JSON::Stream is a JSON parser, based on a finite state machine, that generates events for each state change. This allows streaming both the JSON document into memory and the parsed object graph out of memory to some other process.
This is much like an XML SAX parser that generates events during parsing. There is no requirement for the document, or the object graph, to be fully buffered in memory. This is best suited for huge JSON documents that won't fit in memory. For example, streaming and processing large map/reduce views from Apache CouchDB.
The simplest way to parse is to read the full JSON document into memory and then parse it into a full object graph. This is fine for small documents because we have room for both the document and parsed object in memory.
require 'json/stream'
json = File.read('/tmp/test.json')
obj = JSON::Stream::Parser.parse(json)
While it's possible to do this with JSON::Stream, we really want to use the json gem for documents like this. JSON.parse() is much faster than this parser, because it can rely on having the entire document in memory to analyze.
For larger documents we can use an IO object to stream it into the parser. We still need room for the parsed object, but the document itself is never fully read into memory.
require 'json/stream'
stream = File.open('/tmp/test.json')
obj = JSON::Stream::Parser.parse(stream)
Again, while JSON::Stream can be used this way, if we just need to stream the document from disk or the network, we're better off using the yajl-ruby gem.
Huge documents arriving over the network in small chunks to an EventMachine receive_data loop is where JSON::Stream is really useful. Inside an EventMachine::Connection subclass we might have:
def post_init
@parser = JSON::Stream::Parser.new do
start_document { puts "start document" }
end_document { puts "end document" }
start_object { puts "start object" }
end_object { puts "end object" }
start_array { puts "start array" }
end_array { puts "end array" }
key {|k| puts "key: #{k}" }
value {|v| puts "value: #{v}" }
end
end
def receive_data(data)
begin
@parser << data
rescue JSON::Stream::ParserError => e
close_connection
end
end
The parser accepts chunks of the JSON document and parses up to the end of the available buffer. Passing in more data resumes the parse from the prior state. When an interesting state change happens, the parser notifies all registered callback procs of the event.
The event callback is where we can do interesting data filtering and passing
to other processes. The above example simply prints state changes, but
imagine the callbacks looking for an array named rows
and processing sets
of these row objects in small batches. Millions of rows, streaming over the
network, can be processed in constant memory space this way.
- ruby >= 1.9.2
- jruby >= 1.7
JSON::Stream is released under the MIT license. Check the LICENSE file for details.