This is a JavaScript/ECMA-262 implementation of MessagePack, an efficient binary serilization format:
This library is a universal JavaScript, which supports both browsers and NodeJS. In addition, because it is implemented in TypeScript, type definition files (d.ts
) are bundled in the distribution.
Note that this is the second version of MessagePack for JavaScript. The first version, which was implemented in ES5 and was never released to npmjs.com, is tagged as classic.
import { deepStrictEqual } from "assert";
import { encode, decode } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const object = {
nil: null,
integer: 1,
float: Math.PI,
string: "Hello, world!",
binary: Uint8Array.from([1, 2, 3]),
array: [10, 20, 30],
map: { foo: "bar" },
timestampExt: new Date(),
};
const encoded: Uint8Array = encode(object);
deepStrictEqual(decode(encoded), object);
- Synopsis
- Table of Contents
- Install
- API
encode(data: unknown, options?: EncodeOptions): Uint8Array
decode(buffer: ArrayLike<number> | ArrayBuffer, options?: DecodeOptions): unknown
decodeAsync(stream: AsyncIterable<ArrayLike<number>> | ReadableStream<ArrayLike<number>>, options?: DecodeAsyncOptions): Promise<unknown>
decodeArrayStream(stream: AsyncIterable<ArrayLike<number>> | ReadableStream<ArrayLike<number>>, options?: DecodeAsyncOptions): AsyncIterable<unknown>
decodeStream(stream: AsyncIterable<ArrayLike<number>> | ReadableStream<ArrayLike<number>>, options?: DecodeAsyncOptions): AsyncIterable<unknown>
- Extension Types
- MessagePack Specification
- Prerequsites
- Benchmark
- Distribution
- Maintenance
- Big Thanks
- License
This library is published to npmjs.com
as @msgpack/msgpack.
npm install @msgpack/msgpack
It encodes data
and returns a byte array as Uint8Array
, throwing errors if data
is, or includes, a non-serializable object such as a function
or a symbol
.
for example:
import { encode } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const encoded: Uint8Array = encode({ foo: "bar" });
console.log(encoded);
If you'd like to convert the uint8array to a NodeJS Buffer
, use Buffer.from(arrayBuffer, offset, length)
in order not to copy the underlying ArrayBuffer
, while Buffer.from(uint8array)
copies it:
import { encode } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const encoded: Uint8Array = encode({ foo: "bar" });
// `buffer` refers the same ArrayBuffer as `encoded`.
const buffer: Buffer = Buffer.from(encoded.buffer, encoded.byteOffset, encoded.byteLength);
console.log(buffer);
Name | Type | Default |
---|---|---|
extensionCodec | ExtensionCodec | ExtensinCodec.defaultCodec |
maxDepth | number | 100 |
initialBufferSize | number | 2048 |
sortKeys | boolean | false |
forceFloat32 | boolean | false |
It decodes buffer
encoded in MessagePack, and returns a decoded object as uknown
.
buffer
must be an array of bytes, which is typically Uint8Array
, or ArrayBuffer
.
for example:
import { encode } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const encoded: Uint8Array;
const object = decode(encoded);
console.log(object);
NodeJS Buffer
is also acceptable because it is a subclass of Uint8Array
.
Name | Type | Default |
---|---|---|
extensionCodec | ExtensionCodec | ExtensinCodec.defaultCodec |
maxStrLength | number | 4_294_967_295 (UINT32_MAX) |
maxBinLength | number | 4_294_967_295 (UINT32_MAX) |
maxArrayLength | number | 4_294_967_295 (UINT32_MAX) |
maxMapLength | number | 4_294_967_295 (UINT32_MAX) |
maxExtLength | number | 4_294_967_295 (UINT32_MAX) |
You can use max${Type}Length
to limit the length of each type decoded.
decodeAsync(stream: AsyncIterable<ArrayLike<number>> | ReadableStream<ArrayLike<number>>, options?: DecodeAsyncOptions): Promise<unknown>
It decodes stream
in an async iterable of byte arrays, and returns decoded object as uknown
type, wrapped in Promise
. This function works asyncronously.
DecodeAsyncOptions
is the same as DecodeOptions
for decode()
.
This function is designed to work with whatwg fetch()
like this:
import { decodeAsync } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const MSGPACK_TYPE = "application/x-msgpack";
const response = await fetch(url);
const contentType = response.headers.get("Content-Type");
if (contentType && contentType.startsWith(MSGPACK_TYPE) && response.body != null) {
const object = await decodeAsync(response.body);
// do something with object
} else { /* handle errors */ }
decodeArrayStream(stream: AsyncIterable<ArrayLike<number>> | ReadableStream<ArrayLike<number>>, options?: DecodeAsyncOptions): AsyncIterable<unknown>
It is alike to decodeAsync()
, but only accepts an array of items as the input stream
, and emits the decoded item one by one.
It throws errors when the input is not an array-family.
for example:
import { encode } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const stream: AsyncIterator<Uint8Array>;
// in an async function:
for await (const item of decodeArrayStream(stream)) {
console.log(item);
}
decodeStream(stream: AsyncIterable<ArrayLike<number>> | ReadableStream<ArrayLike<number>>, options?: DecodeAsyncOptions): AsyncIterable<unknown>
It is alike to decodeAsync()
and decodeArrayStream()
, but the input stream
consists of independent MessagePack items.
In other words, it decodes an unlimited stream and emits an item one by one.
for example:
import { encode } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const stream: AsyncIterator<Uint8Array>;
// in an async function:
for await (const item of decodeStream(stream)) {
console.log(item);
}
To handle MessagePack Extension Types, this library provides ExtensionCodec
class.
Here is an example to setup custom extension types that handles Map
and Set
classes in TypeScript:
import { encode, decode, ExtensionCodec } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const extensionCodec = new ExtensionCodec();
// Set<T>
const SET_EXT_TYPE = 0 // Any in 0-127
extensionCodec.register({
type: SET_EXT_TYPE,
encode: (object: unknown): Uint8Array | null => {
if (object instanceof Set) {
return encode([...object]);
} else {
return null;
}
},
decode: (data: Uint8Array) => {
const array = decode(data) as Array<unknown>;
return new Set(array);
},
});
// Map<T>
const MAP_EXT_TYPE = 1; // Any in 0-127
extensionCodec.register({
type: 1,
encode: (object: unknown): Uint8Array => {
if (object instanceof Map) {
return encode([...object]);
} else {
return null;
}
},
decode: (data: Uint8Array) => {
const array = decode(data) as Array<[unknown, unknown]>;
return new Map(array);
},
});
// and later
import { encode, decode } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const encoded = = encode([new Set<any>(), new Map<any, any>()], { extensionCodec });
const decoded = decode(encoded, { extensionCodec });
Not that extension types for custom objects must be [0, 127]
, while [-1, -128]
is reserved for MessagePack itself.
This library does not handle BigInt by default, but you can handle it with ExtensionCodec
like this:
import { deepStrictEqual } from "assert";
import { encode, decode, ExtensionCodec } from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const BIGINT_EXT_TYPE = 0; // Any in 0-127
const extensionCodec = new ExtensionCodec();
extensionCodec.register({
type: BIGINT_EXT_TYPE,
encode: (input: unknown) => {
if (typeof input === "bigint") {
return encode(input.toString());
} else {
return null;
}
},
decode: (data: Uint8Array) => {
return BigInt(decode(data));
},
});
const value = BigInt(Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER) + BigInt(1);
const encoded: = encode(value, { extensionCodec });
deepStrictEqual(decode(encoded, { extensionCodec }), value);
There is a proposal for a new date/time representations in JavaScript:
This library maps Date
to the MessagePack timestamp extension by default, but you can re-map the temporal module (or @std-proposal/temporal ponyfill) to the timestamp extension like this:
import { Instant } from "@std-proposal/temporal";
import { deepStrictEqual } from "assert";
import {
encode,
decode,
ExtensionCodec,
EXT_TIMESTAMP,
encodeTimeSpecToTimestamp,
decodeTimestampToTimeSpec,
} from "@msgpack/msgpack";
const extensionCodec = new ExtensionCodec();
extensionCodec.register({
type: EXT_TIMESTAMP, // override the default behavior!
encode: (input: any) => {
if (input instanceof Instant) {
const sec = input.seconds;
const nsec = Number(input.nanoseconds - BigInt(sec) * BigInt(1e9));
return encodeTimeSpecToTimestamp({ sec, nsec });
} else {
return null;
}
},
decode: (data: Uint8Array) => {
const timeSpec = decodeTimestampToTimeSpec(data);
const sec = BigInt(timeSpec.sec);
const nsec = BigInt(timeSpec.nsec);
return Instant.fromEpochNanoseconds(sec * BigInt(1e9) + nsec);
},
});
const instant = Instant.fromEpochMilliseconds(Date.now());
const encoded = encode(instant, { extensionCodec });
const decoded = decode(encoded, { extensionCodec });
deepStrictEqual(decoded, instant);
This will be default once the temporal module is standardizied, which is not a near-future, though.
This library is compatible with the "August 2017" revision of MessagePack specification at the point where timestamp ext was added:
- str/bin separation, added on August 2013
- extension types, added on August 2013
- timestamp ext type, added on August 2017
The livinng specification is here:
https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack
Note that as of June 2019 there're no versions on the MessagePack specification. See msgpack/msgpack#195 for the discussions.
The following table shows how JavaScript values are mapped to MessagePack formats and vice versa.
Source Value | MessagePack Format | Value Decoded |
---|---|---|
null, undefined | nil | null (*1) |
boolean (true, false) | bool family | boolean (true, false) |
number (53-bit int) | int family | number (53-bit int) |
number (64-bit float) | float family | number (64-bit float) |
string | str family | string |
ArrayBufferView | bin family | Uint8Array (*2) |
Array | array family | Array |
Object | map family | Object (*3) |
Date | timestamp ext family | Date (*4) |
- *1 Both
null
andundefined
are mapped tonil
(0xC0
) type, and are decoded intonull
- *2 Any
ArrayBufferView
s including NodeJS'sBuffer
are mapped tobin
family, and are decoded intoUint8Array
- *3 In handling
Object
, it is regarded asRecord<string, unknown>
in terms of TypeScript - *4 MessagePack timestamps may have nanoseconds, which will lost when it is decoded into JavaScript
Date
. This behavior can be overridden by registering-1
for the extension codec.
This is a universal JavaScript library that supports major browsers and NodeJS.
- ES5 language features
- ES2018 standard library, including:
- Typed arrays (ES2015)
- Async iterations (ES2018)
- Features added in ES2015-ES2018
ES2018 standard library used in this library can be polyfilled with core-js.
If you support IE11, import core-js
in your application entrypoints, as this library does in testing for browsers .
NodeJS v10 is required, but NodeJS v12 or later is recommended because it includes the V8 feature of Improving DataView performance in V8.
NodeJS before v10 will work by importing @msgpack/msgpack/dist.es5/msgpack
.
Benchmark on NodeJS/v12.7.0
operation | op | ms | op/s |
---|---|---|---|
buf = Buffer.from(JSON.stringify(obj)); | 507700 | 5000 | 101540 |
buf = JSON.stringify(obj); | 958100 | 5000 | 191620 |
obj = JSON.parse(buf); | 346500 | 5000 | 69300 |
buf = require("msgpack-lite").encode(obj); | 361800 | 5001 | 72345 |
obj = require("msgpack-lite").decode(buf); | 267400 | 5000 | 53480 |
buf = require("@msgpack/msgpack").encode(obj); | 510200 | 5000 | 102040 |
obj = require("@msgpack/msgpack").decode(buf); | 825500 | 5000 | 165100 |
Note that Buffer.from()
for JSON.stringify()
is added to emulate I/O where a JavaScript string must be converted into a byte array encoded in UTF-8, whereas MessagePack's encode()
returns a byte array.
The NPM package distributed in npmjs.com includes both ES2015+ and ES5 files:
dist/
is compiled into ES2015+dist.es5/
is compiled into ES5 and bundled to singile filedist.es5/msgpack.min.js
- the default, minified file (UMD)dist.es5/msgpack.js
- an optional, non-minified file (UMD)
If you use NodeJS and/or webpack, their module resolvers use the suitable one automatically.
This library is availble via CDN:
<script crossorigin src="https://unpkg.com/@msgpack/msgpack"></script>
It loads MessagePack
module to the global object.
For simple testing:
npm run test
This library uses Travis CI.
test matrix:
- WebAssembly availability
WASM=force
/WASM=never
- TypeScript targets
target=es2019
/target=es5
- JavaScript engines
- NodeJS, borwsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, IE11, and so on)
See test:* in package.json and .travis.yml for details.
# run tests on NodeJS, Chrome, and Firefox
make test-all
# edit the changelog
code CHANGELOG.md
# bump version
npm version patch|minor|major
# run the publishing task
make publish
npm run update-dependencies
Cross-browser Testing Platform and Open Source <3 Provided by Sauce Labs.
Copyright 2019 The MessagePack community.
This software uses the ISC license:
https://opensource.org/licenses/ISC
See LICENSE for details.