Description
This module implements a simple TNetstring parser and serializer. TNetString stands for "tagged netstring" and is a modification of Dan Bernstein's netstrings specification. TNetstrings allow for the same data structures as JSON but in a format that is resistant to buffer overflows and backward compatible with original netstrings. They make no assumptions about string contents, allowing for easy transmission of ascii and binary data mixed with strongly typed values.
See http://cr.yp.to/proto/netstrings.txt and http://tnetstrings.info/ for additional information.
You can also read the specification here.
Prerequisites
None. This is a pure-nim library.
Installation
The easiest way to install this module is via the nimble package manager, by simply running:
% nimble install tnetstring
Alternatively, you can fetch the 'tnetstring.nim' file yourself, and put it in a place of your choosing.
Usage
import tnetstring
let
tnetstr = "52:4:test,3:1.3^4:key2,4:true!6:things,12:1:1#1:2#1:3#]}"
tnetobj = parse_tnetstring( tnetstr )
# tnetobj is now equivalent to the structure:
# @[(key: test, val: 1.3), (key: key2, val: true), (key: things, val: @[1, 2, 3])]
assert( tnetobj.kind == TNetstringObject )
echo tnetobj[ "test" ]
echo tnetobj[ "key2" ]
for item in tnetobj[ "things" ]:
echo item
Results in:
1.3
true
1
2
3
This module can also be used to reasonably create a serialized TNetstring, suitable for network transmission:
let
number = 1000
list = @[ "thing1", "thing2" ]
tnettop = newTNetstringArray() # top-level array
tnetsub = newTNetstringArray() # sub array
tnettop.add( newTNetstringInt(number) )
for item in list:
tnetsub.add( newTNetstringString(item) )
tnettop.add( tnetsub )
# Equivalent to: @[1000, @[thing1, thing2]]
echo dump_tnetstring( tnettop )
Results in:
29:4:1000#18:6:thing1,6:thing2,]]
Contributing
You can check out the current development source with Fossil via its home repo, or with Git/Jujutsu at its project mirror.
After checking out the source, running:
$ nimble setup
... will install dependencies, and do any other necessary setup for development.
Authors
- Mahlon E. Smith mahlon@martini.nu