iw5-mod/deps/rapidjson/doc/dom.md

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DOM

Document Object Model(DOM) is an in-memory representation of JSON for query and manipulation. The basic usage of DOM is described in Tutorial. This section will describe some details and more advanced usages.

[TOC]

Template

In the tutorial, Value and Document was used. Similarly to std::string, these are actually typedef of template classes:

namespace rapidjson {

template <typename Encoding, typename Allocator = MemoryPoolAllocator<> >
class GenericValue {
    // ...
};

template <typename Encoding, typename Allocator = MemoryPoolAllocator<> >
class GenericDocument : public GenericValue<Encoding, Allocator> {
    // ...
};

typedef GenericValue<UTF8<> > Value;
typedef GenericDocument<UTF8<> > Document;

} // namespace rapidjson

User can customize these template parameters.

Encoding

The Encoding parameter specifies the encoding of JSON String value in memory. Possible options are UTF8, UTF16, UTF32. Note that, these 3 types are also template class. UTF8<> is UTF8<char>, which means using char to store the characters. You may refer to Encoding for details.

Suppose a Windows application would query localization strings stored in JSON files. Unicode-enabled functions in Windows use UTF-16 (wide character) encoding. No matter what encoding was used in JSON files, we can store the strings in UTF-16 in memory.

using namespace rapidjson;

typedef GenericDocument<UTF16<> > WDocument;
typedef GenericValue<UTF16<> > WValue;

FILE* fp = fopen("localization.json", "rb"); // non-Windows use "r"

char readBuffer[256];
FileReadStream bis(fp, readBuffer, sizeof(readBuffer));

AutoUTFInputStream<unsigned, FileReadStream> eis(bis);  // wraps bis into eis

WDocument d;
d.ParseStream<0, AutoUTF<unsigned> >(eis);

const WValue locale(L"ja"); // Japanese

MessageBoxW(hWnd, d[locale].GetString(), L"Test", MB_OK);

Allocator

The Allocator defines which allocator class is used when allocating/deallocating memory for Document/Value. Document owns, or references to an Allocator instance. On the other hand, Value does not do so, in order to reduce memory consumption.

The default allocator used in GenericDocument is MemoryPoolAllocator. This allocator actually allocate memory sequentially, and cannot deallocate one by one. This is very suitable when parsing a JSON into a DOM tree.

Another allocator is CrtAllocator, of which CRT is short for C RunTime library. This allocator simply calls the standard malloc()/realloc()/free(). When there is a lot of add and remove operations, this allocator may be preferred. But this allocator is far less efficient than MemoryPoolAllocator.

Parsing

Document provides several functions for parsing. In below, (1) is the fundamental function, while the others are helpers which call (1).

using namespace rapidjson;

// (1) Fundamental
template <unsigned parseFlags, typename SourceEncoding, typename InputStream>
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::ParseStream(InputStream& is);

// (2) Using the same Encoding for stream
template <unsigned parseFlags, typename InputStream>
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::ParseStream(InputStream& is);

// (3) Using default parse flags
template <typename InputStream>
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::ParseStream(InputStream& is);

// (4) In situ parsing
template <unsigned parseFlags>
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::ParseInsitu(Ch* str);

// (5) In situ parsing, using default parse flags
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::ParseInsitu(Ch* str);

// (6) Normal parsing of a string
template <unsigned parseFlags, typename SourceEncoding>
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::Parse(const Ch* str);

// (7) Normal parsing of a string, using same Encoding of Document
template <unsigned parseFlags>
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::Parse(const Ch* str);

// (8) Normal parsing of a string, using default parse flags
GenericDocument& GenericDocument::Parse(const Ch* str);

The examples of tutorial uses (8) for normal parsing of string. The examples of stream uses the first three. In situ parsing will be described soon.

The parseFlags are combination of the following bit-flags:

Parse flags Meaning
kParseNoFlags No flag is set.
kParseDefaultFlags Default parse flags. It is equal to macro RAPIDJSON_PARSE_DEFAULT_FLAGS, which is defined as kParseNoFlags.
kParseInsituFlag In-situ(destructive) parsing.
kParseValidateEncodingFlag Validate encoding of JSON strings.
kParseIterativeFlag Iterative(constant complexity in terms of function call stack size) parsing.
kParseStopWhenDoneFlag After parsing a complete JSON root from stream, stop further processing the rest of stream. When this flag is used, parser will not generate kParseErrorDocumentRootNotSingular error. Using this flag for parsing multiple JSONs in the same stream.
kParseFullPrecisionFlag Parse number in full precision (slower). If this flag is not set, the normal precision (faster) is used. Normal precision has maximum 3 ULP error.
kParseCommentsFlag Allow one-line // ... and multi-line /* ... */ comments (relaxed JSON syntax).
kParseNumbersAsStringsFlag Parse numerical type values as strings.
kParseTrailingCommasFlag Allow trailing commas at the end of objects and arrays (relaxed JSON syntax).
kParseNanAndInfFlag Allow parsing NaN, Inf, Infinity, -Inf and -Infinity as double values (relaxed JSON syntax).
kParseEscapedApostropheFlag Allow escaped apostrophe \' in strings (relaxed JSON syntax).

By using a non-type template parameter, instead of a function parameter, C++ compiler can generate code which is optimized for specified combinations, improving speed, and reducing code size (if only using a single specialization). The downside is the flags needed to be determined in compile-time.

The SourceEncoding parameter defines what encoding is in the stream. This can be differed to the Encoding of the Document. See Transcoding and Validation section for details.

And the InputStream is type of input stream.

Parse Error

When the parse processing succeeded, the Document contains the parse results. When there is an error, the original DOM is unchanged. And the error state of parsing can be obtained by bool HasParseError(), ParseErrorCode GetParseError() and size_t GetErrorOffset().

Parse Error Code Description
kParseErrorNone No error.
kParseErrorDocumentEmpty The document is empty.
kParseErrorDocumentRootNotSingular The document root must not follow by other values.
kParseErrorValueInvalid Invalid value.
kParseErrorObjectMissName Missing a name for object member.
kParseErrorObjectMissColon Missing a colon after a name of object member.
kParseErrorObjectMissCommaOrCurlyBracket Missing a comma or } after an object member.
kParseErrorArrayMissCommaOrSquareBracket Missing a comma or ] after an array element.
kParseErrorStringUnicodeEscapeInvalidHex Incorrect hex digit after \\u escape in string.
kParseErrorStringUnicodeSurrogateInvalid The surrogate pair in string is invalid.
kParseErrorStringEscapeInvalid Invalid escape character in string.
kParseErrorStringMissQuotationMark Missing a closing quotation mark in string.
kParseErrorStringInvalidEncoding Invalid encoding in string.
kParseErrorNumberTooBig Number too big to be stored in double.
kParseErrorNumberMissFraction Miss fraction part in number.
kParseErrorNumberMissExponent Miss exponent in number.

The offset of error is defined as the character number from beginning of stream. Currently RapidJSON does not keep track of line number.

To get an error message, RapidJSON provided a English messages in rapidjson/error/en.h. User can customize it for other locales, or use a custom localization system.

Here shows an example of parse error handling.

#include "rapidjson/document.h"
#include "rapidjson/error/en.h"

// ...
Document d;
if (d.Parse(json).HasParseError()) {
    fprintf(stderr, "\nError(offset %u): %s\n", 
        (unsigned)d.GetErrorOffset(),
        GetParseError_En(d.GetParseError()));
    // ...
}

In Situ Parsing

From Wikipedia:

In situ ... is a Latin phrase that translates literally to "on site" or "in position". It means "locally", "on site", "on the premises" or "in place" to describe an event where it takes place, and is used in many different contexts. ... (In computer science) An algorithm is said to be an in situ algorithm, or in-place algorithm, if the extra amount of memory required to execute the algorithm is O(1), that is, does not exceed a constant no matter how large the input. For example, heapsort is an in situ sorting algorithm.

In normal parsing process, a large overhead is to decode JSON strings and copy them to other buffers. In situ parsing decodes those JSON string at the place where it is stored. It is possible in JSON because the length of decoded string is always shorter than or equal to the one in JSON. In this context, decoding a JSON string means to process the escapes, such as "\n", "\u1234", etc., and add a null terminator ('\0')at the end of string.

The following diagrams compare normal and in situ parsing. The JSON string values contain pointers to the decoded string.

normal parsing

In normal parsing, the decoded string are copied to freshly allocated buffers. "\\n" (2 characters) is decoded as "\n" (1 character). "\\u0073" (6 characters) is decoded as "s" (1 character).

instiu parsing

In situ parsing just modified the original JSON. Updated characters are highlighted in the diagram. If the JSON string does not contain escape character, such as "msg", the parsing process merely replace the closing double quotation mark with a null character.

Since in situ parsing modify the input, the parsing API needs char* instead of const char*.

// Read whole file into a buffer
FILE* fp = fopen("test.json", "r");
fseek(fp, 0, SEEK_END);
size_t filesize = (size_t)ftell(fp);
fseek(fp, 0, SEEK_SET);
char* buffer = (char*)malloc(filesize + 1);
size_t readLength = fread(buffer, 1, filesize, fp);
buffer[readLength] = '\0';
fclose(fp);

// In situ parsing the buffer into d, buffer will also be modified
Document d;
d.ParseInsitu(buffer);

// Query/manipulate the DOM here...

free(buffer);
// Note: At this point, d may have dangling pointers pointed to the deallocated buffer.

The JSON strings are marked as const-string. But they may not be really "constant". The life cycle of it depends on the JSON buffer.

In situ parsing minimizes allocation overheads and memory copying. Generally this improves cache coherence, which is an important factor of performance in modern computer.

There are some limitations of in situ parsing:

  1. The whole JSON is in memory.
  2. The source encoding in stream and target encoding in document must be the same.
  3. The buffer need to be retained until the document is no longer used.
  4. If the DOM need to be used for long period after parsing, and there are few JSON strings in the DOM, retaining the buffer may be a memory waste.

In situ parsing is mostly suitable for short-term JSON that only need to be processed once, and then be released from memory. In practice, these situation is very common, for example, deserializing JSON to C++ objects, processing web requests represented in JSON, etc.

Transcoding and Validation

RapidJSON supports conversion between Unicode formats (officially termed UCS Transformation Format) internally. During DOM parsing, the source encoding of the stream can be different from the encoding of the DOM. For example, the source stream contains a UTF-8 JSON, while the DOM is using UTF-16 encoding. There is an example code in EncodedInputStream.

When writing a JSON from DOM to output stream, transcoding can also be used. An example is in EncodedOutputStream.

During transcoding, the source string is decoded to into Unicode code points, and then the code points are encoded in the target format. During decoding, it will validate the byte sequence in the source string. If it is not a valid sequence, the parser will be stopped with kParseErrorStringInvalidEncoding error.

When the source encoding of stream is the same as encoding of DOM, by default, the parser will not validate the sequence. User may use kParseValidateEncodingFlag to force validation.

Techniques

Some techniques about using DOM API is discussed here.

DOM as SAX Event Publisher

In RapidJSON, stringifying a DOM with Writer may be look a little bit weird.

// ...
Writer<StringBuffer> writer(buffer);
d.Accept(writer);

Actually, Value::Accept() is responsible for publishing SAX events about the value to the handler. With this design, Value and Writer are decoupled. Value can generate SAX events, and Writer can handle those events.

User may create custom handlers for transforming the DOM into other formats. For example, a handler which converts the DOM into XML.

For more about SAX events and handler, please refer to SAX.

User Buffer

Some applications may try to avoid memory allocations whenever possible.

MemoryPoolAllocator can support this by letting user to provide a buffer. The buffer can be on the program stack, or a "scratch buffer" which is statically allocated (a static/global array) for storing temporary data.

MemoryPoolAllocator will use the user buffer to satisfy allocations. When the user buffer is used up, it will allocate a chunk of memory from the base allocator (by default the CrtAllocator).

Here is an example of using stack memory. The first allocator is for storing values, while the second allocator is for storing temporary data during parsing.

typedef GenericDocument<UTF8<>, MemoryPoolAllocator<>, MemoryPoolAllocator<>> DocumentType;
char valueBuffer[4096];
char parseBuffer[1024];
MemoryPoolAllocator<> valueAllocator(valueBuffer, sizeof(valueBuffer));
MemoryPoolAllocator<> parseAllocator(parseBuffer, sizeof(parseBuffer));
DocumentType d(&valueAllocator, sizeof(parseBuffer), &parseAllocator);
d.Parse(json);

If the total size of allocation is less than 4096+1024 bytes during parsing, this code does not invoke any heap allocation (via new or malloc()) at all.

User can query the current memory consumption in bytes via MemoryPoolAllocator::Size(). And then user can determine a suitable size of user buffer.