1 stable release
1.0.0 | Jun 28, 2022 |
---|
#2475 in Rust patterns
22KB
312 lines
RESP parser and validator
Since
v1.0.0
, the crate is published asio_resp
and no more.squall_dot_io_resp
A RESP (REdis Serialization Protocol) parser implementation, written with edge performance in mind.
If you are not familiar with RESP, consider starting here with RESP specs. RESP is a binary safe serialization protocol. Initially developed for the ReDiS project, it is injection safe (needs no escaping) and is fast-forward as it requires no look-back in parsing.
This crate aims to parse and validate your RESP strings. Since the protocol can be used beyond its initial scope, to a general-purpose communication scheme.
To do so, its reuses Rust TryInto
trait to try and parse your &str
as a valid RESP. Implemented on a Value
enum of RESP tokens, it
returns a Rust Result<Value, Error>
.
Usage
Add dependency to your project:
; Cargo.toml
[dependecies]
io_resp = "0.1.2"
Here are example with code:
use io_resp::{
Node::{self, NIL, SIZE, ARRAY, ERROR, INTEGER, UNKNOWN, SIMPLE_STRING, BULK_STRING},
Value::{self, Nil, Error, Array, String, Integer},
Error as VError,
ValueResult,
};
assert_eq!( // Empty RESP
"".try_into() as ValueResult,
Err(VError::Unexpected {node: UNKNOWN, index: 0}));
assert_eq!( // Unterminated number: missing "\r\n"
":0".try_into() as ValueResult,
Err(VError::Unexpected {node: INTEGER, index: 2}));
assert_eq!( // Not enough elements in the array
"*2\r\n$-1\r\n".try_into() as ValueResult,
Err(VError::Size {node: ARRAY, index: 9}));
assert_eq!( // Longer bulk string: got more that 2-bytes
"$2\r\nHello\r\n".try_into() as ValueResult,
Err(VError::Size {node: BULK_STRING, index: 6}));
assert_eq!( // Sorter bulk string: shorter by 1-byte (capital A acute is 2-bytes)
"$3\r\nÂ\r\n".try_into() as ValueResult,
Err(VError::Size {node: BULK_STRING, index: 7}));
use io_resp::{
Node::{self, NIL, SIZE, ARRAY, ERROR, INTEGER, UNKNOWN, SIMPLE_STRING, BULK_STRING},
Value::{self, Nil, Error, Array, String, Integer},
Error as VError,
ValueResult,
};
// JSON: null
assert_eq!(
Value::try_from("$-1\r\n"),
Ok(Nil)
);
// JSON: 10
assert_eq!(
Value::try_from(":10\r\n"),
Ok(Integer(10))
);
// JSON: "Nina Simone"
assert_eq!(
Value::try_from("+Nina Simone\r\n"),
Ok(String("Nina Simone".into()))
);
// JSON: "Lorem ipsum...\r\nDolor sit amet..."
assert_eq!(
Value::try_from("$33\r\nLorem ipsum...\r\nDolor sit amet...\r\n"),
Ok(String("Lorem ipsum...\r\nDolor sit amet...".into()))
);
// JavaScript: [null, 447, new Error("Oh oh!"), "Hourly", "Si vis pacem,\r\npara bellum"]
assert_eq!(
Value::try_from("*5\r\n$-1\r\n:447\r\n-Oh oh!\r\n+Hourly\r\n$26\r\nSi vis pacem,\r\npara bellum\r\n"),
Ok(Array(vec![
Nil,
Integer(447),
Error("Oh oh!".into()),
String("Hourly".into()),
String("Si vis pacem,\r\npara bellum".into())
]))
);
// NOTE: Even recursive arrays - we leave that for you to try out.
License
MIT
Contributions
Should you find some issues, please report on GitHub project, or consider opening a pull-request.