0
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/matrix-construct/construct synced 2024-11-05 13:28:54 +01:00
construct/include/ircd/json/value.h

150 lines
5.6 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

2018-02-04 03:22:01 +01:00
// Matrix Construct
//
// Copyright (C) Matrix Construct Developers, Authors & Contributors
// Copyright (C) 2016-2018 Jason Volk <jason@zemos.net>
//
// Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
// purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
// copyright notice and this permission notice is present in all copies. The
// full license for this software is available in the LICENSE file.
#pragma once
#define HAVE_IRCD_JSON_VALUE_H
namespace ircd::json
{
struct value;
using values = std::initializer_list<value>;
size_t serialized(const bool &);
size_t serialized(const value *const &begin, const value *const &end);
size_t serialized(const values &);
string_view stringify(mutable_buffer &, const value *const &begin, const value *const &end);
}
/// A primitive of the ircd::json system representing a value at runtime.
///
/// This holds state for values apropos a JSON object or array. Value's
/// data can either be in the form of a JSON string or it can be some native
/// machine state. The serial flag indicates the former.
///
/// Value can can hold any of the JSON types in either of these states.
/// This is accomplished with runtime switching and branching but this is
/// still lightweight and without a vtable pointer. The structure is just
/// the size of two pointers like a string_view; we commandeer bits of the
/// second word to hold type, flags, and length information. Thus we can hold
/// large vectors of values at 16 byte alignment and not 24 byte.
///
/// Value is capable of allocation and ownership of its internal data and copy
/// semantics. This is primarily to support recursion and various developer
/// conveniences like nested initializer_list's etc. It is better to
/// std::move() a value than copy it, but the full copy semantic is supported;
/// however, if serial=false then a copy will stringify the data into JSON and
/// the destination will be serial=true,alloc=true; thus copying of complex
/// native values never occurs.
///
/// Take careful note of a quirk with `operator string_view()`: when the
/// value is a STRING type string_view()'ing the value will never show
/// the string with surrounding quotes in view. This is because the value
/// accepts both quoted and unquoted strings as input from the developer, then
/// always serializes correctly; unquoted strings are more natural to work
/// with. This does not apply to other types like OBJECT and array as
/// string_view()'ing those when in a serial state will show surrounding '{'
/// etc.
///
struct ircd::json::value
{
union
{
2017-03-20 12:25:55 +01:00
int64_t integer;
double floating;
const char *string;
const struct value *array;
const struct member *object;
};
uint64_t len : 57; ///< length indicator
enum type type : 3; ///< json::type indicator
uint64_t serial : 1; ///< only *string is used. type indicates JSON
uint64_t alloc : 1; ///< indicates the pointer for type is owned
uint64_t floats : 1; ///< for NUMBER type, integer or floating
using create_string_closure = std::function<void (mutable_buffer &)>;
void create_string(const size_t &len, const create_string_closure &);
public:
bool null() const; ///< literal null or assets are really null
bool empty() const; ///< null() or assets are empty
bool undefined() const;
bool operator!() const; ///< null() or undefined() or empty() or asset Falsy
operator string_view() const; ///< NOTE unquote()'s the string value
explicit operator double() const;
explicit operator int64_t() const;
explicit operator std::string() const; ///< NOTE full stringify() of value
value(const struct member *const &, const size_t &len);
value(std::unique_ptr<const struct member[]> &&, const size_t &len); // alloc = true
value(const struct value *const &, const size_t &len);
value(std::unique_ptr<const struct value[]> &&, const size_t &len); // alloc = true
template<size_t N> value(const char (&)[N], const enum type &);
template<size_t N> value(const char (&)[N]);
explicit value(const std::string &, const enum type &);
explicit value(const std::string &);
value(const string_view &sv, const enum type &);
value(const string_view &sv);
value(const json::object &);
value(const json::array &);
value(const char *const &, const enum type &);
value(const char *const &s);
explicit value(const int64_t &);
explicit value(const double &);
explicit value(const bool &);
value(const members &); // alloc = true
value(const nullptr_t &);
value();
value(value &&) noexcept;
value(const value &);
value &operator=(value &&) noexcept;
value &operator=(const value &);
~value() noexcept;
friend bool operator==(const value &a, const value &b);
friend bool operator!=(const value &a, const value &b);
friend bool operator<=(const value &a, const value &b);
friend bool operator>=(const value &a, const value &b);
friend bool operator<(const value &a, const value &b);
friend bool operator>(const value &a, const value &b);
friend enum type type(const value &a);
2017-10-12 03:07:47 +02:00
friend bool defined(const value &);
friend size_t serialized(const value &);
friend string_view stringify(mutable_buffer &, const value &);
friend std::ostream &operator<<(std::ostream &, const value &);
};
2017-03-20 12:25:55 +01:00
static_assert(sizeof(ircd::json::value) == 16, "");
inline
ircd::json::value::value()
:string{nullptr}
,len{0}
,type{STRING}
,serial{false}
,alloc{false}
,floats{false}
{}
template<size_t N>
ircd::json::value::value(const char (&str)[N])
:value{string_view{str, strnlen(str, N)}}
{}
template<size_t N>
ircd::json::value::value(const char (&str)[N],
const enum type &type)
:value{string_view{str, strnlen(str, N)}, type}
{}