# Serpent Lua serializer and pretty printer. ## Features * Human readable: * Provides single-line and multi-line output. * Nested tables are properly indented in the multi-line output. * Numerical keys are listed first. * Keys are (optionally) sorted alphanumerically. * Array part skips keys (`{'a', 'b'}` instead of `{[1] = 'a', [2] = 'b'}`). * `nil` values are included when expected (`{1, nil, 3}` instead of `{1, [3]=3}`). * Keys use short notation (`{foo = 'foo'}` instead of `{['foo'] = 'foo'}`). * Shared references and self-references are marked in the output. * Machine readable: provides reliable deserialization using `loadstring()`. * Supports deeply nested tables. * Supports tables with self-references. * Keeps shared tables and functions shared after de/serialization. * Supports function serialization using `string.dump()`. * Supports serialization of global functions. * Supports `__tostring` and `__serialize` metamethods. * Escapes new-line `\010` and end-of-file control `\026` characters in strings. * Configurable with options and custom formatters. ## Usage ```lua local serpent = require("serpent") local a = {1, nil, 3, x=1, ['true'] = 2, [not true]=3} a[a] = a -- self-reference with a table as key and value print(serpent.dump(a)) -- full serialization print(serpent.line(a)) -- single line, no self-ref section print(serpent.block(a)) -- multi-line indented, no self-ref section local fun, err = loadstring(serpent.dump(a)) if err then error(err) end local copy = fun() -- or using serpent.load: local ok, copy = serpent.load(serpent.dump(a)) print(ok and copy[3] == a[3]) ``` ## Functions Serpent provides three functions that are shortcuts to the same internal function, but set different options by default: * `dump(a[, {...}])` -- full serialization; sets `name`, `compact` and `sparse` options; * `line(a[, {...}])` -- single line pretty printing, no self-ref section; sets `sortkeys` and `comment` options; * `block(a[, {...}])` -- multi-line indented pretty printing, no self-ref section; sets `indent`, `sortkeys`, and `comment` options. Note that `line` and `block` functions return pretty-printed data structures and if you want to deserialize them, you need to add `return` before running them through `loadstring`. For example: `loadstring('return '..require('mobdebug').line("foo"))() == "foo"`. While you can use `loadstring` or `load` functions to load serialized fragments, Serpent also provides `load` function that adds safety checks and reports an error if there is any executable code in the fragment. * `ok, res = serpent.load(str[, {safe = true}])` -- loads serialized fragment; you need to pass `{safe = false}` as the second value if you want to turn safety checks off. Similar to `pcall` and `loadstring` calls, `load` returns status as the first value and the result or the error message as the second value. ## Options * indent (string) -- indentation; triggers long multi-line output * comment (true/false/maxlevel) -- provide stringified value in a comment (up to `maxlevel` of depth) * sortkeys (true/false/function) -- sort keys * sparse (true/false) -- force sparse encoding (no nil filling based on `#t`) * compact (true/false) -- remove spaces * fatal (true/False) -- raise fatal error on non-serilizable values * nocode (true/False) -- disable bytecode serialization for easy comparison * nohuge (true/False) -- disable checking numbers against undefined and huge values * maxlevel (number) -- specify max level up to which to expand nested tables * maxnum (number) -- specify max number of elements in a table * numformat (string; "%.17g") -- specify format for numeric values (shortest possible round-trippable double) * valignore (table) -- allows to specify a list of values to ignore (as keys) * keyallow (table) -- allows to specify the list of keys to be serialized. Any keys not in this list are not included in final output (as keys) * keyignore (table) -- allows to specity the list of keys to ignore in serialization. * valtypeignore (table) -- allows to specify a list of value *types* to ignore (as keys) * custom (function) -- provide custom output for tables * name (string) -- name; triggers full serialization with self-ref section These options can be provided as a second parameter to Serpent functions. ```lua block(a, {fatal = true}) line(a, {nocode = true, valignore = {[arrayToIgnore] = true}}) function todiff(a) return dump(a, {nocode = true, indent = ' '}) end ``` Serpent functions set these options to different default values: * `dump` sets `compact` and `sparse` to `true`; * `line` sets `sortkeys` and `comment` to `true`; * `block` sets `sortkeys` and `comment` to `true` and `indent` to `' '`. ## Metatables with __tostring and __serialize methods If a table or a userdata value has `__tostring` or `__serialize` method, the method will be used to serialize the value. If `__serialize` method is present, it will be called with the value as a parameter. if `__serialize` method is not present, but `__tostring` is, then `tostring` will be called with the value as a parameter. In both cases, the result will be serialized, so `__serialize` method can return a table, that will be serialize and replace the original value. ## Sorting A custom sort function can be provided to sort the contents of tables. The function takes 2 parameters, the first being the table (a list) with the keys, the second the original table. It should modify the first table in-place, and return nothing. For example, the following call will apply a sort function identical to the standard sort, except that it will not distinguish between lower- and uppercase. ```lua local mysort = function(k, o) -- k=keys, o=original table local maxn, to = 12, {number = 'a', string = 'b'} local function padnum(d) return ("%0"..maxn.."d"):format(d) end local sort = function(a,b) -- this -vvvvvvvvvv- is needed to sort array keys first return ((k[a] and 0 or to[type(a)] or 'z')..(tostring(a):gsub("%d+",padnum))):upper() < ((k[b] and 0 or to[type(b)] or 'z')..(tostring(b):gsub("%d+",padnum))):upper() end table.sort(k, sort) end local content = { some = 1, input = 2, To = 3, serialize = 4 } local result = require('serpent').block(content, {sortkeys = mysort}) ``` ## Formatters Serpent supports a way to provide a custom formatter that allows to fully customize the output. The formatter takes four values: * tag -- the name of the current element with '=' or an empty string in case of array index, * head -- an opening table bracket `{` and associated indentation and newline (if any), * body -- table elements concatenated into a string using commas and indentation/newlines (if any), and * tail -- a closing table bracket `}` and associated indentation and newline (if any). For example, the following call will apply `Foo{bar} notation to its output (used by Metalua to display ASTs): ```lua print((require "serpent").block(ast, {comment = false, custom = function(tag,head,body,tail) local out = head..body..tail if tag:find('^lineinfo') then out = out:gsub("\n%s+", "") -- collapse lineinfo to one line elseif tag == '' then body = body:gsub('%s*lineinfo = [^\n]+', '') local _,_,atag = body:find('tag = "(%w+)"%s*$') if atag then out = "`"..atag..head.. body:gsub('%s*tag = "%w+"%s*$', '')..tail out = out:gsub("\n%s+", ""):gsub(",}","}") else out = head..body..tail end end return tag..out end})) ``` ## Limitations * Doesn't handle userdata (except filehandles in `io.*` table). * Threads, function upvalues/environments, and metatables are not serialized. ## Performance A simple performance test against `serialize.lua` from metalua, `pretty.write` from Penlight, and `tserialize.lua` from lua-nucleo is included in `t/bench.lua`. These are the results from one of the runs: * nucleo (1000): 0.256s * metalua (1000): 0.177s * serpent (1000): 0.22s * serpent (1000): 0.161s -- no comments, no string escapes, no math.huge check * penlight (1000): 0.132s Serpent does additional processing to escape `\010` and `\026` characters in strings (to address http://lua-users.org/lists/lua-l/2007-07/msg00362.html, which is already fixed in Lua 5.2) and to check all numbers for `math.huge`. The seconds number excludes this processing to put it on an equal footing with other modules that skip these checks (`nucleo` still checks for `math.huge`). ## Author Paul Kulchenko (paul@kulchenko.com) ## License See LICENSE file. ## History ### v0.28 (May 06 2015) - Switched to a method proposed by @SoniEx2 to disallow function calls (#15). - Added more `tostring` for Lua 5.3 support (pkulchenko/ZeroBraneStudio#401). - Updated environment handling to localize the impact (#15). - Added setting env to protect against assigning global functions (closes #15). - Updated tests to work with Lua 5.3. - Added explicit `tostring` for Lua 5.3 with `LUA_NOCVTN2S` set (pkulchenko/ZeroBraneStudio#401). - Fixed crash when not all Lua standard libraries are loaded (thanks to Tommy Nguyen). - Improved Lua 5.2 support for serialized functions. ### v0.27 (Jan 11 2014) - Fixed order of elements in the array part with `sortkeys=true` (fixes #13). - Updated custom formatter documentation (closes #11). - Added `load` function to deserialize; updated documentation (closes #9). ### v0.26 (Nov 05 2013) - Added `load` function that (safely) loads serialized/pretty-printed values. - Updated documentation. ### v0.25 (Sep 29 2013) - Added `maxnum` option to limit the number of elements in tables. - Optimized processing of tables with numeric indexes. ### v0.24 (Jun 12 2013) - Fixed an issue with missing numerical keys (fixes #8). - Fixed an issue with luaffi that returns `getmetatable(ffi.C)` as `true`. ### v0.23 (Mar 24 2013) - Added support for `cdata` type in LuaJIT (thanks to [Evan](https://github.com/neomantra)). - Added comment to indicate incomplete output. - Added support for metatables with __serialize method. - Added handling of metatables with __tostring method. - Fixed an issue with having too many locals in self-reference section. - Fixed emitting premature circular reference in self-reference section, which caused invalid serialization. - Modified the sort function signature to also pass the original table, so not only keys are available when sorting, but also the values in the original table. ### v0.22 (Jan 15 2013) - Added ability to process __tostring results that may be non-string values. ### v0.21 (Jan 08 2013) - Added `keyallow` and `valtypeignore` options (thanks to Jess Telford). - Renamed `ignore` to `valignore`. ### v0.19 (Nov 16 2012) - Fixed an issue with serializing shared functions as keys. - Added serialization of metatables using __tostring (when present). ### v0.18 (Sep 13 2012) - Fixed an issue with serializing data structures with circular references that require emitting temporary variables. - Fixed an issue with serializing keys pointing to shared references. - Improved overall serialization logic to inline values when possible. ### v0.17 (Sep 12 2012) - Fixed an issue with serializing userdata that doesn't provide tostring(). ### v0.16 (Aug 28 2012) - Removed confusing --[[err]] comment from serialized results. - Added a short comment to serialized functions when the body is skipped. ### v0.15 (Jun 17 2012) - Added `ignore` option to allow ignoring table values. - Added `comment=num` option to set the max level up to which add comments. - Changed all comments (except math.huge) to be controlled by `comment` option. ### v0.14 (Jun 13 2012) - Fixed an issue with string keys with numeric values `['3']` getting mixed with real numeric keys (only with `sortkeys` option set to `true`). - Fixed an issue with negative and real value numeric keys being misplaced. ### v0.13 (Jun 13 2012) - Added `maxlevel` option. - Fixed key sorting such that `true` and `'true'` are always sorted in the same order (for a more stable output). - Removed addresses from names of temporary variables (for stable output). ### v0.12 (Jun 12 2012) - Added options to configure serialization process. - Added `goto` to the list of keywords for Lua 5.2. - Changed interface to dump/line/block methods. - Changed `math.huge` to 1/0 for better portability. - Replaced \010 with \n for better readability. ### v0.10 (Jun 03 2012) - First public release.