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//! This library provides a bit more lightweight implementation (compared to Serde)
//! of general-purpose serialization and de-serialization. **The intention here is
//! not to replace Serde completely** though. Serde does an amazing job and it
//! wouldn't make much sense to compete with Serde in terms of
//! serialization/de-serialization speed and the amount of memory used in runtime.
//!
//! We focus mainly on the one thing where Serde can be a pain in the... code :) -
//! and it's the size of the resulting binary. Depending on the complexity of the
//! types that you try to serialize/de-serialize, Serde can produce quite a lot of
//! code. Plus there is also some monomorphization which may add even more code to
//! your binary.
//!
//! In order to achieve it's goal, this library does some assumptions about the
//! underlying format. It uses an intermediate data representation that is similar
//! to JSON. The intermediate format can be then serialized/deserialized using
//! Serde. This implies that this library will never be as fast as Serde itself.
//!
//! # Usage
//!
//! You can use this library as a drop-in replacement for Serde. There are
//! `Serialize` and `Deserialize` traits that can be automatically derived and
//! there are also some attributes (compatible with Serde), so all you really have
//! to do is to put `serde-lite` instead of `serde` into your `Cargo.toml`.
//!
//! ## Serialization
//!
//! Here is a brief example of serialization into JSON:
//! ```rust
//! use serde_lite::Serialize;
//! use serde_lite_derive::Serialize;
//!
//! #[derive(Serialize)]
//! struct MyStruct {
//! field1: u32,
//! field2: String,
//! }
//!
//! let instance = MyStruct {
//! field1: 10,
//! field2: String::from("Hello, World!"),
//! };
//!
//! let intermediate = instance.serialize().unwrap();
//! let json = serde_json::to_string_pretty(&intermediate).unwrap();
//! ```
//!
//! ## De-serialization
//!
//! Here is a brief example of de-serialization from JSON:
//! ```rust
//! use serde_lite::Deserialize;
//! use serde_lite_derive::Deserialize;
//!
//! #[derive(Deserialize)]
//! struct MyStruct {
//! field1: u32,
//! field2: String,
//! }
//!
//! let input = r#"{
//! "field1": 10,
//! "field2": "Hello, World!"
//! }"#;
//!
//! let intermediate = serde_json::from_str(input).unwrap();
//! let instance = MyStruct::deserialize(&intermediate).unwrap();
//! ```
//!
//! ## Update
//!
//! Wait. What? Yes, this library has one more cool feature - partial updates.
//! Simply derive `Update` the same way you'd derive `Deserialize`. Example:
//! ```rust
//! use serde_lite::{Deserialize, Update};
//! use serde_lite_derive::{Deserialize, Update};
//!
//! #[derive(Deserialize, Update)]
//! struct MyStruct {
//! field1: u32,
//! field2: String,
//! }
//!
//! let mut instance = MyStruct {
//! field1: 10,
//! field2: String::new(),
//! };
//!
//! let input = r#"{
//! "field2": "Hello, World!"
//! }"#;
//!
//! let intermediate = serde_json::from_str(input).unwrap();
//! let instance = instance.update(&intermediate).unwrap();
//! ```
//!
//! This feature can be especially handy if you're constructing a REST API and
//! you'd like to allow partial updates of your data.
//!
//! ## Supported attributes
//!
//! The library does not support all Serde attributes at this moment. Patches are
//! definitely welcome. These attributes are supported:
//!
//! * Container attributes:
//! * `tag`
//! * `content`
//! * Field attributes:
//! * `default`
//! * `flatten`
//! * `rename`
//! * `skip`
//! * `skip_serializing`
//! * `skip_serializing_if`
//! * `skip_deserializing`
//! * `serialize_with`
//! * `deserialize_with`
//! * `update_with`
//! * Enum variant attributes:
//! * `rename`
//!
//! # When to use this library
//!
//! You can use this library whenever you need to serialize/de-serialize some
//! complex types and the size of the resulting binary matters to you. It is also
//! very useful in projects where you need to be able to partially update your data
//! based on the user input (e.g. REST APIs).
//!
//! # When to avoid using this library
//!
//! If the only thing that matters to you is the runtime performance, you probably
//! don't want to use this library. It also isn't very useful for
//! serializing/de-serializing huge amount of data because it needs to be
//! transformed into the intermediate representation at first. And, finally, this
//! library can only be used with self-describing formats like JSON.
mod deserialize;
mod intermediate;
mod map;
mod serialize;
mod update;
use std::{
borrow::Cow,
collections::LinkedList,
fmt::{self, Display, Formatter},
};
#[cfg(feature = "derive")]
pub use serde_lite_derive::{Deserialize, Serialize, Update};
pub use crate::{
deserialize::Deserialize,
intermediate::{Intermediate, Number},
map::{Map, MapImpl},
serialize::Serialize,
update::Update,
};
/// Error.
#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub enum Error {
OutOfBounds,
UnsupportedConversion,
MissingField,
UnknownEnumVariant,
MissingEnumVariantContent,
InvalidValue(Cow<'static, str>),
NamedFieldErrors(ErrorList<NamedFieldError>),
UnnamedFieldErrors(ErrorList<UnnamedFieldError>),
Custom(Cow<'static, str>),
}
impl Error {
/// Create an invalid value error with a given expected type name.
#[inline]
pub fn invalid_value<T>(expected: T) -> Self
where
T: ToString,
{
Self::InvalidValue(Cow::Owned(expected.to_string()))
}
/// Create an invalid value error with a given expected type name.
#[inline]
pub const fn invalid_value_static(expected: &'static str) -> Self {
Self::InvalidValue(Cow::Borrowed(expected))
}
/// Create a custom error with a given error message.
#[inline]
pub fn custom<T>(msg: T) -> Self
where
T: ToString,
{
Self::Custom(Cow::Owned(msg.to_string()))
}
/// Create a custom error with a given error message.
#[inline]
pub const fn custom_static(msg: &'static str) -> Self {
Self::Custom(Cow::Borrowed(msg))
}
}
impl Display for Error {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
match self {
Self::OutOfBounds => f.write_str("value is out of bounds"),
Self::UnsupportedConversion => f.write_str("conversion not supported"),
Self::MissingField => f.write_str("missing field"),
Self::UnknownEnumVariant => f.write_str("unknown enum variant"),
Self::MissingEnumVariantContent => f.write_str("missing enum variant content"),
Self::InvalidValue(expected) => write!(f, "invalid value ({} expected)", expected),
Self::NamedFieldErrors(errors) => {
write!(f, "field errors ({})", errors)
}
Self::UnnamedFieldErrors(errors) => {
write!(f, "field errors ({})", errors)
}
Self::Custom(msg) => f.write_str(msg),
}
}
}
impl std::error::Error for Error {}
impl From<ErrorList<NamedFieldError>> for Error {
#[inline]
fn from(errors: ErrorList<NamedFieldError>) -> Self {
Self::NamedFieldErrors(errors)
}
}
impl From<NamedFieldError> for Error {
#[inline]
fn from(err: NamedFieldError) -> Self {
let mut errors = ErrorList::new();
errors.push(err);
Self::from(errors)
}
}
impl From<ErrorList<UnnamedFieldError>> for Error {
#[inline]
fn from(errors: ErrorList<UnnamedFieldError>) -> Self {
Self::UnnamedFieldErrors(errors)
}
}
impl From<UnnamedFieldError> for Error {
#[inline]
fn from(err: UnnamedFieldError) -> Self {
let mut errors = ErrorList::new();
errors.push(err);
Self::from(errors)
}
}
/// Error associated with a named field.
#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub struct NamedFieldError {
field: Cow<'static, str>,
error: Error,
}
impl NamedFieldError {
/// Create a new error for a given named field.
#[inline]
pub fn new<T>(field: T, error: Error) -> Self
where
T: ToString,
{
Self {
field: Cow::Owned(field.to_string()),
error,
}
}
/// Create a new error for a given named field.
#[inline]
pub const fn new_static(field: &'static str, error: Error) -> Self {
Self {
field: Cow::Borrowed(field),
error,
}
}
/// Get the name of the field.
#[inline]
pub fn field(&self) -> &str {
&self.field
}
/// Get the error.
#[inline]
pub fn error(&self) -> &Error {
&self.error
}
/// Take the error.
#[inline]
pub fn into_error(self) -> Error {
self.error
}
}
impl Display for NamedFieldError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
write!(f, "{}: {}", self.field, self.error)
}
}
impl std::error::Error for NamedFieldError {}
/// Error associated with an unnamed field.
#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub struct UnnamedFieldError {
index: usize,
error: Error,
}
impl UnnamedFieldError {
/// Create a new error for a given field.
#[inline]
pub const fn new(field_index: usize, error: Error) -> Self {
Self {
index: field_index,
error,
}
}
/// Get index of the field.
#[inline]
pub fn field_index(&self) -> usize {
self.index
}
/// Get the error.
#[inline]
pub fn error(&self) -> &Error {
&self.error
}
/// Take the error.
#[inline]
pub fn into_error(self) -> Error {
self.error
}
}
impl Display for UnnamedFieldError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
write!(f, "{}: {}", self.index, self.error)
}
}
impl std::error::Error for UnnamedFieldError {}
/// List of errors.
#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub struct ErrorList<T> {
inner: LinkedList<T>,
}
impl<T> ErrorList<T> {
/// Create a new error list.
#[inline]
pub const fn new() -> Self {
Self {
inner: LinkedList::new(),
}
}
/// Check if the list is empty.
#[inline]
pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
self.inner.is_empty()
}
/// Get length of the list.
#[inline]
pub fn len(&self) -> usize {
self.inner.len()
}
/// Add a given error to the list.
#[inline]
pub fn push(&mut self, err: T) {
self.inner.push_back(err)
}
/// Append a given list of errors to the current one.
#[inline]
pub fn append(&mut self, mut other: Self) {
self.inner.append(&mut other.inner)
}
/// Iterate over the errors.
#[inline]
pub fn iter(&self) -> std::collections::linked_list::Iter<'_, T> {
self.inner.iter()
}
}
impl<'a, T> IntoIterator for &'a ErrorList<T> {
type Item = &'a T;
type IntoIter = std::collections::linked_list::Iter<'a, T>;
#[inline]
fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter {
self.inner.iter()
}
}
impl<T> IntoIterator for ErrorList<T> {
type Item = T;
type IntoIter = std::collections::linked_list::IntoIter<T>;
#[inline]
fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter {
self.inner.into_iter()
}
}
impl<T> Display for ErrorList<T>
where
T: Display,
{
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
let mut iter = self.iter();
if let Some(first) = iter.next() {
Display::fmt(first, f)?;
}
for err in iter {
write!(f, ", {}", err)?;
}
Ok(())
}
}
impl<T> std::error::Error for ErrorList<T> where T: std::error::Error {}