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JSON implementation for Ruby (Required by ruby-i18n, ruby-stdlib) | (PKGBUILD: https://archlinux.org/packages/extra/x86_64/ruby-json)

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JSON implementation for Ruby

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Description

This is an implementation of the JSON specification according to RFC 7159 http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc7159.txt .

The JSON generator generate UTF-8 character sequences by default. If an :ascii_only option with a true value is given, they escape all non-ASCII and control characters with \uXXXX escape sequences, and support UTF-16 surrogate pairs in order to be able to generate the whole range of unicode code points.

All strings, that are to be encoded as JSON strings, should be UTF-8 byte sequences on the Ruby side. To encode raw binary strings, that aren't UTF-8 encoded, please use the to_json_raw_object method of String (which produces an object, that contains a byte array) and decode the result on the receiving endpoint.

Installation

Install the gem and add to the application's Gemfile by executing:

$ bundle add json

If bundler is not being used to manage dependencies, install the gem by executing:

$ gem install json

Usage

To use JSON you can

require 'json'

Now you can parse a JSON document into a ruby data structure by calling

JSON.parse(document)

If you want to generate a JSON document from a ruby data structure call

JSON.generate(data)

You can also use the pretty_generate method (which formats the output more verbosely and nicely) or fast_generate (which doesn't do any of the security checks generate performs, e. g. nesting deepness checks).

Handling arbitrary types

Caution

You should never use JSON.unsafe_load nor JSON.parse(str, create_additions: true) to parse untrusted user input, as it can lead to remote code execution vulnerabilities.

To create a JSON document from a ruby data structure, you can call JSON.generate like that:

json = JSON.generate [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]
# => "[1,2,{\"a\":3.141},false,true,null,\"4..10\"]"

To get back a ruby data structure from a JSON document, you have to call JSON.parse on it:

JSON.parse json
# => [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, "4..10"]

Note, that the range from the original data structure is a simple string now. The reason for this is, that JSON doesn't support ranges or arbitrary classes. In this case the json library falls back to call Object#to_json, which is the same as #to_s.to_json.

It's possible to add JSON support serialization to arbitrary classes by simply implementing a more specialized version of the #to_json method, that should return a JSON object (a hash converted to JSON with #to_json) like this (don't forget the *a for all the arguments):

class Range
  def to_json(*a)
    {
      'json_class'   => self.class.name, # = 'Range'
      'data'         => [ first, last, exclude_end? ]
    }.to_json(*a)
  end
end

The hash key json_class is the class, that will be asked to deserialise the JSON representation later. In this case it's Range, but any namespace of the form A::B or ::A::B will do. All other keys are arbitrary and can be used to store the necessary data to configure the object to be deserialised.

If the key json_class is found in a JSON object, the JSON parser checks if the given class responds to the json_create class method. If so, it is called with the JSON object converted to a Ruby hash. So a range can be deserialised by implementing Range.json_create like this:

class Range
  def self.json_create(o)
    new(*o['data'])
  end
end

Now it possible to serialise/deserialise ranges as well:

json = JSON.generate [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]
# => "[1,2,{\"a\":3.141},false,true,null,{\"json_class\":\"Range\",\"data\":[4,10,false]}]"
JSON.parse json
# => [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]
json = JSON.generate [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]
# => "[1,2,{\"a\":3.141},false,true,null,{\"json_class\":\"Range\",\"data\":[4,10,false]}]"
JSON.unsafe_load json
# => [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]

JSON.generate always creates the shortest possible string representation of a ruby data structure in one line. This is good for data storage or network protocols, but not so good for humans to read. Fortunately there's also JSON.pretty_generate (or JSON.pretty_generate) that creates a more readable output:

 puts JSON.pretty_generate([1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10])
 [
   1,
   2,
   {
     "a": 3.141
   },
   false,
   true,
   null,
   {
     "json_class": "Range",
     "data": [
       4,
       10,
       false
     ]
   }
 ]

There are also the methods Kernel#j for generate, and Kernel#jj for pretty_generate output to the console, that work analogous to Core Ruby's p and the pp library's pp methods.

Development

Release

Update the lib/json/version.rb file.

rbenv shell 2.6.5
rake build
gem push pkg/json-2.3.0.gem

rbenv shell jruby-9.2.9.0
rake build
gem push pkg/json-2.3.0-java.gem

Author

Florian Frank mailto:[email protected]

License

Ruby License, see https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/about/license.txt.

Download

The latest version of this library can be downloaded at

Online Documentation should be located at

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JSON implementation for Ruby (Required by ruby-i18n, ruby-stdlib) | (PKGBUILD: https://archlinux.org/packages/extra/x86_64/ruby-json)

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