############################################################################## # JSON::Any # v1.16 # Copyright (c) 2007 Chris Thompson ############################################################################## package JSON::Any; use warnings; use strict; use Carp; =head1 NAME JSON::Any - Wrapper Class for the various JSON classes. =head1 VERSION Version 1.16 =cut our $VERSION = '1.16'; our $UTF8; my ( %conf, $handler, $encoder, $decoder ); use constant HANDLER => 0; use constant ENCODER => 1; use constant DECODER => 2; use constant UTF8 => 3; BEGIN { %conf = ( json => { encoder => 'encode_json', decoder => 'decode_json', create_object => sub { require utf8; utf8->import(); JSON->import( '-support_by_pp', '-no_export' ); my ( $self, $conf ) = @_; my @params = qw( ascii latin1 utf8 pretty indent space_before space_after relaxed canonical allow_nonref allow_blessed convert_blessed filter_json_object shrink max_depth max_size loose allow_bignum allow_barekey allow_singlequote escape_slash indent_length sort_by ); local $conf->{utf8} = !$conf->{utf8}; # it means the opposite my $obj = $handler->new; for my $mutator (@params) { next unless exists $conf->{$mutator}; $obj = $obj->$mutator( $conf->{$mutator} ); } $self->[ENCODER] = 'encode'; $self->[DECODER] = 'decode'; $self->[HANDLER] = $obj; }, }, json_dwiw => { encoder => 'to_json', decoder => 'from_json', create_object => sub { my ( $self, $conf ) = @_; my @params = qw(bare_keys); croak "JSON::DWIW does not support utf8" if $conf->{utf8}; $self->[ENCODER] = 'to_json'; $self->[DECODER] = 'from_json'; $self->[HANDLER] = $handler->new( { map { $_ => $conf->{$_} } @params } ); }, }, json_xs_1 => { encoder => 'to_json', decoder => 'from_json', create_object => sub { my ( $self, $conf ) = @_; my @params = qw( ascii utf8 pretty indent space_before space_after canonical allow_nonref shrink max_depth ); my $obj = $handler->new; for my $mutator (@params) { next unless exists $conf->{$mutator}; $obj = $obj->$mutator( $conf->{$mutator} ); } $self->[ENCODER] = 'encode'; $self->[DECODER] = 'decode'; $self->[HANDLER] = $obj; }, }, json_xs_2 => { encoder => 'encode_json', decoder => 'decode_json', create_object => sub { require utf8; utf8->import(); my ( $self, $conf ) = @_; my @params = qw( ascii latin1 utf8 pretty indent space_before space_after relaxed canonical allow_nonref allow_blessed convert_blessed filter_json_object shrink max_depth max_size ); local $conf->{utf8} = !$conf->{utf8}; # it means the opposite my $obj = $handler->new; for my $mutator (@params) { next unless exists $conf->{$mutator}; $obj = $obj->$mutator( $conf->{$mutator} ); } $self->[ENCODER] = 'encode'; $self->[DECODER] = 'decode'; $self->[HANDLER] = $obj; }, }, json_syck => { encoder => 'Dump', decoder => 'Load', create_object => sub { my ( $self, $conf ) = @_; croak "JSON::Syck does not support utf8" if $conf->{utf8}; $self->[ENCODER] = sub { Dump(@_) }; $self->[DECODER] = sub { Load(@_) }; $self->[HANDLER] = 'JSON::Syck'; } }, ); # JSON::PC claims it has the same API as JSON $conf{json_pc} = $conf{json}; } sub _make_key { my $handler = shift; ( my $key = lc($handler) ) =~ s/::/_/g; if ( 'json_xs' eq $key ) { no strict 'refs'; $key .= "_" . ( split /\./, ${"$handler\::VERSION"} )[0]; } return $key; } sub import { my $class = shift; my @order = @_; ( $handler, $encoder, $decoder ) = (); @order = split /\s/, $ENV{JSON_ANY_ORDER} if !@order and $ENV{JSON_ANY_ORDER}; @order = qw(XS JSON DWIW Syck) unless @order; foreach my $testmod (@order) { $testmod = "JSON::$testmod" unless $testmod eq "JSON"; eval "require $testmod"; unless ($@) { $handler = $testmod; my $key = _make_key($handler); $encoder = $conf{$key}->{encoder}; $decoder = $conf{$key}->{decoder}; last; } } croak "Couldn't find a JSON Package." unless $handler; croak "Couldn't find a decoder method." unless $decoder; croak "Couldn't find a encoder method." unless $encoder; } =head1 SYNOPSIS This module will provide a coherent API to bring together the various JSON modules currently on CPAN. This module will allow you to code to any JSON API and have it work regardless of which JSON module is actually installed. use JSON::Any; my $j = JSON::Any->new; $json = $j->objToJson({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'}); $obj = $j->jsonToObj($json); or $json = $j->encode({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'}); $obj = $j->decode($json); or $json = $j->Dump({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'}); $obj = $j->Load($json); or $json = $j->to_json({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'}); $obj = $j->from_json($json); or without creating an object: $json = JSON::Any->objToJson({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'}); $obj = JSON::Any->jsonToObj($json); On load, JSON::Any will find a valid JSON module in your @INC by looking for them in this order: JSON::XS JSON JSON::DWIW JSON::Syck And loading the first one it finds. You may change the order by specifying it on the C line: use JSON::Any qw(DWIW Syck XS JSON); Specifying an order that is missing one of the modules will prevent that module from being used: use JSON::Any qw(DWIW XS JSON); This will check in that order, and will never attempt to load JSON::Syck. This can also be set via the $ENV{JSON_ANY_ORDER} environment variable. WARNING: If you call JSON::Any with an empty list use JSON::Any (); It will skip the JSON package detection routines and will die loudly that it couldn't find a package. =head1 FUNCTIONS =over =item C Will take any of the parameters for the underlying system and pass them through. However these values don't map between JSON modules, so, from a portability standpoint this is really only helpful for those paramters that happen to have the same name. This will be addressed in a future release. The one parameter that is universally supported (to the extent that is supported by the underlying JSON modules) is C. When this parameter is enabled all resulting JSON will be marked as unicode, and all unicode strings in the input data structure will be preserved as such. The actual output will vary, for example L will encode and decode unicode chars (the resulting JSON is not unicode) wheras L will emit unicode JSON. =back =cut sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = bless [], $class; my $key = _make_key($handler); if ( my $creator = $conf{$key}->{create_object} ) { my @config = @_; if ( $ENV{JSON_ANY_CONFIG} ) { push @config, map { split /=/, $_ } split /,\s*/, $ENV{JSON_ANY_CONFIG}; } $creator->( $self, my $conf = {@config} ); $self->[UTF8] = $conf->{utf8}; } return $self; } =over =item C Takes no arguments, returns a string indicating which JSON Module is in use. =back =cut sub handlerType { my $class = shift; $handler; } =over =item C Takes no arguments, if called on an object returns the internal JSON::* object in use. Otherwise returns the JSON::* package we are using for class methods. =back =cut sub handler { my $self = shift; if ( ref $self ) { return $self->[HANDLER]; } return $handler; } =over =item C Takes a single argument, a hashref to be converted into JSON. It returns the JSON text in a scalar. =back =cut sub objToJson { my $self = shift; my $obj = shift; croak 'must provide object to convert' unless defined $obj; my $json; if ( ref $self ) { my $method; unless ( ref $self->[ENCODER] ) { croak "No $handler Object created!" unless exists $self->[HANDLER]; $method = $self->[HANDLER]->can( $self->[ENCODER] ); croak "$handler can't execute $self->[ENCODER]" unless $method; } else { $method = $self->[ENCODER]; } $json = $self->[HANDLER]->$method($obj); } else { $json = $handler->can($encoder)->($obj); } utf8::decode($json) if ( ref $self ? $self->[UTF8] : $UTF8 ) and !utf8::is_utf8($json) and utf8::valid($json); return $json; } =over =item C =item C =item C Aliases for objToJson, can be used interchangeably, regardless of the underlying JSON module. =back =cut *to_json = \&objToJson; *Dump = \&objToJson; *encode = \&objToJson; =over =item C Takes a single argument, a string of JSON text to be converted back into a hashref. =back =cut sub jsonToObj { my $self = shift; my $obj = shift; croak 'must provide json to convert' unless defined $obj; if ( ref $self ) { my $method; unless ( ref $self->[DECODER] ) { croak "No $handler Object created!" unless exists $self->[HANDLER]; $method = $self->[HANDLER]->can( $self->[DECODER] ); croak "$handler can't execute $self->[DECODER]" unless $method; } else { $method = $self->[DECODER]; } return $self->[HANDLER]->$method($obj); } $handler->can($decoder)->($obj); } =over =item C =item C =item C Aliases for jsonToObj, can be used interchangeably, regardless of the underlying JSON module. =back =cut *from_json = \&jsonToObj; *Load = \&jsonToObj; *decode = \&jsonToObj; =head1 AUTHOR Chris Thompson, C<< >> Chris Prather, C<< >> =head1 BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests to C, or through the web interface at L. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes. =head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This module came about after discussions on irc.perl.org about the fact that there were now six separate JSON perl modules with different interfaces. In the spirit of Class::Any, JSON::Any was created with the considerable help of Matt 'mst' Trout. Simon Wistow graciously supplied a patch for backwards compat with JSON::XS versions previous to 2.01 San Dimas High School Football Rules! =head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright 2007 Chris Thompson, some rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut 1; # End of JSON::Any