NAME Config::JSON::Enhanced - JSON-based config with C/Shell-style comments, verbatim sections and variable substitutions VERSION Version 0.09 SYNOPSIS This module provides subroutine config2perl() for parsing configuration content, from files or strings, based on, what I call, "enhanced JSON" (see section "ENHANCED JSON FORMAT" for more details). Briefly, it is standard JSON which allows: * C-style, C++-style, shell-style or custom comments. * Template-style variables (e.g. <% appdir %>) which are substituted with user-specified data during parsing. * Verbatim sections which are a sort of here-doc for JSON, allowing strings to span multiple lines, to contain single and double quotes unescaped, to contain template-style variables. This module was created because I needed to include long shell scripts containing lots of quotes and newlines, in a configuration file which started as JSON. The process is simple: so-called "enhanced JSON" is parsed by config2perl. Comments are removed, variables are substituted, verbatim sections become one line again and standard JSON is created. This is parsed with JSON (via Data::Roundtrip::json2perl) to produce a Perl data structure which is returned. It has been tested with unicode data (see t/070-config2perl-complex-utf8.t) with success. But who knows ?!?! Here is an example: use Config::JSON::Enhanced; # simple "enhanced" JSON with comments in 3 styles: C,shell,CPP my $configdata = <<'EOJ'; { /* 'a' is ... */ "a" : "abc", # b is ... "b" : [1,2,3], "c" : 12 // c is ... } EOJ my $perldata = config2perl({ 'string' => $configdata, 'commentstyle' => "C,shell,CPP", }); die "call to config2perl() has failed" unless defined $perldata; # the standard JSON: # {"a" : "abc","b" : [1,2,3], "c" : 12} # this "enhanced" JSON demonstrates the use of variables # which will be substituted during the transformation to # standard JSON with user-specified data. # Notice that the opening and closing tags enclosing variable # names can be customised using the 'tags' input parameter, # so as to avoid clashes with content in the JSON. my $configdata = <<'EOJ'; { "d" : [1,2,<% tempvar0 %>], "configfile" : "<%SCRIPTDIR%>/config/myapp.conf", "username" : "<% username %>" } } EOJ my $perldata = config2perl({ 'string' => $configdata, 'commentstyle' => "C,shell,CPP", # optionally customise the tags enclosing the variables # when you want to avoid clashes with other strings in JSON #'tags' => ['<%', '%>'], # <<< these are the default values # user-specified data to replace the variables in # the "enhanced" JSON above: 'variable-substitutions' => { 'tempvar0' => 42, 'username' => getlogin(), 'SCRIPTDIR' => $FindBin::Bin, }, }); die "call to config2perl() has failed" unless defined $perldata; # the standard JSON # (notice how all variables in <%...%> are now replaced): # {"d" : [1,2,42], # "username" : "yossarian", # "configfile" : "/home/yossarian/B52/config/myapp.conf" # } # this "enhanced" JSON demonstrates "verbatim sections" # the puprose of which is to make more readable JSON strings # by allowing them to span over multiple lines. # There is also no need for escaping double quotes. # template variables (like above) will be substituted # There will be no comments removal from the verbatim sections. my $configdata = <<'EOJ'; { "a" : <%begin-verbatim-section%> This is a multiline string "quoted text" and 'quoted like this also' will be retained in the string escaped. White space from beginning and end will be chomped. <%end-verbatim-section%> , "b" = 123 } EOJ my $perldata = config2perl({ 'string' => $configdata, 'commentstyle' => "C,shell,CPP", }); die "call to config2perl() has failed" unless defined $perldata; # the standard JSON (notice that "a" value is in a single line, # here printed broken for readability): # {"a" : # "This is a multiline\nstring\n\"quoted text\" and 'quoted like # this also'\nwill be retained in the string escaped.\nComments # will not be removed.\nWhite space from # beginning and end will be chomped.", # "b" : 123 # }; EXPORT * config2perl is exported by default. SUBROUTINES config2perl my $ret = config2perl($params); die unless defined $ret; Arguments: * $params : a hashref of input parameters. Return value: * the parsed content as a Perl data structure on success or undef on failure. Given input content in "ENHANCED JSON FORMAT", this sub removes comments (as per preferences via input parameters), replaces all template variables, if any, compacts "Verbatim Sections", if any, into a single-line string and then parses what remains as standard JSON into a Perl data structure which is returned to caller. JSON parsing is done with Data::Roundtrip::json2perl, which uses JSON. Comments outside of JSON fields will always be removed, otherwise JSON can not be parsed. Comments inside of JSON fields, keys, values, strings etc. will not be removed unless input parameter remove-comments-in-strings is set to 1 by the caller. Comments (or what looks like comments with the current input parameters) inside "Verbatim Sections" will never be removed. The input content to-be-parsed can be specified with one of the following input parameters (entries in the $params): * filename : content is read from a file with this name. * filehandle : content is read from a file which has already been opened for reading by the caller. * string : content is contained in this string. Additionally, input parameters can contain the following keys: * commentstyle : specify what comment style(s) to be expected in the input content (if any) as a comma-separated string. For example 'C,CPP,shell,custom(<<)(>>),custom(REM)()'. These are the values it understands: * C : comments take the form of C-style comments which are exclusively within /* and */. For example * I am a comment */. This is the default comment style if none specified. * CPP : comments can the the form of C++-style comments which are within /* and */ or after // until the end of line. For example /* I am a comment */, // I am a comment to the end of line. * shell : comments can be after # until the end of line. For example, # I am a comment to the end of line. * custom : comments are enclosed (or preceded) by custom, user-specified tags. The form is custom(OPENINGTAG)(CLOSINGTAG). OPENINGTAG is required. CLOSINGTAG is optional meaning that the comment extends to the end of line (just like shell comments). For example custom(<<)(>>) or custom({{)(}) or custom(REM)() or custom(<<<<)(>>). OPENINGTAG and CLOSINGTAG do not need to be of the same character length as it is obvious from the previous example. A word of warning: the regex for identifying comments (and variables and verbatim sections) has the custom tags escaped for special regex characters (with the \Q ... \E construct). So you are pretty safe in using any character. Please report weird behaviour. Warning : either opening or closing comment tags must not be the same as opening or closing variables / verbatim section tags. * variable-substitutions : a hashref whose keys are variable names as they occur in the input Enhanced JSON content and their corresponding values should substitute them. Enhanced JSON, can contain template variables in the form <% my-var-1 %>. These must be replaced with data which is supplied to the call of config2perl() under the parameters key variable-substitutions, for example: config2perl({ "variable-substitutions" => { "my-var-1" => 42, "SCRIPTDIR" => "/home/abc", }, "string" => '{"a":"<% my-var-1 %>", "b":"<% SCRIPTDIR %>/app.conf"}', }); Variable substitution will be performed in both keys and values of the input JSON, including "Verbatim Sections". * remove-comments-in-strings : by default no attempt to remove what-looks-like-comments from JSON strings (both keys and values). However, if this flag is set to 1 anything that looks like comments (as per the 'commentstyle' parameter) will be removed from inside all JSON strings (keys or values) unless they were part of verbatim section. This does not apply for the content verbatim sections. What looks like comments to us, inside verbatim sections will be left intact. For example consider the JSON string "hello/*a comment*/" (which can be a key or a value). If remove-comments-in-strings is set to 1, then the JSON string will become hello. If set to 0 (which is the default) it will be unchanged. * tags : specify the opening and closing tags for template variables and verbatim section as an ARRAYref of exactly 2 items (the opening and the closing tags). By default the opening tag is >% and the closing tag is %<. A word of warning: the regex for identifying variables and verbatim sections (and comments) has the custom tags escaped for special regex characters (with the \Q ... \E construct). So you are pretty safe in using any character. Please report weird behaviour. If you set tags = [ '[::', '::]' ]> then your template variables should look like this: {:: var1 ::] and verbatim sections like this: [:: begin-verbatim-section ::]. * debug : set this to a positive integer to increase verbosity and dump debugging messages. Default is zero for zero verbosity. See section "ENHANCED JSON FORMAT" for details on the format of what I call enhanced JSON. config2perl returns the parsed content as a Perl data structure on success or undef on failure. ENHANCED JSON FORMAT This is JSON with added reasonable, yet completely ad-hoc, enhancements (from my point of view). These enhancements are: * Comments are allowed: * C-style comments take the form of C-style comments which are exclusively within /* and */. For example * I am a comment */ * C++-style comments can the the form of C++-style comments which are within /* and */ or after // until the end of line. For example /* I am a comment */, // I am a comment to the end of line. * shell-style comments can be after # until the end of line. For example, # I am a comment to the end of line. * comments with custom, user-specified, opening and optional closing tags which allows fine-tuning the process of deciding on something being a comment. * Template variables support : template-style variables in the form of <% HOMEDIR %> will be substituded with values specified by the user during parsing. Note that variable names are case sensitive, they can contain spaces, hyphens etc., for example: <% abc- 123 - xyz %> (the variable name is abc- 123 - xyz, notice the multiple spaces between 123 and xyz and also notice the absence of any spaces before abc and after xyz). The tags for denoting a template variable are controled by the 'tags' parameter to the sub config2perl. Defaults are <% and %>. * Verbatim Sections : similar to here-doc, this feature allows for string values to span over multiple lines and to contain un-escpaed quotes. This is useful if you want a JSON value to contain a shell script, for example. Verbatim sections can also contain template variables which will be substituted. No comment will be removed. * Unfortunately, there is not support for ignoring superfluous commas in JSON, in the manner of glorious Perl. Warning : either opening or closing comment tags must not be the same as opening or closing variables / verbatim section tags. Verbatim Sections A Verbaitm Section in this ad-hoc, so-called Enhanced JSON is content enclosed within <%begin-verbatim-section%> and <%end-verbatim-section%> tags. A verbatim section's content may span multiple lines (which when converted to JSON will preserve them by escaping. e.g. by replacing them with '\n') and can contain template variables to be substituted with user-specified data. All single and double quotes can be left un-escaped, the program will escape them (hopefully correctly!). The content of Verbatim Sections will have all its template variables substituted. Comments will be left untouched. The tags for denoting the opening and closing a verbatim section are controled by the 'tags' parameter to the sub config2perl. Defaults are <% and %>. Here is an example of enhanced JSON which contains comments, a verbatim section and template variables: my $con = <<'EOC'; { "long bash script" : ["/usr/bin/bash", /* This is a verbatim section */ <%begin-verbatim-section%> # save current dir, this comment remains pushd . &> /dev/null # following quotes will be escaped echo "My 'appdir' is \"<%appdir%>\"" echo "My current dir: " $(echo $PWD) " and bye" # go back to initial dir popd &> /dev/null <%end-verbatim-section%> /* the end of the verbatim section */ ], // this is an example of a template variable "expected result" : "<% expected-res123 %>" } EOC # Which, can be processed thusly: my $res = config2perl({ 'string' => $con, 'commentstyle' => 'C,CPP', 'variable-substitutions' => { 'appdir' => Cwd::abs_path($FindBin::Bin), 'expected-res123' => 42 }, }); die "call to config2perl() has failed" unless defined $res; # following is the dump of $res, note the breaking of the lines # in the 'long bash script' is just for readability. # In reality, it is one long line: { "expected result" => 42, "long bash script" => [ "/usr/bin/bash", "# save current dir, this comment remains\npushd . &> /dev/null\n # following quotes will be escaped\necho \"My 'appdir' is \\\"/home/babushka/Config-JSON-Enhanced/t\\\"\"\n echo \"My current dir: \" \$(echo \$PWD) \" and bye\"\n# go back to initial dir, this comment remains\npopd &> /dev/null" ] }; A JSON string can contain comments which you may want to retain (note: comments filtering will not apply to verbatim sections). For example if the content is a unix shell script it is possible to contain comments like # comment. These will be removed along with all other comments in the entire JSON input if you are using shell style comments. Another problem is when JSON string contains comment opening or closing tags. For example consider this cron spec : */15 * * * * which contains the closing string of a C-style comment and will cass a big mess. You have two options in order to deal with this problem: * Set 'remove-comments-in-strings' parameter to sub config2perl to 0. This will keep ALL comments in all strings (both keys and values). This is a one-size-fits-all solution and it is not ideal. * The best solution is to change the comment style of the input, so called Enhanced, JSON to something different to the comments you are trying to keep in your strings. So, for example, if you want to retain the comments in a unix shell script then use C as the comment style for the JSON. Note that it is possible (since version 0.03) to use custom tags for comments. This greatly increases your chances to make config2perl understand what comments you want to keep as part of your data. For example, make your comments like [::: comment :::] or even like using 'commentstyle' => 'custom([:::)(:::])' and 'commentstyle' => 'custom()', respectively. TIPS You can change the tags used in denoting the template variables and verbatim sections with the tags parameter to the sub config2perl. Use this feature to change tags to something else if your JSON contains the same character sequence for these tags and avoid clashes and unexpected substitutions. <% and %> are the default tags. Similarly, custom comment style (specifying what should be the opening and, optionally, closing tags) can be employed if your JSON strings contain something that looks like comments and you want to avoid their removal. WARNINGS/CAVEATS In order to remove comments within strings, a simplistic regular expression for extracting quoted strings is employed. It finds anything within two double quotes. It tries to handle escaped quotes within quoted strings. This regex may be buggy or may not be complex enough to handle all corner cases. Therefore, it is possible that setting parameter remove-comments-in-strings to 1 to sub config2perl to cause unexpected results. Please report these cases, see SUPPORT. The regex for identifying comments, variables and verbatim sections has the custom tags escaped for special regex characters (with the \Q ... \E construct). So you are pretty safe in using any character. Please report weird behaviour. AUTHOR Andreas Hadjiprocopis, HUGS ! Almaz ! BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-config-json-enhanced at rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at https://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Config-JSON-Enhanced. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes. SUPPORT You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command. perldoc Config::JSON::Enhanced You can also look for information at: * RT: CPAN's request tracker (report bugs here) https://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Config-JSON-Enhanced * CPAN Ratings https://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Config-JSON-Enhanced * Search CPAN https://metacpan.org/release/Config-JSON-Enhanced ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT This software is Copyright (c) 2023 by Andreas Hadjiprocopis. This is free software, licensed under: The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)