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UBJSON

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
UBJSON
Original author(s)Riyad Kalla
Stable release
Draft 12
Written inVarious languages
Operating systemAny
PlatformCross-platform
TypeData interchange
LicenseApache 2.0
Websiteubjson.org

Universal Binary JSON (UBJSON) is a computer data interchange format. It is a binary form directly imitating JSON, but requiring fewer bytes of data. It aims to achieve the generality of JSON, combined with being much easier to process than JSON.

Rationale and Objectives

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UBJSON is a proposed successor to BSON, BJSON and others. UBJSON has the following goals:

  • Complete compatibility with the JSON specification – there is a 1:1 mapping between standard JSON and UBJSON.
  • Ease of implementation – only including data types that are widely supported in popular programming languages so that there are no problems with certain languages not being supported well.
  • Ease of use – it can be quickly understood and adopted.
  • Speed and efficiency – UBJSON uses data representations that are (roughly) 30% smaller than their compacted JSON counterparts and are optimized for fast parsing. Streamed serialisation is supported, meaning that the transfer of UBJSON over a network connection can start sending data before the final size of the data is known.

Data types and syntax

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UBJSON data can be either a value or a container.

Value types

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UBJSON uses a single binary tuple to represent all JSON value types:[1]

   type [length] [data]

Each element in the tuple is defined as:

type

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The type is a 1-byte ASCII character used to indicate the type of the data following it. The ASCII characters were chosen to make manually walking and debugging data stored in the UBJSON format as easy as possible (e.g. making the data relatively readable in a hex editor). Types are available for the five JSON value types. There is also a no-op type used for stream keep-alive.

High-precision numbers are represented as an arbitrarily long, UTF-8 string-encoded numeric value.

length (optional)

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The length is an integer number (e.g. uint8, or int64) encoding the size of the data payload in bytes. It is used for strings, high-precision numbers and optionally containers. They are omitted for other types.

Length is encoded following the same convention as integers, thus including its own type. For example, the string hello is encoded as S,U,0x05,h,e,l,l,o.

data (optional)

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A sequence of bytes representing the actual binary data for this type of value. All numbers are in big-endian order.

Container types

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Similarly to JSON, UBJSON defines two container types: array and object.[2]

Arrays are ordered sequences of elements, represented as a [ followed by zero or more elements of value and container type and a trailing ].

Objects are labeled sets of elements, represented as a { followed by zero or more key-value pairs and a trailing }. Each key is a string with the S character omitted, and each "value" can be any element of value or container type.

Alternatively, arrays and objects may indicate the number of elements they contain as # followed by an integer number before their first element, in which case the trailing ] or } is omitted. Additionally, if all elements have the same type, the types can be omitted and replaced by a single $ followed by the type, in which case the element count must follow immediately. For example, the array ["a","b","c"] may be represented as [,$,C,#,U,0x03,a,b,c.

Binary data

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While there is no explicit binary type, binary data is stored in a strongly typed array of uint8 values. This ensures binary efficiency while maintaining compatibility with JSON, even though JSON has no direct support for binary data.[3][4]

Representation

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The MIME type 'application/ubjson' is recommended, as is the file extension '.ubj' when stored in a file-system.[4]

Software support

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Value Types | Universal Binary JSON Specification". Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  2. ^ "Container Types | Universal Binary JSON Specification". Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  3. ^ "Binary Data | Universal Binary JSON Specification". Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "UBJSON (.ubj)—Wolfram Language Documentation". Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  5. ^ "UBJSON Storage Format". Retrieved 20 July 2019.
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