json-c
0.15
|
json-c
Build Status
Test Status
JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C, output them as JSON formatted strings and parse JSON formatted strings back into the C representation of JSON objects. It aims to conform to RFC 7159.
git
, gcc
and cmake
Home page for json-c: https://github.com/json-c/json-c/wiki
gcc
, clang
, or another C compilerTo generate docs you'll also need:
doxygen>=1.8.13
If you are on a relatively modern system, you'll likely be able to install the prerequisites using your OS's packaging system.
sudo apt install git sudo apt install cmake sudo apt install doxygen # optional sudo apt install valgrind # optional
json-c
GitHub repo: https://github.com/json-c/json-c
$ git clone https://github.com/json-c/json-c.git $ mkdir json-c-build $ cd json-c-build $ cmake ../json-c # See CMake section below for custom arguments
Note: it's also possible to put your build directory inside the json-c source directory, or even not use a separate build directory at all, but certain things might not work quite right (notably, make distcheck
)
Then:
$ make $ make test $ make USE_VALGRIND=0 test # optionally skip using valgrind $ make install
The libray documentation can be generated directly from the source codes using Doxygen tool:
# in build directory make doc google-chrome doc/html/index.html
The json-c library is built with CMake, which can take a few options.
Variable | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX | String | The install location. |
CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE | String | Defaults to "debug". |
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS | Bool | The default build generates a dynamic (dll/so) library. Set this to OFF to create a static library only. |
BUILD_STATIC_LIBS | Bool | The default build generates a static (lib/a) library. Set this to OFF to create a shared library only. |
DISABLE_STATIC_FPIC | Bool | The default builds position independent code. Set this to OFF to create a shared library only. |
DISABLE_BSYMBOLIC | Bool | Disable use of -Bsymbolic-functions. |
DISABLE_THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE | Bool | Disable use of Thread-Local Storage (HAVE___THREAD). |
DISABLE_WERROR | Bool | Disable use of -Werror. |
ENABLE_RDRAND | Bool | Enable RDRAND Hardware RNG Hash Seed. |
ENABLE_THREADING | Bool | Enable partial threading support. |
OVERRIDE_GET_RANDOM_SEED | String | A block of code to use instead of the default implementation of json_c_get_random_seed(), e.g. on embedded platforms where not even the fallback to time() works. Must be a single line. |
Pass these options as -D
on CMake's command-line.
# build a static library only cmake -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF ..
Although json-c does not support fully multi-threaded access to object trees, it has some code to help make its use in threaded programs a bit safer. Currently, this is limited to using atomic operations for json_object_get() and json_object_put().
Since this may have a performance impact, of at least 3x slower according to https://stackoverflow.com/a/11609063, it is disabled by default. You may turn it on by adjusting your cmake command with: -DENABLE_THREADING=ON
Separately, the default hash function used for object field keys, lh_char_hash, uses a compare-and-swap operation to ensure the random seed is only generated once. Because this is a one-time operation, it is always compiled in when the compare-and-swap operation is available.
For those familiar with the old autoconf/autogen.sh/configure method, there is a cmake-configure
wrapper script to ease the transition to cmake.
mkdir build cd build ../cmake-configure --prefix=/some/install/path make
cmake-configure can take a few options.
options | Description |
---|---|
prefix=PREFIX | install architecture-independent files in PREFIX |
enable-threading | Enable code to support partly multi-threaded use |
enable-rdrand | Enable RDRAND Hardware RNG Hash Seed generation on supported x86/x64 platforms. |
enable-shared | build shared libraries [default=yes] |
enable-static | build static libraries [default=yes] |
disable-Bsymbolic | Avoid linking with -Bsymbolic-function |
disable-werror | Avoid treating compiler warnings as fatal errors |
By default, if valgrind is available running tests uses it. That can slow the tests down considerably, so to disable it use:
export USE_VALGRIND=0
To run tests a separate build directory is recommended:
mkdir build-test cd build-test # VALGRIND=1 causes -DVALGRIND=1 to be passed when compiling code # which uses slightly slower, but valgrind-safe code. VALGRIND=1 cmake .. make make test # By default, if valgrind is available running tests uses it. make USE_VALGRIND=0 test # optionally skip using valgrind
If a test fails, check Testing/Temporary/LastTest.log
, tests/testSubDir/${testname}/${testname}.vg.out
, and other similar files. If there is insufficient output try:
VERBOSE=1 make test
or
JSONC_TEST_TRACE=1 make test
and check the log files again.
vcpkg
You can download and install JSON-C using the vcpkg dependency manager:
git clone https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg.git cd vcpkg ./bootstrap-vcpkg.sh ./vcpkg integrate install vcpkg install json-c
The JSON-C port in vcpkg is kept up to date by Microsoft team members and community contributors. If the version is out of date, please create an issue or pull request on the vcpkg repository.
libjson-c
If your system has pkgconfig
, then you can just add this to your makefile
:
CFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --cflags json-c) LDFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --libs json-c)
Without pkgconfig
, you would do something like this:
JSON_C_DIR=/path/to/json_c/install CFLAGS += -I$(JSON_C_DIR)/include/json-c LDFLAGS+= -L$(JSON_C_DIR)/lib -ljson-c
To use json-c you can either include json.h, or preferrably, one of the following more specific header files:
json_object_object_foreach()
in json_object.h)For a full list of headers see files.html
The primary type in json-c is json_object. It describes a reference counted tree of json objects which are created by either parsing text with a json_tokener (i.e. json_tokener_parse_ex()
), or by creating (with json_object_new_object()
, json_object_new_int()
, etc...) and adding (with json_object_object_add()
, json_object_array_add()
, etc...) them individually. Typically, every object in the tree will have one reference, from it's parent. When you are done with the tree of objects, you call json_object_put() on just the root object to free it, which recurses down through any child objects calling json_object_put() on each one of those in turn.
You can get a reference to a single child (json_object_object_get()
or json_object_array_get_idx()
) and use that object as long as its parent is valid. If you need a child object to live longer than its parent, you can increment the child's refcount (json_object_get()
) to allow it to survive the parent being freed or it being removed from its parent (json_object_object_del()
or json_object_array_del_idx()
)
When parsing text, the json_tokener object is independent from the json_object that it returns. It can be allocated (json_tokener_new()
) used ones or multiple times (json_tokener_parse_ex()
, and freed (json_tokener_free()
) while the json_object objects live on.
A json_object tree can be serialized back into a string with json_object_to_json_string_ext()
. The string that is returned is only valid until the next "to_json_string" call on that same object. Also, it is freed when the json_object is freed.