to set the userdata and reset |
| * the serializer to its default value. |
| * |
| * @param jso the object to set the userdata for |
| * @param userdata an optional opaque cookie |
| * @param user_delete an optional function from freeing userdata |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT void json_object_set_userdata(json_object *jso, void *userdata, |
| json_object_delete_fn *user_delete); |
| |
| /** |
| * Set a custom serialization function to be used when this particular object |
| * is converted to a string by json_object_to_json_string. |
| * |
| * If custom userdata is already set on this object, any existing user_delete |
| * function is called before the new one is set. |
| * |
| * If to_string_func is NULL the default behaviour is reset (but the userdata |
| * and user_delete fields are still set). |
| * |
| * The userdata parameter is optional and may be passed as NULL. It can be used |
| * to provide additional data for to_string_func to use. This parameter may |
| * be NULL even if user_delete is non-NULL. |
| * |
| * The user_delete parameter is optional and may be passed as NULL, even if |
| * the userdata parameter is non-NULL. It will be called just before the |
| * json_object is deleted, after it's reference count goes to zero |
| * (see json_object_put()). |
| * If this is not provided, it is up to the caller to free the userdata at |
| * an appropriate time. (i.e. after the json_object is deleted) |
| * |
| * Note that the userdata is the same as set by json_object_set_userdata(), so |
| * care must be taken not to overwrite the value when both a custom serializer |
| * and json_object_set_userdata() are used. |
| * |
| * @param jso the object to customize |
| * @param to_string_func the custom serialization function |
| * @param userdata an optional opaque cookie |
| * @param user_delete an optional function from freeing userdata |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT void json_object_set_serializer(json_object *jso, |
| json_object_to_json_string_fn *to_string_func, |
| void *userdata, json_object_delete_fn *user_delete); |
| |
| #ifdef __clang__ |
| /* |
| * Clang doesn't pay attention to the parameters defined in the |
| * function typedefs used here, so turn off spurious doc warnings. |
| * { |
| */ |
| #pragma clang diagnostic push |
| #pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wdocumentation" |
| #endif |
| |
| /** |
| * Simply call free on the userdata pointer. |
| * Can be used with json_object_set_serializer(). |
| * |
| * @param jso unused |
| * @param userdata the pointer that is passed to free(). |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT json_object_delete_fn json_object_free_userdata; |
| |
| /** |
| * Copy the jso->_userdata string over to pb as-is. |
| * Can be used with json_object_set_serializer(). |
| * |
| * @param jso The object whose _userdata is used. |
| * @param pb The destination buffer. |
| * @param level Ignored. |
| * @param flags Ignored. |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT json_object_to_json_string_fn json_object_userdata_to_json_string; |
| |
| #ifdef __clang__ |
| /* } */ |
| #pragma clang diagnostic pop |
| #endif |
| |
| /* object type methods */ |
| |
| /** Create a new empty object with a reference count of 1. The caller of |
| * this object initially has sole ownership. Remember, when using |
| * json_object_object_add or json_object_array_put_idx, ownership will |
| * transfer to the object/array. Call json_object_get if you want to maintain |
| * shared ownership or also add this object as a child of multiple objects or |
| * arrays. Any ownerships you acquired but did not transfer must be released |
| * through json_object_put. |
| * |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_object |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_object(void); |
| |
| /** Get the hashtable of a json_object of type json_type_object |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns a linkhash |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct lh_table *json_object_get_object(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Get the size of an object in terms of the number of fields it has. |
| * @param obj the json_object whose length to return |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_object_length(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Get the sizeof (struct json_object). |
| * @returns a size_t with the sizeof (struct json_object) |
| */ |
| JSON_C_CONST_FUNCTION(JSON_EXPORT size_t json_c_object_sizeof(void)); |
| |
| /** Add an object field to a json_object of type json_type_object |
| * |
| * The reference count of `val` will *not* be incremented, in effect |
| * transferring ownership that object to `obj`, and thus `val` will be |
| * freed when `obj` is. (i.e. through `json_object_put(obj)`) |
| * |
| * If you want to retain a reference to the added object, independent |
| * of the lifetime of obj, you must increment the refcount with |
| * `json_object_get(val)` (and later release it with json_object_put()). |
| * |
| * Since ownership transfers to `obj`, you must make sure |
| * that you do in fact have ownership over `val`. For instance, |
| * json_object_new_object() will give you ownership until you transfer it, |
| * whereas json_object_object_get() does not. |
| * |
| * Any previous object stored under `key` in `obj` will have its refcount |
| * decremented, and be freed normally if that drops to zero. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param key the object field name (a private copy will be duplicated) |
| * @param val a json_object or NULL member to associate with the given field |
| * |
| * @return On success, <code>0</code> is returned. |
| * On error, a negative value is returned. |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_object_add(struct json_object *obj, const char *key, |
| struct json_object *val); |
| |
| /** Add an object field to a json_object of type json_type_object |
| * |
| * The semantics are identical to json_object_object_add, except that an |
| * additional flag fields gives you more control over some detail aspects |
| * of processing. See the description of JSON_C_OBJECT_ADD_* flags for more |
| * details. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param key the object field name (a private copy will be duplicated) |
| * @param val a json_object or NULL member to associate with the given field |
| * @param opts process-modifying options. To specify multiple options, use |
| * (OPT1|OPT2) |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_object_add_ex(struct json_object *obj, const char *const key, |
| struct json_object *const val, const unsigned opts); |
| |
| /** Get the json_object associate with a given object field. |
| * Deprecated/discouraged: used json_object_object_get_ex instead. |
| * |
| * This returns NULL if the field is found but its value is null, or if |
| * the field is not found, or if obj is not a json_type_object. If you |
| * need to distinguish between these cases, use json_object_object_get_ex(). |
| * |
| * *No* reference counts will be changed. There is no need to manually adjust |
| * reference counts through the json_object_put/json_object_get methods unless |
| * you need to have the child (value) reference maintain a different lifetime |
| * than the owning parent (obj). Ownership of the returned value is retained |
| * by obj (do not do json_object_put unless you have done a json_object_get). |
| * If you delete the value from obj (json_object_object_del) and wish to access |
| * the returned reference afterwards, make sure you have first gotten shared |
| * ownership through json_object_get (& don't forget to do a json_object_put |
| * or transfer ownership to prevent a memory leak). |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param key the object field name |
| * @returns the json_object associated with the given field name |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_object_get(const struct json_object *obj, |
| const char *key); |
| |
| /** Get the json_object associated with a given object field. |
| * |
| * This returns true if the key is found, false in all other cases (including |
| * if obj isn't a json_type_object). |
| * |
| * *No* reference counts will be changed. There is no need to manually adjust |
| * reference counts through the json_object_put/json_object_get methods unless |
| * you need to have the child (value) reference maintain a different lifetime |
| * than the owning parent (obj). Ownership of value is retained by obj. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param key the object field name |
| * @param value a pointer where to store a reference to the json_object |
| * associated with the given field name. |
| * |
| * It is safe to pass a NULL value. |
| * @returns whether or not the key exists |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT json_bool json_object_object_get_ex(const struct json_object *obj, const char *key, |
| struct json_object **value); |
| |
| /** Delete the given json_object field |
| * |
| * The reference count will be decremented for the deleted object. If there |
| * are no more owners of the value represented by this key, then the value is |
| * freed. Otherwise, the reference to the value will remain in memory. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param key the object field name |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT void json_object_object_del(struct json_object *obj, const char *key); |
| |
| /** |
| * Iterate through all keys and values of an object. |
| * |
| * Adding keys to the object while iterating is NOT allowed. |
| * |
| * Deleting an existing key, or replacing an existing key with a |
| * new value IS allowed. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param key the local name for the char* key variable defined in the body |
| * @param val the local name for the json_object* object variable defined in |
| * the body |
| */ |
| #if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__STRICT_ANSI__) && (defined(__STDC_VERSION__) && __STDC_VERSION__ >= 199901L) |
| |
| #define json_object_object_foreach(obj, key, val) \ |
| char *key = NULL; \ |
| struct json_object *val __attribute__((__unused__)) = NULL; \ |
| for (struct lh_entry *entry##key = lh_table_head(json_object_get_object(obj)), \ |
| *entry_next##key = NULL; \ |
| ({ \ |
| if (entry##key) \ |
| { \ |
| key = (char *)lh_entry_k(entry##key); \ |
| val = (struct json_object *)lh_entry_v(entry##key); \ |
| entry_next##key = lh_entry_next(entry##key); \ |
| }; \ |
| entry##key; \ |
| }); \ |
| entry##key = entry_next##key) |
| |
| #else /* ANSI C or MSC */ |
| |
| #define json_object_object_foreach(obj, key, val) \ |
| char *key = NULL; \ |
| struct json_object *val = NULL; \ |
| struct lh_entry *entry##key; \ |
| struct lh_entry *entry_next##key = NULL; \ |
| for (entry##key = lh_table_head(json_object_get_object(obj)); \ |
| (entry##key ? (key = (char *)lh_entry_k(entry##key), \ |
| val = (struct json_object *)lh_entry_v(entry##key), \ |
| entry_next##key = lh_entry_next(entry##key), entry##key) \ |
| : 0); \ |
| entry##key = entry_next##key) |
| |
| #endif /* defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__STRICT_ANSI__) && (defined(__STDC_VERSION__) && __STDC_VERSION__ >= 199901L) */ |
| |
| /** Iterate through all keys and values of an object (ANSI C Safe) |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param iter the object iterator, use type json_object_iter |
| */ |
| #define json_object_object_foreachC(obj, iter) \ |
| for (iter.entry = lh_table_head(json_object_get_object(obj)); \ |
| (iter.entry ? (iter.key = (char *)lh_entry_k(iter.entry), \ |
| iter.val = (struct json_object *)lh_entry_v(iter.entry), iter.entry) \ |
| : 0); \ |
| iter.entry = lh_entry_next(iter.entry)) |
| |
| /* Array type methods */ |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_array |
| * with 32 slots allocated. |
| * If you know the array size you'll need ahead of time, use |
| * json_object_new_array_ext() instead. |
| * @see json_object_new_array_ext() |
| * @see json_object_array_shrink() |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_array |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_array(void); |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_array |
| * with the desired number of slots allocated. |
| * @see json_object_array_shrink() |
| * @param initial_size the number of slots to allocate |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_array |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_array_ext(int initial_size); |
| |
| /** Get the arraylist of a json_object of type json_type_array |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns an arraylist |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct array_list *json_object_get_array(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Get the length of a json_object of type json_type_array |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns an int |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT size_t json_object_array_length(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Sorts the elements of jso of type json_type_array |
| * |
| * Pointers to the json_object pointers will be passed as the two arguments |
| * to sort_fn |
| * |
| * @param jso the json_object instance |
| * @param sort_fn a sorting function |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT void json_object_array_sort(struct json_object *jso, |
| int (*sort_fn)(const void *, const void *)); |
| |
| /** Binary search a sorted array for a specified key object. |
| * |
| * It depends on your compare function what's sufficient as a key. |
| * Usually you create some dummy object with the parameter compared in |
| * it, to identify the right item you're actually looking for. |
| * |
| * @see json_object_array_sort() for hints on the compare function. |
| * |
| * @param key a dummy json_object with the right key |
| * @param jso the array object we're searching |
| * @param sort_fn the sort/compare function |
| * |
| * @return the wanted json_object instance |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object * |
| json_object_array_bsearch(const struct json_object *key, const struct json_object *jso, |
| int (*sort_fn)(const void *, const void *)); |
| |
| /** Add an element to the end of a json_object of type json_type_array |
| * |
| * The reference count will *not* be incremented. This is to make adding |
| * fields to objects in code more compact. If you want to retain a reference |
| * to an added object you must wrap the passed object with json_object_get |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param val the json_object to be added |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_array_add(struct json_object *obj, struct json_object *val); |
| |
| /** Insert or replace an element at a specified index in an array (a json_object of type json_type_array) |
| * |
| * The reference count will *not* be incremented. This is to make adding |
| * fields to objects in code more compact. If you want to retain a reference |
| * to an added object you must wrap the passed object with json_object_get |
| * |
| * The reference count of a replaced object will be decremented. |
| * |
| * The array size will be automatically be expanded to the size of the |
| * index if the index is larger than the current size. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param idx the index to insert the element at |
| * @param val the json_object to be added |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_array_put_idx(struct json_object *obj, size_t idx, |
| struct json_object *val); |
| |
| /** Get the element at specified index of array `obj` (which must be a json_object of type json_type_array) |
| * |
| * *No* reference counts will be changed, and ownership of the returned |
| * object remains with `obj`. See json_object_object_get() for additional |
| * implications of this behavior. |
| * |
| * Calling this with anything other than a json_type_array will trigger |
| * an assert. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param idx the index to get the element at |
| * @returns the json_object at the specified index (or NULL) |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_array_get_idx(const struct json_object *obj, |
| size_t idx); |
| |
| /** Delete an elements from a specified index in an array (a json_object of type json_type_array) |
| * |
| * The reference count will be decremented for each of the deleted objects. If there |
| * are no more owners of an element that is being deleted, then the value is |
| * freed. Otherwise, the reference to the value will remain in memory. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param idx the index to start deleting elements at |
| * @param count the number of elements to delete |
| * @returns 0 if the elements were successfully deleted |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_array_del_idx(struct json_object *obj, size_t idx, size_t count); |
| |
| /** |
| * Shrink the internal memory allocation of the array to just |
| * enough to fit the number of elements in it, plus empty_slots. |
| * |
| * @param jso the json_object instance, must be json_type_array |
| * @param empty_slots the number of empty slots to leave allocated |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_array_shrink(struct json_object *jso, int empty_slots); |
| |
| /* json_bool type methods */ |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_boolean |
| * @param b a json_bool 1 or 0 |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_boolean |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_boolean(json_bool b); |
| |
| /** Get the json_bool value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type is coerced to a json_bool if the passed object is not a json_bool. |
| * integer and double objects will return 0 if there value is zero |
| * or 1 otherwise. If the passed object is a string it will return |
| * 1 if it has a non zero length. |
| * If any other object type is passed 0 will be returned, even non-empty |
| * json_type_array and json_type_object objects. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns a json_bool |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT json_bool json_object_get_boolean(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Set the json_bool value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type of obj is checked to be a json_type_boolean and 0 is returned |
| * if it is not without any further actions. If type of obj is json_type_boolean |
| * the object value is changed to new_value |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param new_value the value to be set |
| * @returns 1 if value is set correctly, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_set_boolean(struct json_object *obj, json_bool new_value); |
| |
| /* int type methods */ |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_int |
| * Note that values are stored as 64-bit values internally. |
| * To ensure the full range is maintained, use json_object_new_int64 instead. |
| * @param i the integer |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_int |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_int(int32_t i); |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_int |
| * @param i the integer |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_int |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_int64(int64_t i); |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_uint |
| * @param i the integer |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_uint |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_uint64(uint64_t i); |
| |
| /** Get the int value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type is coerced to a int if the passed object is not a int. |
| * double objects will return their integer conversion. Strings will be |
| * parsed as an integer. If no conversion exists then 0 is returned |
| * and errno is set to EINVAL. null is equivalent to 0 (no error values set) |
| * |
| * Note that integers are stored internally as 64-bit values. |
| * If the value of too big or too small to fit into 32-bit, INT32_MAX or |
| * INT32_MIN are returned, respectively. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns an int |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int32_t json_object_get_int(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Set the int value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type of obj is checked to be a json_type_int and 0 is returned |
| * if it is not without any further actions. If type of obj is json_type_int |
| * the object value is changed to new_value |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param new_value the value to be set |
| * @returns 1 if value is set correctly, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_set_int(struct json_object *obj, int new_value); |
| |
| /** Increment a json_type_int object by the given amount, which may be negative. |
| * |
| * If the type of obj is not json_type_int then 0 is returned with no further |
| * action taken. |
| * If the addition would result in a overflow, the object value |
| * is set to INT64_MAX. |
| * If the addition would result in a underflow, the object value |
| * is set to INT64_MIN. |
| * Neither overflow nor underflow affect the return value. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param val the value to add |
| * @returns 1 if the increment succeeded, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_int_inc(struct json_object *obj, int64_t val); |
| |
| /** Get the int value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type is coerced to a int64 if the passed object is not a int64. |
| * double objects will return their int64 conversion. Strings will be |
| * parsed as an int64. If no conversion exists then 0 is returned. |
| * |
| * NOTE: Set errno to 0 directly before a call to this function to determine |
| * whether or not conversion was successful (it does not clear the value for |
| * you). |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns an int64 |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int64_t json_object_get_int64(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Get the uint value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type is coerced to a uint64 if the passed object is not a uint64. |
| * double objects will return their uint64 conversion. Strings will be |
| * parsed as an uint64. If no conversion exists then 0 is returned. |
| * |
| * NOTE: Set errno to 0 directly before a call to this function to determine |
| * whether or not conversion was successful (it does not clear the value for |
| * you). |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns an uint64 |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT uint64_t json_object_get_uint64(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Set the int64_t value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type of obj is checked to be a json_type_int and 0 is returned |
| * if it is not without any further actions. If type of obj is json_type_int |
| * the object value is changed to new_value |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param new_value the value to be set |
| * @returns 1 if value is set correctly, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_set_int64(struct json_object *obj, int64_t new_value); |
| |
| /** Set the uint64_t value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type of obj is checked to be a json_type_uint and 0 is returned |
| * if it is not without any further actions. If type of obj is json_type_uint |
| * the object value is changed to new_value |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param new_value the value to be set |
| * @returns 1 if value is set correctly, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_set_uint64(struct json_object *obj, uint64_t new_value); |
| |
| /* double type methods */ |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_double |
| * |
| * @see json_object_double_to_json_string() for how to set a custom format string. |
| * |
| * @param d the double |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_double |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_double(double d); |
| |
| /** |
| * Create a new json_object of type json_type_double, using |
| * the exact serialized representation of the value. |
| * |
| * This allows for numbers that would otherwise get displayed |
| * inefficiently (e.g. 12.3 => "12.300000000000001") to be |
| * serialized with the more convenient form. |
| * |
| * Notes: |
| * |
| * This is used by json_tokener_parse_ex() to allow for |
| * an exact re-serialization of a parsed object. |
| * |
| * The userdata field is used to store the string representation, so it |
| * can't be used for other data if this function is used. |
| * |
| * A roughly equivalent sequence of calls, with the difference being that |
| * the serialization function won't be reset by json_object_set_double(), is: |
| * @code |
| * jso = json_object_new_double(d); |
| * json_object_set_serializer(jso, json_object_userdata_to_json_string, |
| * strdup(ds), json_object_free_userdata); |
| * @endcode |
| * |
| * @param d the numeric value of the double. |
| * @param ds the string representation of the double. This will be copied. |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_double_s(double d, const char *ds); |
| |
| /** |
| * Set a global or thread-local json-c option, depending on whether |
| * JSON_C_OPTION_GLOBAL or JSON_C_OPTION_THREAD is passed. |
| * Thread-local options default to undefined, and inherit from the global |
| * value, even if the global value is changed after the thread is created. |
| * Attempting to set thread-local options when threading is not compiled in |
| * will result in an error. Be sure to check the return value. |
| * |
| * double_format is a "%g" printf format, such as "%.20g" |
| * |
| * @return -1 on errors, 0 on success. |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_c_set_serialization_double_format(const char *double_format, |
| int global_or_thread); |
| |
| /** Serialize a json_object of type json_type_double to a string. |
| * |
| * This function isn't meant to be called directly. Instead, you can set a |
| * custom format string for the serialization of this double using the |
| * following call (where "%.17g" actually is the default): |
| * |
| * @code |
| * jso = json_object_new_double(d); |
| * json_object_set_serializer(jso, json_object_double_to_json_string, |
| * "%.17g", NULL); |
| * @endcode |
| * |
| * @see printf(3) man page for format strings |
| * |
| * @param jso The json_type_double object that is serialized. |
| * @param pb The destination buffer. |
| * @param level Ignored. |
| * @param flags Ignored. |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_double_to_json_string(struct json_object *jso, struct printbuf *pb, |
| int level, int flags); |
| |
| /** Get the double floating point value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type is coerced to a double if the passed object is not a double. |
| * integer objects will return their double conversion. Strings will be |
| * parsed as a double. If no conversion exists then 0.0 is returned and |
| * errno is set to EINVAL. null is equivalent to 0 (no error values set) |
| * |
| * If the value is too big to fit in a double, then the value is set to |
| * the closest infinity with errno set to ERANGE. If strings cannot be |
| * converted to their double value, then EINVAL is set & NaN is returned. |
| * |
| * Arrays of length 0 are interpreted as 0 (with no error flags set). |
| * Arrays of length 1 are effectively cast to the equivalent object and |
| * converted using the above rules. All other arrays set the error to |
| * EINVAL & return NaN. |
| * |
| * NOTE: Set errno to 0 directly before a call to this function to |
| * determine whether or not conversion was successful (it does not clear |
| * the value for you). |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns a double floating point number |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT double json_object_get_double(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Set the double value of a json_object |
| * |
| * The type of obj is checked to be a json_type_double and 0 is returned |
| * if it is not without any further actions. If type of obj is json_type_double |
| * the object value is changed to new_value |
| * |
| * If the object was created with json_object_new_double_s(), the serialization |
| * function is reset to the default and the cached serialized value is cleared. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param new_value the value to be set |
| * @returns 1 if value is set correctly, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_set_double(struct json_object *obj, double new_value); |
| |
| /* string type methods */ |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_string |
| * |
| * A copy of the string is made and the memory is managed by the json_object |
| * |
| * @param s the string |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_string |
| * @see json_object_new_string_len() |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_string(const char *s); |
| |
| /** Create a new empty json_object of type json_type_string and allocate |
| * len characters for the new string. |
| * |
| * A copy of the string is made and the memory is managed by the json_object |
| * |
| * @param s the string |
| * @param len max length of the new string |
| * @returns a json_object of type json_type_string |
| * @see json_object_new_string() |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_string_len(const char *s, const int len); |
| |
| /** Get the string value of a json_object |
| * |
| * If the passed object is of type json_type_null (i.e. obj == NULL), |
| * NULL is returned. |
| * |
| * If the passed object of type json_type_string, the string contents |
| * are returned. |
| * |
| * Otherwise the JSON representation of the object is returned. |
| * |
| * The returned string memory is managed by the json_object and will |
| * be freed when the reference count of the json_object drops to zero. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns a string or NULL |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT const char *json_object_get_string(struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Get the string length of a json_object |
| * |
| * If the passed object is not of type json_type_string then zero |
| * will be returned. |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @returns int |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_get_string_len(const struct json_object *obj); |
| |
| /** Set the string value of a json_object with zero terminated strings |
| * equivalent to json_object_set_string_len (obj, new_value, strlen(new_value)) |
| * @returns 1 if value is set correctly, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_set_string(json_object *obj, const char *new_value); |
| |
| /** Set the string value of a json_object str |
| * |
| * The type of obj is checked to be a json_type_string and 0 is returned |
| * if it is not without any further actions. If type of obj is json_type_string |
| * the object value is changed to new_value |
| * |
| * @param obj the json_object instance |
| * @param new_value the value to be set; Since string length is given in len this need not be zero terminated |
| * @param len the length of new_value |
| * @returns 1 if value is set correctly, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_set_string_len(json_object *obj, const char *new_value, int len); |
| |
| /** This method exists only to provide a complementary function |
| * along the lines of the other json_object_new_* functions. |
| * It always returns NULL, and it is entirely acceptable to simply use NULL directly. |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT struct json_object *json_object_new_null(void); |
| |
| /** Check if two json_object's are equal |
| * |
| * If the passed objects are equal 1 will be returned. |
| * Equality is defined as follows: |
| * - json_objects of different types are never equal |
| * - json_objects of the same primitive type are equal if the |
| * c-representation of their value is equal |
| * - json-arrays are considered equal if all values at the same |
| * indices are equal (same order) |
| * - Complex json_objects are considered equal if all |
| * contained objects referenced by their key are equal, |
| * regardless their order. |
| * |
| * @param obj1 the first json_object instance |
| * @param obj2 the second json_object instance |
| * @returns whether both objects are equal or not |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_equal(struct json_object *obj1, struct json_object *obj2); |
| |
| /** |
| * Perform a shallow copy of src into *dst as part of an overall json_object_deep_copy(). |
| * |
| * If src is part of a containing object or array, parent will be non-NULL, |
| * and key or index will be provided. |
| * When shallow_copy is called *dst will be NULL, and must be non-NULL when it returns. |
| * src will never be NULL. |
| * |
| * If shallow_copy sets the serializer on an object, return 2 to indicate to |
| * json_object_deep_copy that it should not attempt to use the standard userdata |
| * copy function. |
| * |
| * @return On success 1 or 2, -1 on errors |
| */ |
| typedef int(json_c_shallow_copy_fn)(json_object *src, json_object *parent, const char *key, |
| size_t index, json_object **dst); |
| |
| /** |
| * The default shallow copy implementation for use with json_object_deep_copy(). |
| * This simply calls the appropriate json_object_new_<type>() function and |
| * copies over the serializer function (_to_json_string internal field of |
| * the json_object structure) but not any _userdata or _user_delete values. |
| * |
| * If you're writing a custom shallow_copy function, perhaps because you're using |
| * your own custom serializer, you can call this first to create the new object |
| * before customizing it with json_object_set_serializer(). |
| * |
| * @return 1 on success, -1 on errors, but never 2. |
| */ |
| JSON_EXPORT json_c_shallow_copy_fn json_c_shallow_copy_default; |
| |
| /** |
| * Copy the contents of the JSON object. |
| * The destination object must be initialized to NULL, |
| * to make sure this function won't overwrite an existing JSON object. |
| * |
| * This does roughly the same thing as |
| * `json_tokener_parse(json_object_get_string(src))`. |
| * |
| * @param src source JSON object whose contents will be copied |
| * @param dst pointer to the destination object where the contents of `src`; |
| * make sure this pointer is initialized to NULL |
| * @param shallow_copy an optional function to copy individual objects, needed |
| * when custom serializers are in use. See also |
| * json_object set_serializer. |
| * |
| * @returns 0 if the copy went well, -1 if an error occurred during copy |
| * or if the destination pointer is non-NULL |
| */ |
| |
| JSON_EXPORT int json_object_deep_copy(struct json_object *src, struct json_object **dst, |
| json_c_shallow_copy_fn *shallow_copy); |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| #endif |