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  1. \mainpage
  2. `json-c`
  3. ========
  4. 1. [Overview and Build Status](#overview)
  5. 2. [Building on Unix](#buildunix)
  6. * [Prerequisites](#installprereq)
  7. * [Build commands](#buildcmds)
  8. 3. [CMake options](#CMake)
  9. 4. [Testing](#testing)
  10. 5. [Building with `vcpkg`](#buildvcpkg)
  11. 6. [Linking to libjson-c](#linking)
  12. 7. [Using json-c](#using)
  13. JSON-C - A JSON implementation in C <a name="overview"></a>
  14. -----------------------------------
  15. Build Status
  16. * [AppVeyor Build](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/hawicz/json-c) ![AppVeyor Build Status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/github/json-c/json-c?branch=master&svg=true)
  17. * [Travis Build](https://travis-ci.org/json-c/json-c) ![Travis Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/json-c/json-c.svg?branch=master)
  18. Test Status
  19. * [Coveralls](https://coveralls.io/github/json-c/json-c?branch=master) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/json-c/json-c/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/json-c/json-c?branch=master)
  20. JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily
  21. construct JSON objects in C, output them as JSON formatted strings and parse
  22. JSON formatted strings back into the C representation of JSON objects.
  23. It aims to conform to [RFC 7159](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7159).
  24. Building on Unix with `git`, `gcc` and `cmake` <a name="buildunix"></a>
  25. --------------------------------------------------
  26. Home page for json-c: https://github.com/json-c/json-c/wiki
  27. ### Prerequisites: <a name="installprereq"></a>
  28. - `gcc`, `clang`, or another C compiler
  29. - cmake>=2.8, >=3.16 recommended
  30. To generate docs you'll also need:
  31. - `doxygen>=1.8.13`
  32. If you are on a relatively modern system, you'll likely be able to install
  33. the prerequisites using your OS's packaging system.
  34. ### Install using apt (e.g. Ubuntu 16.04.2 LTS)
  35. ```sh
  36. sudo apt install git
  37. sudo apt install cmake
  38. sudo apt install doxygen # optional
  39. sudo apt install valgrind # optional
  40. ```
  41. ### Build instructions: <a name="buildcmds"></a>
  42. `json-c` GitHub repo: https://github.com/json-c/json-c
  43. ```sh
  44. $ git clone https://github.com/json-c/json-c.git
  45. $ mkdir json-c-build
  46. $ cd json-c-build
  47. $ cmake ../json-c # See CMake section below for custom arguments
  48. ```
  49. Note: it's also possible to put your build directory inside the json-c
  50. source directory, or even not use a separate build directory at all, but
  51. certain things might not work quite right (notably, `make distcheck`)
  52. Then:
  53. ```sh
  54. $ make
  55. $ make test
  56. $ make USE_VALGRIND=0 test # optionally skip using valgrind
  57. $ make install
  58. ```
  59. ### Generating documentation with Doxygen:
  60. The libray documentation can be generated directly from the source codes using Doxygen tool:
  61. ```sh
  62. # in build directory
  63. make doc
  64. google-chrome doc/html/index.html
  65. ```
  66. CMake Options <a name="CMake"></a>
  67. --------------------
  68. The json-c library is built with [CMake](https://cmake.org/cmake-tutorial/),
  69. which can take a few options.
  70. Variable | Type | Description
  71. -----------------------------|--------|--------------
  72. CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX | String | The install location.
  73. CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE | String | Defaults to "debug".
  74. BUILD_SHARED_LIBS | Bool | The default build generates a dynamic (dll/so) library. Set this to OFF to create a static library only.
  75. BUILD_STATIC_LIBS | Bool | The default build generates a static (lib/a) library. Set this to OFF to create a shared library only.
  76. DISABLE_STATIC_FPIC | Bool | The default builds position independent code. Set this to OFF to create a shared library only.
  77. DISABLE_BSYMBOLIC | Bool | Disable use of -Bsymbolic-functions.
  78. DISABLE_THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE | Bool | Disable use of Thread-Local Storage (HAVE___THREAD).
  79. DISABLE_WERROR | Bool | Disable use of -Werror.
  80. ENABLE_RDRAND | Bool | Enable RDRAND Hardware RNG Hash Seed.
  81. ENABLE_THREADING | Bool | Enable partial threading support.
  82. Pass these options as `-D` on CMake's command-line.
  83. ```sh
  84. # build a static library only
  85. cmake -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF ..
  86. ```
  87. ### Building with partial threading support
  88. Although json-c does not support fully multi-threaded access to
  89. object trees, it has some code to help make its use in threaded programs
  90. a bit safer. Currently, this is limited to using atomic operations for
  91. json_object_get() and json_object_put().
  92. Since this may have a performance impact, of at least 3x slower
  93. according to https://stackoverflow.com/a/11609063, it is disabled by
  94. default. You may turn it on by adjusting your cmake command with:
  95. -DENABLE_THREADING=ON
  96. Separately, the default hash function used for object field keys,
  97. lh_char_hash, uses a compare-and-swap operation to ensure the random
  98. seed is only generated once. Because this is a one-time operation, it
  99. is always compiled in when the compare-and-swap operation is available.
  100. ### cmake-configure wrapper script
  101. For those familiar with the old autoconf/autogen.sh/configure method,
  102. there is a `cmake-configure` wrapper script to ease the transition to cmake.
  103. ```sh
  104. mkdir build
  105. cd build
  106. ../cmake-configure --prefix=/some/install/path
  107. make
  108. ```
  109. cmake-configure can take a few options.
  110. | options | Description|
  111. | ---- | ---- |
  112. | prefix=PREFIX | install architecture-independent files in PREFIX |
  113. | enable-threading | Enable code to support partly multi-threaded use |
  114. | enable-rdrand | Enable RDRAND Hardware RNG Hash Seed generation on supported x86/x64 platforms. |
  115. | enable-shared | build shared libraries [default=yes] |
  116. | enable-static | build static libraries [default=yes] |
  117. | disable-Bsymbolic | Avoid linking with -Bsymbolic-function |
  118. | disable-werror | Avoid treating compiler warnings as fatal errors |
  119. Testing: <a name="testing"></a>
  120. ----------
  121. By default, if valgrind is available running tests uses it.
  122. That can slow the tests down considerably, so to disable it use:
  123. ```sh
  124. export USE_VALGRIND=0
  125. ```
  126. To run tests a separate build directory is recommended:
  127. ```sh
  128. mkdir build-test
  129. cd build-test
  130. # VALGRIND=1 causes -DVALGRIND=1 to be passed when compiling code
  131. # which uses slightly slower, but valgrind-safe code.
  132. VALGRIND=1 cmake ..
  133. make
  134. make test
  135. # By default, if valgrind is available running tests uses it.
  136. make USE_VALGRIND=0 test # optionally skip using valgrind
  137. ```
  138. If a test fails, check `Testing/Temporary/LastTest.log`,
  139. `tests/testSubDir/${testname}/${testname}.vg.out`, and other similar files.
  140. If there is insufficient output try:
  141. ```sh
  142. VERBOSE=1 make test
  143. ```
  144. or
  145. ```sh
  146. JSONC_TEST_TRACE=1 make test
  147. ```
  148. and check the log files again.
  149. Building on Unix and Windows with `vcpkg` <a name="buildvcpkg"></a>
  150. --------------------------------------------------
  151. You can download and install JSON-C using the [vcpkg](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg/) dependency manager:
  152. git clone https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg.git
  153. cd vcpkg
  154. ./bootstrap-vcpkg.sh
  155. ./vcpkg integrate install
  156. vcpkg install json-c
  157. 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](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg) on the vcpkg repository.
  158. Linking to `libjson-c` <a name="linking">
  159. ----------------------
  160. If your system has `pkgconfig`,
  161. then you can just add this to your `makefile`:
  162. ```make
  163. CFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --cflags json-c)
  164. LDFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --libs json-c)
  165. ```
  166. Without `pkgconfig`, you would do something like this:
  167. ```make
  168. JSON_C_DIR=/path/to/json_c/install
  169. CFLAGS += -I$(JSON_C_DIR)/include/json-c
  170. LDFLAGS+= -L$(JSON_C_DIR)/lib -ljson-c
  171. ```
  172. Using json-c <a name="using">
  173. ------------
  174. To use json-c you can either include json.h, or preferrably, one of the
  175. following more specific header files:
  176. * json_object.h - Core types and methods.
  177. * json_tokener.h - Methods for parsing and serializing json-c object trees.
  178. * json_pointer.h - JSON Pointer (RFC 6901) implementation for retrieving
  179. objects from a json-c object tree.
  180. * json_object_iterator.h - Methods for iterating over single json_object instances. (See also `json_object_object_foreach()` in json_object.h)
  181. * json_visit.h - Methods for walking a tree of json-c objects.
  182. * json_util.h - Miscelleanous utility functions.
  183. For a full list of headers see [files.html](http://json-c.github.io/json-c/json-c-current-release/doc/html/files.html)
  184. The primary type in json-c is json_object. It describes a reference counted
  185. tree of json objects which are created by either parsing text with a
  186. json_tokener (i.e. `json_tokener_parse_ex()`), or by creating
  187. (with `json_object_new_object()`, `json_object_new_int()`, etc...) and adding
  188. (with `json_object_object_add()`, `json_object_array_add()`, etc...) them
  189. individually.
  190. Typically, every object in the tree will have one reference, from it's parent.
  191. When you are done with the tree of objects, you call json_object_put() on just
  192. the root object to free it, which recurses down through any child objects
  193. calling json_object_put() on each one of those in turn.
  194. You can get a reference to a single child
  195. (`json_object_object_get()` or `json_object_array_get_idx()`)
  196. and use that object as long as its parent is valid.
  197. If you need a child object to live longer than its parent, you can
  198. increment the child's refcount (`json_object_get()`) to allow it to survive
  199. the parent being freed or it being removed from its parent
  200. (`json_object_object_del()` or `json_object_array_del_idx()`)
  201. When parsing text, the json_tokener object is independent from the json_object
  202. that it returns. It can be allocated (`json_tokener_new()`)
  203. used ones or multiple times (`json_tokener_parse_ex()`, and
  204. freed (`json_tokener_free()`) while the json_object objects live on.
  205. A json_object tree can be serialized back into a string with
  206. `json_object_to_json_string_ext()`. The string that is returned
  207. is only valid until the next "to_json_string" call on that same object.
  208. Also, it is freed when the json_object is freed.