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package CBOR::Free::Decoder; |
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=encoding utf8 |
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=head1 NAME |
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CBOR::Free::Decoder |
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=head1 SYNOPSIS |
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my $decoder = CBOR::Free::Decoder->new()->set_tag_handlers( |
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2 => sub { DateTime->from_epoch( epoch => shift() ) }, |
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); |
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# Enable shared/circular references: |
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$decoder->preserve_references(); |
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=head1 DESCRIPTION |
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This class provides an object-oriented interface to L’s |
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decoder. This interface allows interpretation of tagged values. |
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=cut |
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#---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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use parent qw( CBOR::Free::Decoder::Base ); |
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use CBOR::Free (); |
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#---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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=head1 METHODS |
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=head2 $obj = I->new() |
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Creates a new CBOR decoder object. |
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=cut |
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#---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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=head2 $data = I->decode( $CBOR ) |
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Same as L’s static function of the same name but applies |
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any tag handlers configured in C. |
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As in L, any unrecognized tags prompt a warning but are |
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otherwise ignored. |
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=cut |
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#---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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=head2 $enabled_yn = I->preserve_references( [$ENABLE] ) |
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Enables/disables recognition of CBOR’s shared references. (If no |
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argument is given, shared references will be enabled.) |
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B This option can cause CBOR::Free to create circular |
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references, which can cause memory leaks if not handled properly. |
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=cut |
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#---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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=head2 $enabled_yn = I->naive_utf8( [$ENABLE] ) |
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Same interface as C, but this option tells I |
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to forgo UTF-8 validation of CBOR text strings when enabled. This speeds up |
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decoding of text strings but may confuse Perl if invalid UTF-8 is given in |
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a CBOR text string. That may or may not break your application. |
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This I be safe in contexts—such as IPC—where you control the CBOR |
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serialization and can thus ensure validity of the encoded text. |
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If in doubt, leave this off. |
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=cut |
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#---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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=head2 $obj = I->string_decode_cbor(); |
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This causes I to decode strings according to their CBOR type: |
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text strings are UTF8-decoded; binary strings are left as-is. This is |
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the default configuration, à la C. |
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=head2 $obj = I->string_decode_never(); |
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This causes I to leave all strings undecoded. This is useful for |
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applications that treat all strings as octet sequences. Note that CBOR |
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text strings will still be validated as UTF-8 unless C is |
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enabled. |
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=head2 $obj = I->string_decode_always(); |
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This causes I to decode all CBOR strings (including binary strings) |
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as UTF-8, applying appropriate pre-validation unless C is |
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enabled. This is useful if you expect all strings (including binary) to be |
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UTF-8 and want to handle them in Perl as character strings instead of |
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byte strings. |
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=head2 I->set_tag_handlers( %TAG_CALLBACK ) |
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Takes a list of key/value pairs where each key is a tag (i.e., number) |
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and each value is a coderef that CBOR::Free will run when that tag is |
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seen during a decode operation. The coderef will receive the tagged value, |
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and its (scalar) return will be inserted into the decoded data structure. |
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To unset a tag handler, assign undef to it. |
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This returns the I. |
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B Handlers assigned here will only fire if CBOR::Free itself |
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doesn’t decode the tag. For example, a handler for the “indirection” tag |
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here will be ignored. |
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=cut |
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1; |