/* * * Copyright 2015 gRPC authors. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. * */ #ifndef GRPC_CORE_LIB_JSON_JSON_H #define GRPC_CORE_LIB_JSON_JSON_H #include #include #include #include "src/core/lib/json/json_common.h" /* A tree-like structure to hold json values. The key and value pointers * are not owned by it. */ typedef struct grpc_json { struct grpc_json* next; struct grpc_json* prev; struct grpc_json* child; struct grpc_json* parent; grpc_json_type type; const char* key; const char* value; /* if set, destructor will free value */ bool owns_value; } grpc_json; /* The next two functions are going to parse the input string, and * modify it in the process, in order to use its space to store * all of the keys and values for the returned object tree. * * They assume UTF-8 input stream, and will output UTF-8 encoded * strings in the tree. The input stream's UTF-8 isn't validated, * as in, what you input is what you get as an output. * * All the keys and values in the grpc_json objects will be strings * pointing at your input buffer. * * Delete the allocated tree afterward using grpc_json_destroy(). */ grpc_json* grpc_json_parse_string_with_len(char* input, size_t size); grpc_json* grpc_json_parse_string(char* input); /* This function will create a new string using gpr_realloc, and will * deserialize the grpc_json tree into it. It'll be zero-terminated, * but will be allocated in chunks of 256 bytes. * * The indent parameter controls the way the output is formatted. * If indent is 0, then newlines will be suppressed as well, and the * output will be condensed at its maximum. */ char* grpc_json_dump_to_string(grpc_json* json, int indent); /* Use these to create or delete a grpc_json object. * Deletion is recursive. We will not attempt to free any of the strings * in any of the objects of that tree, unless the boolean, owns_value, * is true. */ grpc_json* grpc_json_create(grpc_json_type type); void grpc_json_destroy(grpc_json* json); /* Links the child json object into the parent's json tree. If the parent * already has children, then passing in the most recently added child as the * sibling parameter is an optimization. For if sibling is NULL, this function * will manually traverse the tree in order to find the right most sibling. */ grpc_json* grpc_json_link_child(grpc_json* parent, grpc_json* child, grpc_json* sibling); /* Creates a child json object into the parent's json tree then links it in * as described above. */ grpc_json* grpc_json_create_child(grpc_json* sibling, grpc_json* parent, const char* key, const char* value, grpc_json_type type, bool owns_value); /* Creates a child json string object from the integer num, then links the json object into the parent's json tree */ grpc_json* grpc_json_add_number_string_child(grpc_json* parent, grpc_json* it, const char* name, int64_t num); #endif /* GRPC_CORE_LIB_JSON_JSON_H */