Boost
Libraries
arrow_drop_down
Boost.Json

This Release

Vinnie Falco
Vinnie Falco
Author
Krystian Stasiowski
Krystian Stasiowski
Author
Dmitry Arkhipov
Dmitry Arkhipov
Maintainer
Mikhail Khachayants
Mikhail Khachayants
Contributor - New
Rene Rivera
Rene Rivera
Contributor - New
Julien Blanc
Julien Blanc
Contributor - New
Martin Vejbora
Contributor - New
Dmitry Arkhipov
Dmitry Arkhipov
Contributor

Boost.JSON

Branch master develop

Azure

Build Status

Build Status

Docs

Documentation

Documentation

Drone

Build Status

Build Status

Matrix

Matrix

Matrix

Fuzzing

fuzz

Appveyor

Build status

Build status

codecov.io

codecov

codecov

Boost.JSON

Overview

Boost.JSON is a portable C library which provides containers and algorithms that implement https://json.org/[JavaScript Object Notation], or simply ``JSON'', a lightweight data-interchange format. This format is easy for humans to read and write, and easy for machines to parse and generate. It is based on a subset of the JavaScript Programming Language (https://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/10.0/index.html[Standard ECMA-262]), and is currently standardised in https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8259[RFC 8259]. JSON is a text format that is language-independent but uses conventions that are familiar to programmers of the C-family of languages, including C, C, C#, Java, JavaScript, Perl, Python, and many others. These properties make JSON an ideal data-interchange language.

This library focuses on a common and popular use-case: parsing and serializing to and from a container called value which holds JSON types. Any value which you build can be serialized and then deserialized, guaranteeing that the result will be equal to the original value. Whatever JSON output you produce with this library will be readable by most common JSON implementations in any language.

The value container is designed to be well suited as a vocabulary type appropriate for use in public interfaces and libraries, allowing them to be composed. The library restricts the representable data types to the ranges which are almost universally accepted by most JSON implementations, especially JavaScript. The parser and serializer are both highly performant, meeting or exceeding the benchmark performance of the best comparable libraries. Allocators are very well supported. Code which uses these types will be easy to understand, flexible, and performant.

Boost.JSON offers these features:

  • Fast compilation

  • Require only C++11

  • Fast streaming parser and serializer

  • Constant-time key lookup for objects

  • Options to allow non-standard JSON

  • Easy and safe modern API with allocator support

  • Optional header-only, without linking to a library

Visit https://boost.org/libs/json for complete documentation.

Requirements

  • Requires only C++11

  • Link to a built static or dynamic Boost library, or use header-only (see below)

  • Supports -fno-exceptions, detected automatically

The library relies heavily on these well known C++ types in its interfaces (henceforth termed standard types):

  • string_view

  • memory_resource, polymorphic_allocator

  • error_category, error_code, error_condition, system_error

Header-Only

To use as header-only; that is, to eliminate the requirement to link a program to a static or dynamic Boost.JSON library, simply place the following line in exactly one new or existing source file in your project.

#include <boost/json/src.hpp>

MSVC users must also define the macro BOOST_JSON_NO_LIB to disable auto-linking.

Embedded

Boost.JSON works great on embedded devices. The library uses local stack buffers to increase the performance of some operations. On Intel platforms these buffers are large (4KB), while on non-Intel platforms they are small (256 bytes). To adjust the size of the stack buffers for embedded applications define this macro when building the library or including the function definitions:

#define BOOST_JSON_STACK_BUFFER_SIZE 1024
#include <boost/json/src.hpp>

Supported Compilers

Boost.JSON has been tested with the following compilers:

  • clang: 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

  • gcc: 4.8, 4.9, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

  • msvc: 14.0, 14.1, 14.2, 14.3

Supported JSON Text

The library expects input text to be encoded using UTF-8, which is a requirement put on all JSON exchanged between systems by the RFC. Similarly, the text generated by the library is valid UTF-8.

The RFC does not allow byte order marks (BOM) to appear in JSON text, so the library considers BOM syntax errors.

The library supports several popular JSON extensions. These have to be explicitly enabled.

Visual Studio Solution

cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A Win32 -B bin -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=cmake/toolchains/msvc.cmake
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A x64 -B bin64 -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=cmake/toolchains/msvc.cmake

Quality Assurance

The development infrastructure for the library includes these per-commit analyses:

  • Coverage reports

  • Benchmark performance comparisons

  • Compilation and tests on Drone.io, Azure Pipelines, Appveyor

  • Fuzzing using clang-llvm and machine learning

License

Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at https://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)

All Time

sdarwin
sdarwin
Contributor
Peter Dimov
Peter Dimov
Contributor
Gudmundur Adalsteinsson
Gudmundur Adalsteinsson
Contributor
Dogan Ulus
Dogan Ulus
Contributor
Matt Borland
Matt Borland
Contributor
Alan de Freitas
Alan de Freitas
Contributor
Liang Yan
Liang Yan
Contributor
KoaLaYT
KoaLaYT
Contributor
Paul Dreik
Paul Dreik
Contributor
Dima Rusyy
Dima Rusyy
Contributor
Jianyong Chen
Jianyong Chen
Contributor
Cameron Angus
Cameron Angus
Contributor
Oliver Ofenloch
Oliver Ofenloch
Contributor
LeeRiva
LeeRiva
Contributor
Edward Diener
Edward Diener
Contributor
Vaishnav Katiyar
Contributor
sehe
sehe
Contributor
Nigel Stewart
Nigel Stewart
Contributor
Max Kellermann
Max Kellermann
Contributor
Evan Lenz
Evan Lenz
Contributor
Lukas Friembichler
Lukas Friembichler
Contributor