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@bencuk/jsonlint

v10.2.1-fork

Published

FORKED! JSON/CJSON/JSON5 parser, syntax and schema validator and pretty-printer.

Downloads

98

Readme

JSON Lint

NPM version Build Status codecov Dependency Status devDependency Status JavaScript Style Guide

A JSON/CJSON/JSON5 parser, validator and pretty-printer with a command-line client. A pure JavaScript version of the service provided at jsonlint.com.

This is a fork of the original package with the following enhancements:

  • Handles multiple files on the command line (by Greg Inman).
  • Walks directories recursively (by Paul Vollmer).
  • Provides 100% compatible interface to the native JSON.parse method.
  • Optionally recognizes JavaScript-style comments (CJSON) and single quoted strings (JSON5).
  • Optionally ignores trailing commas and reports duplicate object keys as an error.
  • Supports JSON Schema drafts 04, 06 and 07.
  • Offers pretty-printing including comment-stripping and object keys without quotes (JSON5).
  • Prefers the native JSON parser if possible to run 7x faster than the custom parser.
  • Reports errors with rich additional information. From the schema validation too.
  • Implements JavaScript modules using UMD to work everywhere.
  • Depends on up-to-date npm modules with no installation warnings.
  • Small size - 18.2 kB minified, 6.3 kB gzipped.

Note: In comparison with the original project, this package exports only the parse method; not the Parser object.

Integration to the favourite task loaders for JSON file validation is provided by the following NPM modules:

Synopsis

Check syntax of JSON files:

jsonlint -q data/*.json

Parse a JSON string:

const { parse } = require('@prantlf/jsonlint')
const data = parse('{"creative": false}')

Example of an error message:

Parse error on line 1, column 14:
{"creative": ?}
-------------^
Unexpected token "?"

Command-line Interface

Install jsonlint with `npm`` globally to be able to use the command-line interface in any directory:

npm i @prantlf/jsonlint -g

Validate a single file:

jsonlint myfile.json

or pipe the JSON input into stdin:

cat myfile.json | jsonlint

or process all .json files in a directory:

jsonlint mydir

By default, jsonlint will either report a syntax error with details or pretty-print the source if it is valid.

Options

$ jsonlint -h

Usage: jsonlint [options] [<file or directory> ...]

JSON parser, syntax and schema validator and pretty-printer.

Options:
  -s, --sort-keys              sort object keys (not when prettifying)
  -E, --extensions [ext]       file extensions to process for directory walk
                               (default: ["json","JSON"])
  -i, --in-place               overwrite the input files
  -t, --indent [num|char]      number of spaces or specific characters
                               to use for indentation (default: 2)
  -c, --compact                compact error display
  -M, --mode [mode]            set other parsing flags according to a format
                               type (default: "json")
  -C, --comments               recognize and ignore JavaScript-style comments
  -S, --single-quoted-strings  support single quotes as string delimiters
  -T, --trailing-commas        ignore trailing commas in objects and arrays
  -D, --no-duplicate-keys      report duplicate object keys as an error
  -V, --validate [file]        JSON schema file to use for validation
  -e, --environment [env]      which specification of JSON Schema the
                               validation file uses
  -q, --quiet                  do not print the parsed json to stdin
  -p, --pretty-print           prettify the input instead of stringifying
                               the parsed object
  -P, --pretty-print-invalid   force pretty-printing even for invalid input
  --prune-comments             omit comments from the prettified output
  --strip-object-keys          strip quotes from object keys if possible
                               (JSON5)
  --enforce-double-quotes      surrounds all strings with double quotes
  --enforce-single-quotes      surrounds all strings with single quotes
                               (JSON5)
  --trim-trailing-commas       omit trailing commas from objects and arrays
                               (JSON5)
  -v, --version                output the version number
  -h, --help                   output usage information

Parsing mode can be "cjson" or "json5" to enable other flags automatically.
If no files or directories are specified, stdin will be parsed. Environments
for JSON schema validation are "json-schema-draft-04", "json-schema-draft-06"
or "json-schema-draft-07". If not specified, it will be auto-detected.

Module Interface

Install jsonlint with npm locally to be able to use the module programmatically:

npm i @prantlf/jsonlint -S

The only exported item is the parse method, which parses a string in the JSON format to a JavaScript object, array, or value:

const { parse } = require('@prantlf/jsonlint')
// Fails at the position of the character "?".
const data2 = parse('{"creative": ?}') // throws an error
// Succeeds returning the parsed JSON object.
const data3 = parse('{"creative": false}')
// Recognizes comments and single-quoted strings.
const data3 = parse("{'creative': true /* for creativity */}", {
  ignoreComments: true,
  allowSingleQuotedStrings: true
})

Have a look at the source of the on-line page to see how to use jsonlint on web page.

The exported parse method is compatible with the native JSON.parse method. The second parameter provides the additional functionality:

parse(input, [reviver|options])

| Parameter | Description | | ---------- | ------------------------------------------- | | input | text in the JSON format (string) | | reviver | converts object and array values (function) | | options | customize parsing options (object) |

The parse method offers more detailed error information, than the native JSON.parse method and it supports additional parsing options:

| Option | Description | | -------------------------- | ------------------------------------------- | | ignoreComments | ignores single-line and multi-line JavaScript-style comments during parsing as another "whitespace" (boolean) | | ignoreTrailingCommas | ignores trailing commas in objects and arrays (boolean) | | allowSingleQuotedStrings | accepts strings delimited by single-quotes too (boolean) | | allowDuplicateObjectKeys | allows reporting duplicate object keys as an error (boolean) | | mode | sets multiple options according to the type of input data (string) | | reviver | converts object and array values (function) |

The mode parameter (string) sets parsing options to match a common format of input data:

| Mode | Description | | ------- | --------------------------------------------------------- | | json | complies to the pure standard JSON (default if not set) | | cjson | JSON with comments (sets ignoreComments) | | json5 | complies to JSON5 (sets ignoreComments, allowSingleQuotedStrings, ignoreTrailingCommas and enables other JSON5 features) |

Schema Validation

You can validate the input against a JSON schema using the lib/validator module. The validate method accepts either an earlier parsed JSON data or a string with the JSON input:

const { compile } = require('@prantlf/jsonlint/lib/validator')
const validate = compile('string with JSON schema')
// Throws an error in case of failure.
const parsed = validate('string with JSON data')

If a string is passed to the validate method, the same options as for parsing JSON data can be passed as the second parameter. Compiling JSON schema supports the same options as parsing JSON data too (except for reviver). They can be passed as the second (object) parameter. The optional second environment parameter can be passed either as a string or as an additional property in the options object too:

const validate = compile('string with JSON schema', {
  environment: 'json-schema-draft-04'
})

Pretty-Printing

You can parse a JSON string to an array of tokens and print it back to a string with some changes applied. It can be unification of whitespace, reformatting or stripping comments, for example. (Raw token values must be enabled when tokenizing the JSON input.)

const { tokenize } = require('@prantlf/jsonlint')
const tokens = tokenize('string with JSON data', { rawTokens: true })
const { print } = require('@prantlf/jsonlint/lib/printer')
const output = print(tokens, { indent: 2 })

The tokenize method accepts options in the second optional parameter. See the tokenize method above for more information.

The print method accepts an object options as the second optional parameter. The following properties will be recognized there:

| Option | Description | | --------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- | | indent | count of spaces or the specific characters to be used as an indentation unit | | pruneComments | will omit all tokens with comments | | stripObjectKeys | will not print quotes around object keys which are JavaScript identifier names | | enforceDoubleQuotes | will surround all strings with double quotes | | enforceSingleQuotes | will surround all strings with single quotes | | trimTrailingCommas | will omit all trailing commas after the last object entry or array item |

// Just concatenate the tokens to produce the same output as was the input.
print(tokens)
// Strip all whitespace. (Just like `JSON.stringify(json)` would do it,
// but leaving comments in the output.)
print(tokens, {})
// Print to multiple lines without object and array indentation.
// (Just introduce line breaks.)
print(tokens, { indent: '' })
// Print to multiple lines with object and array indentation. (Just like
//`JSON.stringify(json, undefined, 2)` would do it, but retaining comments.)
print(tokens, { indent: 2 })
// Print to multiple lines with object and array indentation, omit comments.
// (Just like `JSON.stringify(json, undefined, '  ')` would do it.)
print(tokens, { indent: '  ', pruneComments: true })
// Print to multiple lines with indentation enabled and JSON5 object keys.
print(tokens, { indent: '\t', stripObjectKeys: true })
// Print to multiple lines with indentation enabled, unify JSON5 formatting.
print(tokens, {
  indent: '    ',
  enforceDoubleQuotes: true,
  trimTrailingCommas: true
})

Tokenizing

The method tokenize has the same prototype as the method parse, but returns an array of tokens instead of the JSON object.

const { tokenize } = require('@prantlf/jsonlint')
const tokens = tokenize('{"flag":true /* default */}', {
  ignoreComments: true,
  rawTokens: true
}))
// Returns the following array:
// [
//   { type: 'symbol',     raw: '{',      value: '{' },
//   { type: 'literal',    raw: '"flag"', value: 'flag' },
//   { type: 'symbol',     raw: ':',      value: ':' },
//   { type: 'literal',    raw: 'true',   value: true },
//   { type: 'whitespace', raw: ' ' },
//   { type: 'comment',    raw: '/* default */' },
//   { type: 'symbol',     raw: '}',      value: '}' }
// ]

The tokenize method accepts options in the second optional parameter. See the parse method above for the shared options. There are several additional options supported for the tokenization:

| Option | Description | | -----------------| ------------------------------------------------------------------ | | rawTokens | adds a raw property with the original string from the JSON input | | tokenLocations | adds a location property with start, end and length of the original string from the JSON input | | tokenPaths | adds a path property with an array of keys and array indexes "on the way to" the token's value |

If you want to retain comments or whitespace for pretty-printing, for example, set rawTokens to true. (The print method requires tokens produced with this flag enabled.)

Performance

This is a part of an output from the parser benchmark, when parsing a 4.2 KB formatted string (package.json) with Node.js 12.14.0:

jsonlint using native JSON.parse x 97,109 ops/sec ±0.81% (93 runs sampled)
jsonlint using hand-coded parser x 7,256 ops/sec ±0.54% (90 runs sampled)
jsonlint using tokenising parser x 6,387 ops/sec ±0.44% (88 runs sampled)

A custom JSON parser is a lot slower than the built-in one. However, it is more important to have a clear error reporting than the highest speed in scenarios like parsing configuration files. (For better error-reporting, the speed can be preserved by using the native parser initially and re-parsing with another parser only in case of failure.) Features like comments or JSON5 are also helpful in configuration files. Tokens preserve the complete input and can be used for pretty-printing without losing the comments.

Error Handling

If parsing fails, a SyntaxError will be thrown with the following properties:

| Property | Description | | ---------- | ----------------------------------------- | | message | the full multi-line error message | | reason | one-line explanation of the error | | excerpt | part of the input string around the error | | pointer | "--^" pointing to the error in excerpt | | location | object pointing to the error location |

The location object contains properties line, column and offset.

The following code logs twice the following message:

Parse error on line 1, column 14:
{"creative": ?}
-------------^
Unexpected token "?"
const { parse } = require('@prantlf/jsonlint')
try {
  parse('{"creative": ?}')
} catch (error) {
  const { message, reason, excerpt, pointer, location } = error
  const { column, line, offset } = location.start
  // Logs the complete error message:
  console.log(message)
  // Logs the same text as included in the `message` property:
  console.log(`Parse error on line ${line}, ${column} column:
${excerpt}
${pointer}
${reason}`)
}

License

Copyright (C) 2012-2019 Zachary Carter, Ferdinand Prantl

Licensed under the MIT License.