/json-c

https://github.com/json-c/json-c is the official code repository for json-c. See the wiki for release tarballs for download.

Primary LanguageCOtherNOASSERTION

json-c {#mainpage}

JSON-C - A JSON implementation in C

Build Status

  • AppVeyor Build Status
  • Travis Build Status

JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C, output them as JSON formatted strings and parse JSON formatted strings back into the C representation of JSON objects. It aims to conform to RFC 7159.

Building on Unix with git, gcc and autotools

Home page for json-c: https://github.com/json-c/json-c/wiki

Prerequisites:

See also the "Installing prerequisites" section below.

  • gcc, clang, or another C compiler
  • libtool>=2.2.6b

If you're not using a release tarball, you'll also need:

  • autoconf>=2.64 (autoreconf)
  • automake>=1.10.3

Make sure you have a complete libtool install, including libtoolize.

Build instructions:

json-c GitHub repo: https://github.com/json-c/json-c

$ git clone https://github.com/json-c/json-c.git
$ cd json-c
$ sh autogen.sh

followed by

$ ./configure  # --enable-threading
$ make
$ make install

To build and run the test programs:

$ make check

Building with partial threading support

Although json-c does not support fully multi-threaded access to object trees, it has some code to help make use in threaded programs a bit safer. Currently, this is limited to using atomic operations for json_object_get() and json_object_put().

Since this may have a performance impact, of at least 3x slower according to https://stackoverflow.com/a/11609063, it is disabled by default. You may turn it on by adjusting your configure command with: --enable-threading

Separately, the default hash function used for object field keys, lh_char_hash, uses a compare-and-swap operation to ensure the randomly seed is only generated once. Because this is a one-time operation, it is always compiled in when the compare-and-swap operation is available.

Linking to libjson-c

If your system has pkgconfig, then you can just add this to your makefile:

CFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --cflags json-c)
LDFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --libs json-c)

Without pkgconfig, you would do something like this:

JSON_C_DIR=/path/to/json_c/install
CFLAGS += -I$(JSON_C_DIR)/include/json-c
LDFLAGS+= -L$(JSON_C_DIR)/lib -ljson-c

Install prerequisites

If you are on a relatively modern system, you'll likely be able to install the prerequisites using your OS's packaging system.

Install using apt (e.g. Ubuntu 16.04.2 LTS)

sudo apt install git
sudo apt install autoconf automake libtool
sudo apt install valgrind # optional

Then start from the "git clone" command, above.

Manually install and build autoconf, automake and libtool

For older OS's that don't have up-to-date version of the packages will require a bit more work. For example, CentOS release 5.11, etc...

curl -O http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/autoconf/autoconf-2.69.tar.gz
curl -O http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/automake/automake-1.15.tar.gz
curl -O http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-2.2.6b.tar.gz

tar xzf autoconf-2.69.tar.gz
tar xzf automake-1.15.tar.gz
tar xzf libtool-2.2.6b.tar.gz

export PATH=${HOME}/ac_install/bin:$PATH

(cd autoconf-2.69 && \
  ./configure --prefix ${HOME}/ac_install && \
  make && \
  make install)

(cd automake-1.15 && \
  ./configure --prefix ${HOME}/ac_install && \
  make && \
  make install)

(cd libtool-2.2.6b && \
  ./configure --prefix ${HOME}/ac_install && \
  make && \
  make install)