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--[[ json.lua | |
A compact pure-Lua JSON library. | |
The main functions are: json.stringify, json.parse. | |
## json.stringify: | |
This expects the following to be true of any tables being encoded: | |
* They only have string or number keys. Number keys must be represented as | |
strings in json; this is part of the json spec. | |
* They are not recursive. Such a structure cannot be specified in json. | |
A Lua table is considered to be an array if and only if its set of keys is a | |
consecutive sequence of positive integers starting at 1. Arrays are encoded like | |
so: `[2, 3, false, "hi"]`. Any other type of Lua table is encoded as a json | |
object, encoded like so: `{"key1": 2, "key2": false}`. | |
Because the Lua nil value cannot be a key, and as a table value is considerd | |
equivalent to a missing key, there is no way to express the json "null" value in | |
a Lua table. The only way this will output "null" is if your entire input obj is | |
nil itself. | |
An empty Lua table, {}, could be considered either a json object or array - | |
it's an ambiguous edge case. We choose to treat this as an object as it is the | |
more general type. | |
To be clear, none of the above considerations is a limitation of this code. | |
Rather, it is what we get when we completely observe the json specification for | |
as arbitrary a Lua object as json is capable of expressing. | |
## json.parse: | |
This function parses json, with the exception that it does not pay attention to | |
\u-escaped unicode code points in strings. | |
It is difficult for Lua to return null as a value. In order to prevent the loss | |
of keys with a null value in a json string, this function uses the one-off | |
table value json.null (which is just an empty table) to indicate null values. | |
This way you can check if a value is null with the conditional | |
`val == json.null`. | |
If you have control over the data and are using Lua, I would recommend just | |
avoiding null values in your data to begin with. | |
--]] | |
local json = {} | |
-- Internal functions. | |
local function kind_of(obj) | |
if type(obj) ~= 'table' then return type(obj) end | |
local i = 1 | |
for _ in pairs(obj) do | |
if obj[i] ~= nil then i = i + 1 else return 'table' end | |
end | |
if i == 1 then return 'table' else return 'array' end | |
end | |
local function escape_str(s) | |
local in_char = {'\\', '"', '/', '\b', '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t'} | |
local out_char = {'\\', '"', '/', 'b', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't'} | |
for i, c in ipairs(in_char) do | |
s = s:gsub(c, '\\' .. out_char[i]) | |
end | |
return s | |
end | |
-- Returns pos, did_find; there are two cases: | |
-- 1. Delimiter found: pos = pos after leading space + delim; did_find = true. | |
-- 2. Delimiter not found: pos = pos after leading space; did_find = false. | |
-- This throws an error if err_if_missing is true and the delim is not found. | |
local function skip_delim(str, pos, delim, err_if_missing) | |
pos = pos + #str:match('^%s*', pos) | |
if str:sub(pos, pos) ~= delim then | |
if err_if_missing then | |
error('Expected ' .. delim .. ' near position ' .. pos) | |
end | |
return pos, false | |
end | |
return pos + 1, true | |
end | |
-- Expects the given pos to be the first character after the opening quote. | |
-- Returns val, pos; the returned pos is after the closing quote character. | |
local function parse_str_val(str, pos, val) | |
val = val or '' | |
local early_end_error = 'End of input found while parsing string.' | |
if pos > #str then error(early_end_error) end | |
local c = str:sub(pos, pos) | |
if c == '"' then return val, pos + 1 end | |
if c ~= '\\' then return parse_str_val(str, pos + 1, val .. c) end | |
-- We must have a \ character. | |
local esc_map = {b = '\b', f = '\f', n = '\n', r = '\r', t = '\t'} | |
local nextc = str:sub(pos + 1, pos + 1) | |
if not nextc then error(early_end_error) end | |
return parse_str_val(str, pos + 2, val .. (esc_map[nextc] or nextc)) | |
end | |
-- Returns val, pos; the returned pos is after the number's final character. | |
local function parse_num_val(str, pos) | |
local num_str = str:match('^-?%d+%.?%d*[eE]?[+-]?%d*', pos) | |
local val = tonumber(num_str) | |
if not val then error('Error parsing number at position ' .. pos .. '.') end | |
return val, pos + #num_str | |
end | |
-- Public values and functions. | |
function json.stringify(obj, as_key) | |
local s = {} -- We'll build the string as an array of strings to be concatenated. | |
local kind = kind_of(obj) -- This is 'array' if it's an array or type(obj) otherwise. | |
if kind == 'array' then | |
if as_key then error('Can\'t encode array as key.') end | |
s[#s + 1] = '[' | |
for i, val in ipairs(obj) do | |
if i > 1 then s[#s + 1] = ', ' end | |
s[#s + 1] = json.stringify(val) | |
end | |
s[#s + 1] = ']' | |
elseif kind == 'table' then | |
if as_key then error('Can\'t encode table as key.') end | |
s[#s + 1] = '{' | |
for k, v in pairs(obj) do | |
if #s > 1 then s[#s + 1] = ', ' end | |
s[#s + 1] = json.stringify(k, true) | |
s[#s + 1] = ':' | |
s[#s + 1] = json.stringify(v) | |
end | |
s[#s + 1] = '}' | |
elseif kind == 'string' then | |
return '"' .. escape_str(obj) .. '"' | |
elseif kind == 'number' then | |
if as_key then return '"' .. tostring(obj) .. '"' end | |
return tostring(obj) | |
elseif kind == 'boolean' then | |
return tostring(obj) | |
elseif kind == 'nil' then | |
return 'null' | |
else | |
error('Unjsonifiable type: ' .. kind .. '.') | |
end | |
return table.concat(s) | |
end | |
json.null = {} -- This is a one-off table to represent the null value. | |
function json.parse(str, pos, end_delim) | |
pos = pos or 1 | |
if pos > #str then error('Reached unexpected end of input.') end | |
local pos = pos + #str:match('^%s*', pos) -- Skip whitespace. | |
local first = str:sub(pos, pos) | |
if first == '{' then -- Parse an object. | |
local obj, key, delim_found = {}, true, true | |
pos = pos + 1 | |
while true do | |
key, pos = json.parse(str, pos, '}') | |
if key == nil then return obj, pos end | |
if not delim_found then error('Comma missing between object items.') end | |
pos = skip_delim(str, pos, ':', true) -- true -> error if missing. | |
obj[key], pos = json.parse(str, pos) | |
pos, delim_found = skip_delim(str, pos, ',') | |
end | |
elseif first == '[' then -- Parse an array. | |
local arr, val, delim_found = {}, true, true | |
pos = pos + 1 | |
while true do | |
val, pos = json.parse(str, pos, ']') | |
if val == nil then return arr, pos end | |
if not delim_found then error('Comma missing between array items.') end | |
arr[#arr + 1] = val | |
pos, delim_found = skip_delim(str, pos, ',') | |
end | |
elseif first == '"' then -- Parse a string. | |
return parse_str_val(str, pos + 1) | |
elseif first == '-' or first:match('%d') then -- Parse a number. | |
return parse_num_val(str, pos) | |
elseif first == end_delim then -- End of an object or array. | |
return nil, pos + 1 | |
else -- Parse true, false, or null. | |
local literals = {['true'] = true, ['false'] = false, ['null'] = json.null} | |
for lit_str, lit_val in pairs(literals) do | |
local lit_end = pos + #lit_str - 1 | |
if str:sub(pos, lit_end) == lit_str then return lit_val, lit_end + 1 end | |
end | |
local pos_info_str = 'position ' .. pos .. ': ' .. str:sub(pos, pos + 10) | |
error('Invalid json syntax starting at ' .. pos_info_str) | |
end | |
end | |
return json |
Hi @shuaich , it's a good question. It turns out that you could edit escape_str()
so that it doesn't escape forward slashes, and everything will work fine.
Why is the current code the way it is? Because when I wrote it I was looking at the JSON spec, which gives a short list of characters that can be escaped: https://www.json.org/json-en.html (scroll down to the "string" section)
After you asked your question, I myself was wondering why anyone would need to escape forward slashes. It turns out that HTML disallows strings inside a <script> tag from containing the character sequence </
, and you can avoid those sequences by escaping forward slashes. Hence JSON supports that, hence my code above supports it. But, again, if you leave the forward slashes un-escaped, it is still valid JSON and you might like that way better! :)
For reference, here's the answer I found on stackoverflow about JSON escaping forward slashes:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/1580682/3561
Thanks Tyler for your responsive and detailed answer. That makes total sense. 👍
@tylerneylon ,
massive thanks for sharing this.
You really helped me figure out how to create an EnvoyFilter to extract claims from the authorization header.
Thank you so much!
Thanks a lot for creating this library.
One question on escape_str(). What is the rationale to escape '/'? '/' is not a valid escape character in Lua. After escaping, http://stderr -> http:\/\/stderr, which IMHO is a bit confusing.
Much appreciated if you could clarify this for me.