/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2018 Intel Corporation. ** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/ ** ** This file is part of the QtCore module of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ ** Commercial License Usage ** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in ** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in ** a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms ** and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further ** information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us. ** ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser ** General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL3 included in the ** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 requirements ** will be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl-3.0.html. ** ** GNU General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU ** General Public License version 2.0 or (at your option) the GNU General ** Public license version 3 or any later version approved by the KDE Free ** Qt Foundation. The licenses are as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL2 and LICENSE.GPL3 ** included in the packaging of this file. Please review the following ** information to ensure the GNU General Public License requirements will ** be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html and ** https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html. ** ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ #include "qcborstream.h" #include #include #include #include #include QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE #ifdef QT_NO_DEBUG # define NDEBUG 1 #endif #undef assert #define assert Q_ASSERT QT_WARNING_PUSH QT_WARNING_DISABLE_GCC("-Wunused-function") QT_WARNING_DISABLE_CLANG("-Wunused-function") QT_WARNING_DISABLE_CLANG("-Wundefined-internal") QT_WARNING_DISABLE_MSVC(4334) // '<<': result of 32-bit shift implicitly converted to 64 bits (was 64-bit shift intended?) #define CBOR_ENCODER_NO_CHECK_USER #define CBOR_NO_VALIDATION_API 1 #define CBOR_NO_PRETTY_API 1 #define CBOR_API static inline #define CBOR_PRIVATE_API static inline #define CBOR_INLINE_API static inline #include static CborError qt_cbor_encoder_write_callback(void *token, const void *data, size_t len, CborEncoderAppendType); static bool qt_cbor_decoder_can_read(void *token, size_t len); static void qt_cbor_decoder_advance(void *token, size_t len); static void *qt_cbor_decoder_read(void *token, void *userptr, size_t offset, size_t len); static CborError qt_cbor_decoder_transfer_string(void *token, const void **userptr, size_t offset, size_t len); #define CBOR_ENCODER_WRITER_CONTROL 1 #define CBOR_ENCODER_WRITE_FUNCTION qt_cbor_encoder_write_callback #define CBOR_PARSER_READER_CONTROL 1 #define CBOR_PARSER_CAN_READ_BYTES_FUNCTION qt_cbor_decoder_can_read #define CBOR_PARSER_ADVANCE_BYTES_FUNCTION qt_cbor_decoder_advance #define CBOR_PARSER_TRANSFER_STRING_FUNCTION qt_cbor_decoder_transfer_string #define CBOR_PARSER_READ_BYTES_FUNCTION qt_cbor_decoder_read #include "../3rdparty/tinycbor/src/cborencoder.c" #include "../3rdparty/tinycbor/src/cborerrorstrings.c" #include "../3rdparty/tinycbor/src/cborparser.c" // silence compilers that complain about this being a static function declared // but never defined static CborError cbor_encoder_close_container_checked(CborEncoder*, const CborEncoder*) { Q_UNREACHABLE(); return CborErrorInternalError; } static CborError _cbor_value_dup_string(const CborValue *, void **, size_t *, CborValue *) { Q_UNREACHABLE(); return CborErrorInternalError; } QT_WARNING_POP Q_DECLARE_TYPEINFO(CborEncoder, Q_PRIMITIVE_TYPE); Q_DECLARE_TYPEINFO(CborValue, Q_PRIMITIVE_TYPE); // confirm our constants match TinyCBOR's Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::UnsignedInteger) == CborIntegerType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::ByteString) == CborByteStringType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::TextString) == CborTextStringType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::Array) == CborArrayType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::Map) == CborMapType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::Tag) == CborTagType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::SimpleType) == CborSimpleType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::HalfFloat) == CborHalfFloatType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::Float) == CborFloatType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::Double) == CborDoubleType); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(QCborStreamReader::Invalid) == CborInvalidType); /*! \headerfile \brief The header contains definitions common to both the streaming classes (QCborStreamReader and QCborStreamWriter) and to QCborValue. */ /*! \enum QCborSimpleType \relates This enum contains the possible "Simple Types" for CBOR. Simple Types range from 0 to 255 and are types that carry no further value. The following values are currently known: \value False A "false" boolean. \value True A "true" boolean. \value Null Absence of value (null). \value Undefined Missing or deleted value, usually an error. Qt CBOR API supports encoding and decoding any Simple Type, whether one of those above or any other value. Applications should only use further values if a corresponding specification has been published, otherwise interpretation and validation by the remote may fail. Values 24 to 31 are reserved and must not be used. The current authoritative list is maintained by IANA in the \l{https://www.iana.org/assignments/cbor-simple-values/cbor-simple-values.xml}{Simple Values registry}. \sa QCborStreamWriter::append(QCborSimpleType), QCborStreamReader::isSimpleType(), QCborStreamReader::toSimpleType(), QCborValue::isSimpleType(), QCborValue::toSimpleType() */ Q_CORE_EXPORT const char *qt_cbor_simpletype_id(QCborSimpleType st) { switch (st) { case QCborSimpleType::False: return "False"; case QCborSimpleType::True: return "True"; case QCborSimpleType::Null: return "Null"; case QCborSimpleType::Undefined: return "Undefined"; } return nullptr; } #if !defined(QT_NO_DEBUG_STREAM) QDebug operator<<(QDebug dbg, QCborSimpleType st) { QDebugStateSaver saver(dbg); const char *id = qt_cbor_simpletype_id(st); if (id) return dbg.nospace() << "QCborSimpleType::" << id; return dbg.nospace() << "QCborSimpleType(" << uint(st) << ')'; } #endif /*! \enum QCborTag \relates This enum contains no enumeration and is used only to provide type-safe access to a CBOR tag. CBOR tags are 64-bit numbers that are attached to generic CBOR types to provide further semantic meaning. QCborTag may be constructed from an enumeration found in QCborKnownTags or directly by providing the numeric representation. For example, the following creates a QCborValue containing a byte array tagged with a tag 2. \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 0 \sa QCborKnownTags, QCborStreamWriter::append(QCborTag), QCborStreamReader::isTag(), QCborStreamReader::toTag(), QCborValue::isTag(), QCborValue::tag() */ Q_CORE_EXPORT const char *qt_cbor_tag_id(QCborTag tag) { // Casting to QCborKnownTags's underlying type will make the comparison // below fail if the tag value is out of range. auto n = std::underlying_type::type(tag); if (QCborTag(n) == tag) { switch (QCborKnownTags(n)) { case QCborKnownTags::DateTimeString: return "DateTimeString"; case QCborKnownTags::UnixTime_t: return "UnixTime_t"; case QCborKnownTags::PositiveBignum: return "PositiveBignum"; case QCborKnownTags::NegativeBignum: return "NegativeBignum"; case QCborKnownTags::Decimal: return "Decimal"; case QCborKnownTags::Bigfloat: return "Bigfloat"; case QCborKnownTags::COSE_Encrypt0: return "COSE_Encrypt0"; case QCborKnownTags::COSE_Mac0: return "COSE_Mac0"; case QCborKnownTags::COSE_Sign1: return "COSE_Sign1"; case QCborKnownTags::ExpectedBase64url: return "ExpectedBase64url"; case QCborKnownTags::ExpectedBase64: return "ExpectedBase64"; case QCborKnownTags::ExpectedBase16: return "ExpectedBase16"; case QCborKnownTags::EncodedCbor: return "EncodedCbor"; case QCborKnownTags::Url: return "Url"; case QCborKnownTags::Base64url: return "Base64url"; case QCborKnownTags::Base64: return "Base64"; case QCborKnownTags::RegularExpression: return "RegularExpression"; case QCborKnownTags::MimeMessage: return "MimeMessage"; case QCborKnownTags::Uuid: return "Uuid"; case QCborKnownTags::COSE_Encrypt: return "COSE_Encrypt"; case QCborKnownTags::COSE_Mac: return "COSE_Mac"; case QCborKnownTags::COSE_Sign: return "COSE_Sign"; case QCborKnownTags::Signature: return "Signature"; } } return nullptr; } #if !defined(QT_NO_DEBUG_STREAM) QDebug operator<<(QDebug dbg, QCborTag tag) { QDebugStateSaver saver(dbg); const char *id = qt_cbor_tag_id(tag); dbg.nospace() << "QCborTag("; if (id) dbg.nospace() << "QCborKnownTags::" << id; else dbg.nospace() << quint64(tag); return dbg << ')'; } #endif /*! \enum QCborKnownTags \relates This enum contains a list of CBOR tags, known at the time of the Qt implementation. This list is not meant to be complete and contains only tags that are either backed by an RFC or specifically used by the Qt implementation. The authoritative list is maintained by IANA in the \l{https://www.iana.org/assignments/cbor-tags/cbor-tags.xhtml}{CBOR tag registry}. \value DateTimeString A date and time string, formatted according to RFC 3339, as refined by RFC 4287. It is the same format as Qt::ISODate and Qt::ISODateWithMs. \value UnixTime_t A numerical representation of seconds elapsed since 1970-01-01T00:00Z. \value PositiveBignum A positive number of arbitrary length, encoded as a byte array in network byte order. For example, the number 2\sup{64} is represented by a byte array containing the byte value 0x01 followed by 8 zero bytes. \value NegativeBignum A negative number of arbirary length, encoded as the absolute value of that number, minus one. For example, a byte array containing byte value 0x02 followed by 8 zero bytes represents the number -2\sup{65} - 1. \value Decimal A decimal fraction, encoded as an array of two integers: the first is the exponent of the power of 10, the second the integral mantissa. The value 273.15 would be encoded as array \c{[-2, 27315]}. \value Bigfloat Similar to Decimal, but the exponent is a power of 2 instead. \value COSE_Encrypt0 An \c Encrypt0 map as specified by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8152}{RFC 8152} (CBOR Object Signing and Encryption). \value COSE_Mac0 A \c Mac0 map as specified by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8152}{RFC 8152} (CBOR Object Signing and Encryption). \value COSE_Sign1 A \c Sign1 map as specified by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8152}{RFC 8152} (CBOR Object Signing and Encryption). \value ExpectedBase64url Indicates that the byte array should be encoded using Base64url if the stream is converted to JSON. \value ExpectedBase64 Indicates that the byte array should be encoded using Base64 if the stream is converted to JSON. \value ExpectedBase16 Indicates that the byte array should be encoded using Base16 (hex) if the stream is converted to JSON. \value EncodedCbor Indicates that the byte array contains a CBOR stream. \value Url Indicates that the string contains a URL. \value Base64url Indicates that the string contains data encoded using Base64url. \value Base64 Indicates that the string contains data encoded using Base64. \value RegularExpression Indicates that the string contains a Perl-Compatible Regular Expression pattern. \value MimeMessage Indicates that the string contains a MIME message (according to \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2045}){RFC 2045}. \value Uuid Indicates that the byte array contains a UUID. \value COSE_Encrypt An \c Encrypt map as specified by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8152}{RFC 8152} (CBOR Object Signing and Encryption). \value COSE_Mac A \c Mac map as specified by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8152}{RFC 8152} (CBOR Object Signing and Encryption). \value COSE_Sign A \c Sign map as specified by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8152}{RFC 8152} (CBOR Object Signing and Encryption). \value Signature No change in interpretation; this tag can be used as the outermost tag in a CBOR stream as the file header. The following tags are interpreted by QCborValue during decoding and will produce objects with extended Qt types, and it will use those tags when encoding the same extended types. \value DateTimeString \l QDateTime \value UnixTime_t \l QDateTime (only in decoding) \value Url \l QUrl \value Uuid \l QUuid Additionally, if a QCborValue containing a QByteArray is tagged using one of \c ExpectedBase64url, \c ExpectedBase64 or \c ExpectedBase16, QCborValue will use the expected encoding when converting to JSON (see QCborValue::toJsonValue). \sa QCborTag, QCborStreamWriter::append(QCborTag), QCborStreamReader::isTag(), QCborStreamReader::toTag(), QCborValue::isTag(), QCborValue::tag() */ #if !defined(QT_NO_DEBUG_STREAM) QDebug operator<<(QDebug dbg, QCborKnownTags tag) { QDebugStateSaver saver(dbg); const char *id = qt_cbor_tag_id(QCborTag(int(tag))); if (id) return dbg.nospace() << "QCborKnownTags::" << id; return dbg.nospace() << "QCborKnownTags(" << int(tag) << ')'; } #endif /*! \class QCborError \inmodule QtCore \relates \reentrant \since 5.12 \brief The QCborError class holds the error condition found while parsing or validating a CBOR stream. \sa QCborStreamReader, QCborValue, QCborParserError */ /*! \enum QCborError::Code This enum contains the possible error condition codes. \value NoError No error was detected. \value UnknownError An unknown error occurred and no further details are available. \value AdvancePastEnd QCborStreamReader::next() was called but there are no more elements in the current context. \value InputOutputError An I/O error with the QIODevice occurred. \value GarbageAtEnd Data was found in the input stream after the last element. \value EndOfFile The end of the input stream was unexpectedly reached while processing an element. \value UnexpectedBreak The CBOR stream contains a Break where it is not allowed (data is corrupt and the error is not recoverable). \value UnknownType The CBOR stream contains an unknown/unparseable Type (data is corrupt and the and the error is not recoverable). \value IllegalType The CBOR stream contains a known type in a position it is not allowed to exist (data is corrupt and the error is not recoverable). \value IllegalNumber The CBOR stream appears to be encoding a number larger than 64-bit (data is corrupt and the error is not recoverable). \value IllegalSimpleType The CBOR stream contains a Simple Type encoded incorrectly (data is corrupt and the error is not recoverable). \value InvalidUtf8String The CBOR stream contains a text string that does not decode properly as UTF (data is corrupt and the error is not recoverable). \value DataTooLarge CBOR string, map or array is too big and cannot be parsed by Qt (internal limitation, but the error is not recoverable). \value NestingTooDeep Too many levels of arrays or maps encountered while processing the input (internal limitation, but the error is not recoverable). \value UnsupportedType The CBOR stream contains a known type that the implementation does not support (internal limitation, but the error is not recoverable). */ /*! \variable QCborError::c \internal */ /*! \fn QCborError::operator Code() const Returns the error code that this QCborError object stores. */ /*! Returns a text string that matches the error code in this QCborError object. Note: the string is not translated. Applications whose interface allow users to parse CBOR streams need to provide their own, translated strings. \sa QCborError::Code */ QString QCborError::toString() const { switch (c) { case NoError: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(NoError) == int(CborNoError)); return QString(); case UnknownError: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(UnknownError) == int(CborUnknownError)); return QStringLiteral("Unknown error"); case AdvancePastEnd: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(AdvancePastEnd) == int(CborErrorAdvancePastEOF)); return QStringLiteral("Read past end of buffer (more bytes needed)"); case InputOutputError: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(InputOutputError) == int(CborErrorIO)); return QStringLiteral("Input/Output error"); case GarbageAtEnd: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(GarbageAtEnd) == int(CborErrorGarbageAtEnd)); return QStringLiteral("Data found after the end of the stream"); case EndOfFile: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(EndOfFile) == int(CborErrorUnexpectedEOF)); return QStringLiteral("Unexpected end of input data (more bytes needed)"); case UnexpectedBreak: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(UnexpectedBreak) == int(CborErrorUnexpectedBreak)); return QStringLiteral("Invalid CBOR stream: unexpected 'break' byte"); case UnknownType: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(UnknownType) == int(CborErrorUnknownType)); return QStringLiteral("Invalid CBOR stream: unknown type"); case IllegalType: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(IllegalType) == int(CborErrorIllegalType)); return QStringLiteral("Invalid CBOR stream: illegal type found"); case IllegalNumber: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(IllegalNumber) == int(CborErrorIllegalNumber)); return QStringLiteral("Invalid CBOR stream: illegal number encoding (future extension)"); case IllegalSimpleType: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(IllegalSimpleType) == int(CborErrorIllegalSimpleType)); return QStringLiteral("Invalid CBOR stream: illegal simple type"); case InvalidUtf8String: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(InvalidUtf8String) == int(CborErrorInvalidUtf8TextString)); return QStringLiteral("Invalid CBOR stream: invalid UTF-8 text string"); case DataTooLarge: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(DataTooLarge) == int(CborErrorDataTooLarge)); return QStringLiteral("Internal limitation: data set too large"); case NestingTooDeep: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(NestingTooDeep) == int(CborErrorNestingTooDeep)); return QStringLiteral("Internal limitation: data nesting too deep"); case UnsupportedType: Q_STATIC_ASSERT(int(UnsupportedType) == int(CborErrorUnsupportedType)); return QStringLiteral("Internal limitation: unsupported type"); } // get the error from TinyCBOR CborError err = CborError(int(c)); return QString::fromLatin1(cbor_error_string(err)); } /*! \class QCborStreamWriter \inmodule QtCore \ingroup cbor \reentrant \since 5.12 \brief The QCborStreamWriter class is a simple CBOR encoder operating on a one-way stream. This class can be used to quickly encode a stream of CBOR content directly to either a QByteArray or QIODevice. CBOR is the Concise Binary Object Representation, a very compact form of binary data encoding that is compatible with JSON. It was created by the IETF Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE) WG, which has used it in many new RFCs. It is meant to be used alongside the \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7252}{CoAP protocol}. QCborStreamWriter provides a StAX-like API, similar to that of \l{QXmlStreamWriter}. It is rather low-level and requires a bit of knowledge of CBOR encoding. For a simpler API, see \l{QCborValue} and especially the encoding function QCborValue::toCbor(). The typical use of QCborStreamWriter is to create the object on the target QByteArray or QIODevice, then call one of the append() overloads with the desired type to be encoded. To create arrays and maps, QCborStreamWriter provides startArray() and startMap() overloads, which must be terminated by the corresponding endArray() and endMap() functions. The following example encodes the equivalent of this JSON content: \div{class="pre"} { "label": "journald", "autoDetect": false, "condition": "libs.journald", "output": [ "privateFeature" ] } \enddiv \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 1 \section1 CBOR support QCborStreamWriter supports all CBOR features required to create canonical and strict streams. It implements almost all of the features specified in \l {https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7049}{RFC 7049}. The following table lists the CBOR features that QCborStreamWriter supports. \table \header \li Feature \li Support \row \li Unsigned numbers \li Yes (full range) \row \li Negative numbers \li Yes (full range) \row \li Byte strings \li Yes \row \li Text strings \li Yes \row \li Chunked strings \li No \row \li Tags \li Yes (arbitrary) \row \li Booleans \li Yes \row \li Null \li Yes \row \li Undefined \li Yes \row \li Arbitrary simple values \li Yes \row \li Half-precision float (16-bit) \li Yes \row \li Single-precision float (32-bit) \li Yes \row \li Double-precision float (64-bit) \li Yes \row \li Infinities and NaN floating point \li Yes \row \li Determinate-length arrays and maps \li Yes \row \li Indeterminate-length arrays and maps \li Yes \row \li Map key types other than strings and integers \li Yes (arbitrary) \endtable \section2 Canonical CBOR encoding Canonical CBOR encoding is defined by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7049#section-3.9}{Section 3.9 of RFC 7049}. Canonical encoding is not a requirement for Qt's CBOR decoding functionality, but it may be required for some protocols. In particular, protocols that require the ability to reproduce the same stream identically may require this. In order to be considered "canonical", a CBOR stream must meet the following requirements: \list \li Integers must be as small as possible. QCborStreamWriter always does this (no user action is required and it is not possible to write overlong integers). \li Array, map and string lengths must be as short as possible. As above, QCborStreamWriter automatically does this. \li Arrays, maps and strings must use explicit length. QCborStreamWriter always does this for strings; for arrays and maps, be sure to call startArray() and startMap() overloads with explicit length. \li Keys in every map must be sorted in ascending order. QCborStreamWriter offers no help in this item: the developer must ensure that before calling append() for the map pairs. \li Floating point values should be as small as possible. QCborStreamWriter will not convert floating point values; it is up to the developer to perform this check prior to calling append() (see those functions' examples). \endlist \section2 Strict CBOR mode Strict mode is defined by \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7049#section-3.10}{Section 3.10 of RFC 7049}. As for Canonical encoding above, QCborStreamWriter makes it possible to create strict CBOR streams, but does not require them or validate that the output is so. \list \li Keys in a map must be unique. QCborStreamWriter performs no validation of map keys. \li Tags may be required to be paired only with the correct types, according to their specification. QCborStreamWriter performs no validation of tag usage. \li Text Strings must be properly-encoded UTF-8. QCborStreamWriter always writes proper UTF-8 for strings added with append(), but performs no validation for strings added with appendTextString(). \endlist \section2 Invalid CBOR stream It is also possible to misuse QCborStreamWriter and produce invalid CBOR streams that will fail to be decoded by a receiver. The following actions will produce invalid streams: \list \li Append a tag and not append the corresponding tagged value (QCborStreamWriter produces no diagnostic). \li Append too many or too few items to an array or map with explicit length (endMap() and endArray() will return false and QCborStreamWriter will log with qWarning()). \endlist \sa QCborStreamReader, QCborValue, QXmlStreamWriter */ class QCborStreamWriterPrivate { public: static Q_CONSTEXPR quint64 IndefiniteLength = (std::numeric_limits::max)(); QIODevice *device; CborEncoder encoder; QStack containerStack; bool deleteDevice = false; QCborStreamWriterPrivate(QIODevice *device) : device(device) { cbor_encoder_init_writer(&encoder, qt_cbor_encoder_write_callback, this); } ~QCborStreamWriterPrivate() { if (deleteDevice) delete device; } template void executeAppend(CborError (*f)(CborEncoder *, Args...), Args... args) { f(&encoder, std::forward(args)...); } void createContainer(CborError (*f)(CborEncoder *, CborEncoder *, size_t), quint64 len = IndefiniteLength) { Q_STATIC_ASSERT(size_t(IndefiniteLength) == CborIndefiniteLength); if (sizeof(len) != sizeof(size_t) && len != IndefiniteLength) { if (Q_UNLIKELY(len >= CborIndefiniteLength)) { // TinyCBOR can't do this in 32-bit mode qWarning("QCborStreamWriter: container of size %llu is too big for a 32-bit build; " "will use indeterminate length instead", len); len = CborIndefiniteLength; } } containerStack.push(encoder); f(&containerStack.top(), &encoder, len); } bool closeContainer() { if (containerStack.isEmpty()) { qWarning("QCborStreamWriter: closing map or array that wasn't open"); return false; } CborEncoder container = containerStack.pop(); CborError err = cbor_encoder_close_container(&container, &encoder); encoder = container; if (Q_UNLIKELY(err)) { if (err == CborErrorTooFewItems) qWarning("QCborStreamWriter: not enough items added to array or map"); else if (err == CborErrorTooManyItems) qWarning("QCborStreamWriter: too many items added to array or map"); return false; } return true; } }; static CborError qt_cbor_encoder_write_callback(void *self, const void *data, size_t len, CborEncoderAppendType) { auto that = static_cast(self); if (!that->device) return CborNoError; qint64 written = that->device->write(static_cast(data), len); return (written == qsizetype(len) ? CborNoError : CborErrorIO); } /*! Creates a QCborStreamWriter object that will write the stream to \a device. The device must be opened before the first append() call is made. This constructor can be used with any class that derives from QIODevice, such as QFile, QProcess or QTcpSocket. QCborStreamWriter has no buffering, so every append() call will result in one or more calls to the device's \l {QIODevice::}{write()} method. The following example writes an empty map to a file: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 2 QCborStreamWriter does not take ownership of \a device. \sa device(), setDevice() */ QCborStreamWriter::QCborStreamWriter(QIODevice *device) : d(new QCborStreamWriterPrivate(device)) { } /*! Creates a QCborStreamWriter object that will append the stream to \a data. All streaming is done immediately to the byte array, without the need for flushing any buffers. The following example writes a number to a byte array then returns it. \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 3 QCborStreamWriter does not take ownership of \a data. */ QCborStreamWriter::QCborStreamWriter(QByteArray *data) : d(new QCborStreamWriterPrivate(new QBuffer(data))) { d->deleteDevice = true; d->device->open(QIODevice::WriteOnly | QIODevice::Unbuffered); } /*! Destroys this QCborStreamWriter object and frees any resources associated. QCborStreamWriter does not perform error checking to see if all required items were written to the stream prior to the object being destroyed. It is the programmer's responsibility to ensure that it was done. */ QCborStreamWriter::~QCborStreamWriter() { } /*! Replaces the device or byte array that this QCborStreamWriter object is writing to with \a device. \sa device() */ void QCborStreamWriter::setDevice(QIODevice *device) { if (d->deleteDevice) delete d->device; d->device = device; d->deleteDevice = false; } /*! Returns the QIODevice that this QCborStreamWriter object is writing to. The device must have previously been set with either the constructor or with setDevice(). If this object was created by writing to a QByteArray, this function will return an internal instance of QBuffer, which is owned by QCborStreamWriter. \sa setDevice() */ QIODevice *QCborStreamWriter::device() const { return d->device; } /*! \overload Appends the 64-bit unsigned value \a u to the CBOR stream, creating a CBOR Unsigned Integer value. In the following example, we write the values 0, 2\sup{32} and \c UINT64_MAX: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 4 \sa QCborStreamReader::isUnsignedInteger(), QCborStreamReader::toUnsignedInteger() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(quint64 u) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_uint, uint64_t(u)); } /*! \overload Appends the 64-bit signed value \a i to the CBOR stream. This will create either a CBOR Unsigned Integer or CBOR NegativeInteger value based on the sign of the parameter. In the following example, we write the values 0, -1, 2\sup{32} and \c INT64_MAX: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 5 \sa QCborStreamReader::isInteger(), QCborStreamReader::toInteger() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(qint64 i) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_int, int64_t(i)); } /*! \overload Appends the 64-bit negative value \a n to the CBOR stream. QCborNegativeInteger is a 64-bit enum that holds the absolute value of the negative number we want to write. If n is zero, the value written will be equivalent to 2\sup{64} (that is, -18,446,744,073,709,551,616). In the following example, we write the values -1, -2\sup{32} and INT64_MIN: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 6 Note how this function can be used to encode numbers that cannot fit a standard computer's 64-bit signed integer like \l qint64. That is, if \a n is larger than \c{std::numeric_limits::max()} or is 0, this will represent a negative number smaller than \c{std::numeric_limits::min()}. \sa QCborStreamReader::isNegativeInteger(), QCborStreamReader::toNegativeInteger() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(QCborNegativeInteger n) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_negative_int, uint64_t(n)); } /*! \fn void QCborStreamWriter::append(const QByteArray &ba) \overload Appends the byte array \a ba to the stream, creating a CBOR Byte String value. QCborStreamWriter will attempt to write the entire string in one chunk. The following example will load and append the contents of a file to the stream: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 7 As the example shows, unlike JSON, CBOR requires no escaping for binary content. \sa appendByteString(), QCborStreamReader::isByteArray(), QCborStreamReader::readByteArray() */ /*! \overload Appends the text string \a str to the stream, creating a CBOR Text String value. QCborStreamWriter will attempt to write the entire string in one chunk. The following example appends a simple string to the stream: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 8 \b{Performance note}: CBOR requires that all Text Strings be encoded in UTF-8, so this function will iterate over the characters in the string to determine whether the contents are US-ASCII or not. If the string is found to contain characters outside of US-ASCII, it will allocate memory and convert to UTF-8. If this check is unnecessary, use appendTextString() instead. \sa QCborStreamReader::isString(), QCborStreamReader::readString() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(QLatin1String str) { // We've got Latin-1 but CBOR wants UTF-8, so check if the string is the // common subset (US-ASCII). if (QtPrivate::isAscii(str)) { // it is plain US-ASCII appendTextString(str.latin1(), str.size()); } else { // non-ASCII, so we need a pass-through UTF-16 append(QString(str)); } } /*! \overload Appends the text string \a str to the stream, creating a CBOR Text String value. QCborStreamWriter will attempt to write the entire string in one chunk. The following example writes an arbitrary QString to the stream: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 9 \sa QCborStreamReader::isString(), QCborStreamReader::readString() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(QStringView str) { QByteArray utf8 = str.toUtf8(); appendTextString(utf8.constData(), utf8.size()); } /*! \overload Appends the CBOR tag \a tag to the stream, creating a CBOR Tag value. All tags must be followed by another type which they provide meaning for. In the following example, we append a CBOR Tag 36 (Regular Expression) and a QRegularExpression's pattern to the stream: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 10 \sa QCborStreamReader::isTag(), QCborStreamReader::toTag() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(QCborTag tag) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_tag, CborTag(tag)); } /*! \fn void QCborStreamWriter::append(QCborKnownTags tag) \overload Appends the CBOR tag \a tag to the stream, creating a CBOR Tag value. All tags must be followed by another type which they provide meaning for. In the following example, we append a CBOR Tag 1 (Unix \c time_t) and an integer representing the current time to the stream, obtained using the \c time() function: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 11 \sa QCborStreamReader::isTag(), QCborStreamReader::toTag() */ /*! \overload Appends the CBOR simple type \a st to the stream, creating a CBOR Simple Type value. In the following example, we write the simple type for Null as well as for type 32, which Qt has no support for. \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 12 \note Using Simple Types for which there is no specification can lead to validation errors by the remote receiver. In addition, simple type values 24 through 31 (inclusive) are reserved and must not be used. \sa QCborStreamReader::isSimpleType(), QCborStreamReader::toSimpleType() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(QCborSimpleType st) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_simple_value, uint8_t(st)); } /*! \overload Appends the floating point number \a f to the stream, creating a CBOR 16-bit Half-Precision Floating Point value. The following code can be used to convert a C++ \tt float to \c qfloat16 if there's no loss of precision and append it, or instead append the \tt float. \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 13 \sa QCborStreamReader::isFloat16(), QCborStreamReader::toFloat16() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(qfloat16 f) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_half_float, static_cast(&f)); } /*! \overload Appends the floating point number \a f to the stream, creating a CBOR 32-bit Single-Precision Floating Point value. The following code can be used to convert a C++ \tt double to \tt float if there's no loss of precision and append it, or instead append the \tt double. \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 14 \sa QCborStreamReader::isFloat(), QCborStreamReader::toFloat() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(float f) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_float, f); } /*! \overload Appends the floating point number \a d to the stream, creating a CBOR 64-bit Double-Precision Floating Point value. QCborStreamWriter always appends the number as-is, performing no check for whether the number is the canonical form for NaN, an infinite, whether it is denormal or if it could be written with a shorter format. The following code performs all those checks, except for the denormal one, which is expected to be taken into account by the system FPU or floating point emulation directly. \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 15 Determining if a double can be converted to an integral with no loss of precision is left as an exercise to the reader. \sa QCborStreamReader::isDouble(), QCborStreamReader::toDouble() */ void QCborStreamWriter::append(double d) { this->d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_double, d); } /*! Appends \a len bytes of data starting from \a data to the stream, creating a CBOR Byte String value. QCborStreamWriter will attempt to write the entire string in one chunk. Unlike the QByteArray overload of append(), this function is not limited by QByteArray's size limits. However, note that neither QCborStreamReader::readByteArray() nor QCborValue support reading CBOR streams with byte arrays larger than 2 GB. \sa append(), appendTextString(), QCborStreamReader::isByteArray(), QCborStreamReader::readByteArray() */ void QCborStreamWriter::appendByteString(const char *data, qsizetype len) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_byte_string, reinterpret_cast(data), size_t(len)); } /*! Appends \a len bytes of text starting from \a utf8 to the stream, creating a CBOR Text String value. QCborStreamWriter will attempt to write the entire string in one chunk. The string pointed to by \a utf8 is expected to be properly encoded UTF-8. QCborStreamWriter performs no validation that this is the case. Unlike the QLatin1String overload of append(), this function is not limited to 2 GB. However, note that neither QCborStreamReader::readString() nor QCborValue support reading CBOR streams with text strings larger than 2 GB. \sa append(QLatin1String), append(QStringView), QCborStreamReader::isString(), QCborStreamReader::readString() */ void QCborStreamWriter::appendTextString(const char *utf8, qsizetype len) { d->executeAppend(cbor_encode_text_string, utf8, size_t(len)); } /*! \fn void QCborStreamWriter::append(const char *str, qsizetype size) \overload Appends \a size bytes of text starting from \a str to the stream, creating a CBOR Text String value. QCborStreamWriter will attempt to write the entire string in one chunk. If \a size is -1, this function will write \c strlen(\a str) bytes. The string pointed to by \a str is expected to be properly encoded UTF-8. QCborStreamWriter performs no validation that this is the case. Unlike the QLatin1String overload of append(), this function is not limited to 2 GB. However, note that neither QCborStreamReader nor QCborValue support reading CBOR streams with text strings larger than 2 GB. \sa append(QLatin1String), append(QStringView), QCborStreamReader::isString(), QCborStreamReader::readString() */ /*! \fn void QCborStreamWriter::append(bool b) \overload Appends the boolean value \a b to the stream, creating either a CBOR False value or a CBOR True value. This function is equivalent to (and implemented as): \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 16 \sa appendNull(), appendUndefined(), QCborStreamReader::isBool(), QCborStreamReader::toBool() */ /*! \fn void QCborStreamWriter::append(std::nullptr_t) \overload Appends a CBOR Null value to the stream. This function is equivalent to (and implemented as): The parameter is ignored. \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 17 \sa appendNull(), append(QCborSimpleType), QCborStreamReader::isNull() */ /*! \fn void QCborStreamWriter::appendNull() Appends a CBOR Null value to the stream. This function is equivalent to (and implemented as): \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 18 \sa append(std::nullptr_t), append(QCborSimpleType), QCborStreamReader::isNull() */ /*! \fn void QCborStreamWriter::appendUndefined() Appends a CBOR Undefined value to the stream. This function is equivalent to (and implemented as): \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 19 \sa append(QCborSimpleType), QCborStreamReader::isUndefined() */ /*! Starts a CBOR Array with indeterminate length in the CBOR stream. Each startArray() call must be paired with one endArray() call and the current CBOR element extends until the end of the array. The array created by this function has no explicit length. Instead, its length is implied by the elements contained in it. Note, however, that use of indeterminate-length arrays is not compliant with canonical CBOR encoding. The following example appends elements from the linked list of strings passed as input: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 20 \sa startArray(quint64), endArray(), startMap(), QCborStreamReader::isArray(), QCborStreamReader::isLengthKnown() */ void QCborStreamWriter::startArray() { d->createContainer(cbor_encoder_create_array); } /*! \overload Starts a CBOR Array with explicit length of \a count items in the CBOR stream. Each startArray call must be paired with one endArray() call and the current CBOR element extends until the end of the array. The array created by this function has an explicit length and therefore exactly \a count items must be added to the CBOR stream. Adding fewer or more items will result in failure during endArray() and the CBOR stream will be corrupt. However, explicit-length arrays are required by canonical CBOR encoding. The following example appends all strings found in the \l QStringList passed as input: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 21 \b{Size limitations}: The parameter to this function is quint64, which would seem to allow up to 2\sup{64}-1 elements in the array. However, both QCborStreamWriter and QCborStreamReader are currently limited to 2\sup{32}-2 items on 32-bit systems and 2\sup{64}-2 items on 64-bit ones. Also note that QCborArray is currently limited to 2\sup{27} elements in any platform. \sa startArray(), endArray(), startMap(), QCborStreamReader::isArray(), QCborStreamReader::isLengthKnown() */ void QCborStreamWriter::startArray(quint64 count) { d->createContainer(cbor_encoder_create_array, count); } /*! Terminates the array started by either overload of startArray() and returns true if the correct number of elements was added to the array. This function must be called for every startArray() used. A return of false indicates error in the application and an unrecoverable error in this stream. QCborStreamWriter also writes a warning using qWarning() if that happens. Calling this function when the current container is not an array is also an error, though QCborStreamWriter cannot currently detect this condition. \sa startArray(), startArray(quint64), endMap() */ bool QCborStreamWriter::endArray() { return d->closeContainer(); } /*! Starts a CBOR Map with indeterminate length in the CBOR stream. Each startMap() call must be paired with one endMap() call and the current CBOR element extends until the end of the map. The map created by this function has no explicit length. Instead, its length is implied by the elements contained in it. Note, however, that use of indeterminate-length maps is not compliant with canonical CBOR encoding (canonical encoding also requires keys to be unique and in sorted order). The following example appends elements from the linked list of int and string pairs passed as input: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 22 \sa startMap(quint64), endMap(), startArray(), QCborStreamReader::isMap(), QCborStreamReader::isLengthKnown() */ void QCborStreamWriter::startMap() { d->createContainer(cbor_encoder_create_map); } /*! \overload Starts a CBOR Map with explicit length of \a count items in the CBOR stream. Each startMap call must be paired with one endMap() call and the current CBOR element extends until the end of the map. The map created by this function has an explicit length and therefore exactly \a count pairs of items must be added to the CBOR stream. Adding fewer or more items will result in failure during endMap() and the CBOR stream will be corrupt. However, explicit-length map are required by canonical CBOR encoding. The following example appends all strings found in the \l QMap passed as input: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 23 \b{Size limitations}: The parameter to this function is quint64, which would seem to allow up to 2\sup{64}-1 pairs in the map. However, both QCborStreamWriter and QCborStreamReader are currently limited to 2\sup{31}-1 items on 32-bit systems and 2\sup{63}-1 items on 64-bit ones. Also note that QCborMap is currently limited to 2\sup{26} elements in any platform. \sa startMap(), endMap(), startArray(), QCborStreamReader::isMap(), QCborStreamReader::isLengthKnown() */ void QCborStreamWriter::startMap(quint64 count) { d->createContainer(cbor_encoder_create_map, count); } /*! Terminates the map started by either overload of startMap() and returns true if the correct number of elements was added to the array. This function must be called for every startMap() used. A return of false indicates error in the application and an unrecoverable error in this stream. QCborStreamWriter also writes a warning using qWarning() if that happens. Calling this function when the current container is not a map is also an error, though QCborStreamWriter cannot currently detect this condition. \sa startMap(), startMap(quint64), endArray() */ bool QCborStreamWriter::endMap() { return d->closeContainer(); } /*! \class QCborStreamReader \inmodule QtCore \ingroup cbor \reentrant \since 5.12 \brief The QCborStreamReader class is a simple CBOR stream decoder, operating on either a QByteArray or QIODevice. This class can be used to decode a stream of CBOR content directly from either a QByteArray or a QIODevice. CBOR is the Concise Binary Object Representation, a very compact form of binary data encoding that is compatible with JSON. It was created by the IETF Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE) WG, which has used it in many new RFCs. It is meant to be used alongside the \l{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7252}{CoAP protocol}. QCborStreamReader provides a StAX-like API, similar to that of \l{QXmlStreamReader}. Using it requires a bit of knowledge of CBOR encoding. For a simpler API, see \l{QCborValue} and especially the decoding function QCborValue::fromCbor(). Typically, one creates a QCborStreamReader by passing the source QByteArray or QIODevice as a parameter to the constructor, then pop elements off the stream if there were no errors in decoding. There are three kinds of CBOR types: \table \header \li Kind \li Types \li Behavior \row \li Fixed-width \li Integers, Tags, Simple types, Floating point \li Value is pre-parsed by QCborStreamReader, so accessor functions are \c const. Must call next() to advance. \row \li Strings \li Byte arrays, Text strings \li Length (if known) is pre-parsed, but the string itself is not. The accessor functions are not const and may allocate memory. Once called, the accessor functions automatically advance to the next element. \row \li Containers \li Arrays, Maps \li Length (if known) is pre-parsed. To access the elements, you must call enterContainer(), read all elements, then call leaveContainer(). That function advances to the next element. \endtable So a processor function typically looks like this: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 24 \section1 CBOR support The following table lists the CBOR features that QCborStreamReader supports. \table \header \li Feature \li Support \row \li Unsigned numbers \li Yes (full range) \row \li Negative numbers \li Yes (full range) \row \li Byte strings \li Yes \row \li Text strings \li Yes \row \li Chunked strings \li Yes \row \li Tags \li Yes (arbitrary) \row \li Booleans \li Yes \row \li Null \li Yes \row \li Undefined \li Yes \row \li Arbitrary simple values \li Yes \row \li Half-precision float (16-bit) \li Yes \row \li Single-precision float (32-bit) \li Yes \row \li Double-precision float (64-bit) \li Yes \row \li Infinities and NaN floating point \li Yes \row \li Determinate-length arrays and maps \li Yes \row \li Indeterminate-length arrays and maps \li Yes \row \li Map key types other than strings and integers \li Yes (arbitrary) \endtable \section1 Dealing with invalid or incomplete CBOR streams QCborStreamReader is capable of detecting corrupt input on its own. The library it uses has been extensively tested against invalid input of any kind and is quite able to report errors. If any is detected, QCborStreamReader will set lastError() to a value besides QCborError::NoError, indicating which situation was detected. Most errors detected by QCborStreamReader during normal item parsing are not recoverable. The code using QCborStreamReader may opt to handle the data that was properly decoded or it can opt to discard the entire data. The only recoverable error is QCborError::EndOfFile, which indicates that more data is required in order to complete the parsing. This situation is useful when data is being read from an asynchronous source, such as a pipe (QProcess) or a socket (QTcpSocket, QUdpSocket, QNetworkReply, etc.). When more data arrives, the surrounding code needs to call either addData(), if parsing from a QByteArray, or reparse(), if it is instead reading directly a the QIDOevice that now has more data available (see setDevice()). \sa QCborStreamWriter, QCborValue, QXmlStreamReader */ /*! \enum QCborStreamReader::Type This enumeration contains all possible CBOR types as decoded by QCborStreamReader. CBOR has 7 major types, plus a number of simple types carrying no value, and floating point values. \value UnsignedInteger (Major type 0) Ranges from 0 to 2\sup{64} - 1 (18,446,744,073,709,551,616) \value NegativeInteger (Major type 1) Ranges from -1 to -2\sup{64} (-18,446,744,073,709,551,616) \value ByteArray (Major type 2) Arbitrary binary data. \value ByteString An alias to ByteArray. \value String (Major type 3) Unicode text, possibly containing NULs. \value TextString An alias to String \value Array (Major type 4) Array of heterogeneous items. \value Map (Major type 5) Map/dictionary of heterogeneous items. \value Tag (Major type 6) Numbers giving further semantic value to generic CBOR items. See \l QCborTag for more information. \value SimpleType (Major type 7) Types carrying no further value. Includes booleans (true and false), null, undefined. \value Float16 IEEE 754 half-precision floating point (\c qfloat16). \value HalfFloat An alias to Float16. \value Float IEEE 754 single-precision floating point (\tt float). \value Double IEEE 754 double-precision floating point (\tt double). \value Invalid Not a valid type, either due to parsing error or due to reaching the end of an array or map. */ /*! \enum QCborStreamReader::StringResultCode This enum is returned by readString() and readByteArray() and is used to indicate what the status of the parsing is. \value EndOfString The parsing for the string is complete, with no error. \value Ok The function returned data; there was no error. \value Error Parsing failed with an error. */ /*! \class QCborStreamReader::StringResult This class is returned by readString() and readByteArray(), with either the contents of the string that was read or an indication that the parsing is done or found an error. The contents of \l data are valid only if \l status is \l{StringResultCode}{Ok}. Otherwise, it should be null. */ /*! \variable Container QCborStreamReader::StringResult::data Contains the actual data from the string if \l status is \c Ok. */ /*! \variable QCborStreamReader::StringResultCode QCborStreamReader::StringResult::status Contains the status of the attempt of reading the string from the stream. */ /*! \fn QCborStreamReader::Type QCborStreamReader::type() const Returns the type of the current element. It is one of the valid types or Invalid. \sa isValid(), isUnsignedInteger(), isNegativeInteger(), isInteger(), isByteArray(), isString(), isArray(), isMap(), isTag(), isSimpleType(), isBool(), isFalse(), isTrue(), isNull(), isUndefined(), isFloat16(), isFloat(), isDouble() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isValid() const Returns true if the current element is valid, false otherwise. The current element may be invalid if there was a decoding error or we've just parsed the last element in an array or map. \note This function is not the opposite of isNull(). Null is a normal CBOR type that must be handled by the application. \sa type(), isInvalid() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isInvalid() const Returns true if the current element is invalid, false otherwise. The current element may be invalid if there was a decoding error or we've just parsed the last element in an array or map. \note This function is not to be confused with isNull(). Null is a normal CBOR type that must be handled by the application. \sa type(), isValid() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isUnsignedInteger() const Returns true if the type of the current element is an unsigned integer (that is if type() returns QCborStreamReader::UnsignedInteger). If this function returns true, you may call toUnsignedInteger() or toInteger() to read that value. \sa type(), toUnsignedInteger(), toInteger(), isInteger(), isNegativeInteger() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isNegativeInteger() const Returns true if the type of the current element is a negative integer (that is if type() returns QCborStreamReader::NegativeInteger). If this function returns true, you may call toNegativeInteger() or toInteger() to read that value. \sa type(), toNegativeInteger(), toInteger(), isInteger(), isUnsignedInteger() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isInteger() const Returns true if the type of the current element is either an unsigned integer or a negative one (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::UnsignedInteger or QCborStreamReader::NegativeInteger). If this function returns true, you may call toInteger() to read that value. \sa type(), toInteger(), toUnsignedInteger(), toNegativeInteger(), isUnsignedInteger(), isNegativeInteger() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isByteArray() const Returns true if the type of the current element is a byte array (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::ByteArray). If this function returns true, you may call readByteArray() to read that data. \sa type(), readByteArray(), isString() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isString() const Returns true if the type of the current element is a text string (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::String). If this function returns true, you may call readString() to read that data. \sa type(), readString(), isByteArray() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isArray() const Returns true if the type of the current element is an array (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::Array). If this function returns true, you may call enterContainer() to begin parsing that container. When the current element is an array, you may also call isLengthKnown() to find out if the array's size is explicit in the CBOR stream. If it is, that size can be obtained by calling length(). The following example pre-allocates a QVariantList given the array's size for more efficient decoding: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 25 \note The code above does not validate that the length is a sensible value. If the input stream reports that the length is 1 billion elements, the above function will try to allocate some 16 GB or more of RAM, which can lead to a crash. \sa type(), isMap(), isLengthKnown(), length(), enterContainer(), leaveContainer() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isMap() const Returns true if the type of the current element is a map (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::Map). If this function returns true, you may call enterContainer() to begin parsing that container. When the current element is a map, you may also call isLengthKnown() to find out if the map's size is explicit in the CBOR stream. If it is, that size can be obtained by calling length(). The following example pre-allocates a QVariantMap given the map's size for more efficient decoding: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 26 The example above uses a function called \c readElementAsString to read the map's keys and obtain a string. That is because CBOR maps may contain any type as keys, not just strings. User code needs to either perform this conversion, reject non-string keys, or instead use a different container besides \l QVariantMap and \l QVariantHash. For example, if the map is expected to contain integer keys, which is recommended as it reduces stream size and parsing, the correct container would be \c{\l{QMap}} or \c{\l{QHash}}. \note The code above does not validate that the length is a sensible value. If the input stream reports that the length is 1 billion elements, the above function will try to allocate some 24 GB or more of RAM, which can lead to a crash. \sa type(), isArray(), isLengthKnown(), length(), enterContainer(), leaveContainer() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isTag() const Returns true if the type of the current element is a CBOR tag (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::Tag). If this function returns true, you may call toTag() to read that data. \sa type(), toTag() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isFloat16() const Returns true if the type of the current element is an IEEE 754 half-precision floating point (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::Float16). If this function returns true, you may call toFloat16() to read that data. \sa type(), toFloat16(), isFloat(), isDouble() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isFloat() const Returns true if the type of the current element is an IEEE 754 single-precision floating point (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::Float). If this function returns true, you may call toFloat() to read that data. \sa type(), toFloat(), isFloat16(), isDouble() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isDouble() const Returns true if the type of the current element is an IEEE 754 double-precision floating point (that is, if type() returns QCborStreamReader::Double). If this function returns true, you may call toDouble() to read that data. \sa type(), toDouble(), isFloat16(), isFloat() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isSimpleType() const Returns true if the type of the current element is any CBOR simple type, including a boolean value (true and false) as well as null and undefined. To find out which simple type this is, call toSimpleType(). Alternatively, to test for one specific simple type, call the overload that takes a QCborSimpleType parameter. CBOR simple types are types that do not carry extra value. There are 255 possibilities, but there are currently only four values that have defined meaning. Code is not expected to cope with unknown simple types and may simply discard the stream as invalid if it finds an unknown one. \sa QCborSimpleType, type(), isSimpleType(QCborSimpleType), toSimpleType() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isSimpleType(QCborSimpleType st) const Returns true if the type of the current element is the simple type \a st, false otherwise. If this function returns true, then toSimpleType() will return \a st. CBOR simple types are types that do not carry extra value. There are 255 possibilities, but there are currently only four values that have defined meaning. Code is not expected to cope with unknown simple types and may simply discard the stream as invalid if it finds an unknown one. \sa QCborSimpleType, type(), isSimpleType(), toSimpleType() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isFalse() const Returns true if the current element is the \c false value, false if it is anything else. \sa type(), isTrue(), isBool(), toBool(), isSimpleType(), toSimpleType() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isTrue() const Returns true if the current element is the \c true value, false if it is anything else. \sa type(), isFalse(), isBool(), toBool(), isSimpleType(), toSimpleType() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isBool() const Returns true if the current element is a boolean value (\c true or \c false), false if it is anything else. If this function returns true, you may call toBool() to retrieve the value of the boolean. You may also call toSimpleType() and compare to either QCborSimpleValue::True or QCborSimpleValue::False. \sa type(), isFalse(), isTrue(), toBool(), isSimpleType(), toSimpleType() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isNull() const Returns true if the current element is the \c null value, false if it is anything else. Null values may be used to indicate the absence of some optional data. \note This function is not the opposite of isValid(). A Null value is a valid CBOR value. \sa type(), isSimpleType(), toSimpleType() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isUndefined() const Returns true if the current element is the \c undefined value, false if it is anything else. Undefined values may be encoded to indicate that some conversion failed or was not possible when creating the stream. QCborStreamReader never performs any replacement and this function will only return true if the stream contains an explicit undefined value. \sa type(), isSimpleType(), toSimpleType() */ /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::isContainer() const Returns true if the current element is a container (that is, an array or a map), false if it is anything else. If the current element is a container, the isLengthKnown() function may be used to find out if the container's size is explicit in the stream and, if so, length() can be used to get that size. More importantly, for a container, the enterContainer() function is available to begin iterating through the elements contained therein. \sa type(), isArray(), isMap(), isLengthKnown(), length(), enterContainer(), leaveContainer(), containerDepth() */ class QCborStreamReaderPrivate { public: enum { // 9 bytes is the maximum size for any integer, floating point or // length in CBOR. MaxCborIndividualSize = 9, IdealIoBufferSize = 256 }; QIODevice *device; QByteArray buffer; QStack containerStack; CborParser parser; CborValue currentElement; QCborError lastError = {}; QByteArray::size_type bufferStart; bool corrupt = false; QCborStreamReaderPrivate(const QByteArray &data) : device(nullptr), buffer(data) { initDecoder(); } QCborStreamReaderPrivate(QIODevice *device) { setDevice(device); } ~QCborStreamReaderPrivate() { } void setDevice(QIODevice *dev) { buffer.clear(); device = dev; initDecoder(); } void initDecoder() { containerStack.clear(); bufferStart = 0; if (device) { buffer.clear(); buffer.reserve(IdealIoBufferSize); // sets the CapacityReserved flag } preread(); if (CborError err = cbor_parser_init_reader(nullptr, &parser, ¤tElement, this)) handleError(err); } char *bufferPtr() { Q_ASSERT(buffer.isDetached()); return const_cast(buffer.constData()) + bufferStart; } void preread() { if (device && buffer.size() - bufferStart < MaxCborIndividualSize) { // load more, but only if there's more to be read qint64 avail = device->bytesAvailable(); Q_ASSERT(avail >= buffer.size()); if (avail == buffer.size()) return; if (bufferStart) device->skip(bufferStart); // skip what we've already parsed if (buffer.size() != IdealIoBufferSize) buffer.resize(IdealIoBufferSize); bufferStart = 0; qint64 read = device->peek(bufferPtr(), IdealIoBufferSize); if (read < 0) buffer.clear(); else if (read != IdealIoBufferSize) buffer.truncate(read); } } void handleError(CborError err) noexcept { Q_ASSERT(err); // is the error fatal? if (err != CborErrorUnexpectedEOF) corrupt = true; // our error codes are the same (for now) lastError = { QCborError::Code(err) }; } void updateBufferAfterString(qsizetype offset, qsizetype size) { Q_ASSERT(device); bufferStart += offset; qsizetype newStart = bufferStart + size; qsizetype remainingInBuffer = buffer.size() - newStart; if (remainingInBuffer <= 0) { // We've read from the QIODevice more than what was in the buffer. buffer.truncate(0); } else { // There's still data buffered, but we need to move it around. char *ptr = buffer.data(); memmove(ptr, ptr + newStart, remainingInBuffer); buffer.truncate(remainingInBuffer); } bufferStart = 0; } bool ensureStringIteration(); }; void qt_cbor_stream_set_error(QCborStreamReaderPrivate *d, QCborError error) { d->handleError(CborError(error.c)); } static inline bool qt_cbor_decoder_can_read(void *token, size_t len) { Q_ASSERT(len <= QCborStreamReaderPrivate::MaxCborIndividualSize); auto self = static_cast(token); qint64 avail = self->buffer.size() - self->bufferStart; return len <= quint64(avail); } static void qt_cbor_decoder_advance(void *token, size_t len) { Q_ASSERT(len <= QCborStreamReaderPrivate::MaxCborIndividualSize); auto self = static_cast(token); Q_ASSERT(len <= size_t(self->buffer.size() - self->bufferStart)); self->bufferStart += int(len); self->preread(); } static void *qt_cbor_decoder_read(void *token, void *userptr, size_t offset, size_t len) { Q_ASSERT(len == 1 || len == 2 || len == 4 || len == 8); Q_ASSERT(offset == 0 || offset == 1); auto self = static_cast(token); // we must have pre-read the data Q_ASSERT(len + offset <= size_t(self->buffer.size() - self->bufferStart)); return memcpy(userptr, self->buffer.constData() + self->bufferStart + offset, len); } static CborError qt_cbor_decoder_transfer_string(void *token, const void **userptr, size_t offset, size_t len) { auto self = static_cast(token); Q_ASSERT(offset <= size_t(self->buffer.size())); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(sizeof(size_t) >= sizeof(QByteArray::size_type)); Q_STATIC_ASSERT(sizeof(size_t) == sizeof(qsizetype)); // check that we will have enough data from the QIODevice before we advance // (otherwise, we'd lose the length information) qsizetype total; if (len > size_t(std::numeric_limits::max()) || add_overflow(offset, len, &total)) return CborErrorDataTooLarge; // our string transfer is just saving the offset to the userptr *userptr = reinterpret_cast(offset); qint64 avail = (self->device ? self->device->bytesAvailable() : self->buffer.size()) - self->bufferStart; return total > avail ? CborErrorUnexpectedEOF : CborNoError; } bool QCborStreamReaderPrivate::ensureStringIteration() { if (currentElement.flags & CborIteratorFlag_IteratingStringChunks) return true; CborError err = cbor_value_begin_string_iteration(¤tElement); if (!err) return true; handleError(err); return false; } /*! \internal */ inline void QCborStreamReader::preparse() { if (lastError() == QCborError::NoError) { type_ = cbor_value_get_type(&d->currentElement); if (type_ != CborInvalidType) { d->lastError = {}; // Undo the type mapping that TinyCBOR does (we have an explicit type // for negative integer and we don't have separate types for Boolean, // Null and Undefined). if (type_ == CborBooleanType || type_ == CborNullType || type_ == CborUndefinedType) { type_ = SimpleType; value64 = quint8(d->buffer.at(d->bufferStart)) - CborSimpleType; } else { // Using internal TinyCBOR API! value64 = _cbor_value_extract_int64_helper(&d->currentElement); if (cbor_value_is_negative_integer(&d->currentElement)) type_ = quint8(QCborStreamReader::NegativeInteger); } } } else { type_ = Invalid; } } /*! Creates a QCborStreamReader object with no source data. After construction, QCborStreamReader will report an error parsing. You can add more data by calling addData() or by setting a different source device using setDevice(). \sa addData(), isValid() */ QCborStreamReader::QCborStreamReader() : QCborStreamReader(QByteArray()) { } /*! \overload Creates a QCborStreamReader object with \a len bytes of data starting at \a data. The pointer must remain valid until QCborStreamReader is destroyed. */ QCborStreamReader::QCborStreamReader(const char *data, qsizetype len) : QCborStreamReader(QByteArray::fromRawData(data, len)) { } /*! \overload Creates a QCborStreamReader object with \a len bytes of data starting at \a data. The pointer must remain valid until QCborStreamReader is destroyed. */ QCborStreamReader::QCborStreamReader(const quint8 *data, qsizetype len) : QCborStreamReader(QByteArray::fromRawData(reinterpret_cast(data), len)) { } /*! \overload Creates a QCborStreamReader object that will parse the CBOR stream found in \a data. */ QCborStreamReader::QCborStreamReader(const QByteArray &data) : d(new QCborStreamReaderPrivate(data)) { preparse(); } /*! \overload Creates a QCborStreamReader object that will parse the CBOR stream found by reading from \a device. QCborStreamReader does not take ownership of \a device, so it must remain valid until this oject is destroyed. */ QCborStreamReader::QCborStreamReader(QIODevice *device) : d(new QCborStreamReaderPrivate(device)) { preparse(); } /*! Destroys this QCborStreamReader object and frees any associated resources. */ QCborStreamReader::~QCborStreamReader() { } /*! Sets the source of data to \a device, resetting the decoder to its initial state. */ void QCborStreamReader::setDevice(QIODevice *device) { d->setDevice(device); preparse(); } /*! Returns the QIODevice that was set with either setDevice() or the QCborStreamReader constructor. If this object was reading from a QByteArray, this function returns nullptr instead. */ QIODevice *QCborStreamReader::device() const { return d->device; } /*! Adds \a data to the CBOR stream and reparses the current element. This function is useful if the end of the data was previously reached while processing the stream, but now more data is available. */ void QCborStreamReader::addData(const QByteArray &data) { addData(data.constData(), data.size()); } /*! \fn void QCborStreamReader::addData(const quint8 *data, qsizetype len) \overload Adds \a len bytes of data starting at \a data to the CBOR stream and reparses the current element. This function is useful if the end of the data was previously reached while processing the stream, but now more data is available. */ /*! \overload Adds \a len bytes of data starting at \a data to the CBOR stream and reparses the current element. This function is useful if the end of the data was previously reached while processing the stream, but now more data is available. */ void QCborStreamReader::addData(const char *data, qsizetype len) { if (!d->device) { if (len > 0) d->buffer.append(data, len); reparse(); } else { qWarning("QCborStreamReader: addData() with device()"); } } /*! Reparses the current element. This function must be called when more data becomes available in the source QIODevice after parsing failed due to reaching the end of the input data before the end of the CBOR stream. When reading from QByteArray(), the addData() function automatically calls this function. Calling it when the reading had not failed is a no-op. */ void QCborStreamReader::reparse() { d->lastError = {}; d->preread(); if (CborError err = cbor_value_reparse(&d->currentElement)) d->handleError(err); else preparse(); } /*! Clears the decoder state and resets the input source data to an empty byte array. After this function is called, QCborStreamReader will be indicating an error parsing. Call addData() to add more data to be parsed. \sa reset(), setDevice() */ void QCborStreamReader::clear() { setDevice(nullptr); } /*! Resets the source back to the beginning and clears the decoder state. If the source data was a QByteArray, QCborStreamReader will restart from the beginning of the array. If the source data is a QIODevice, this function will call QIODevice::reset(), which will seek to byte position 0. If the CBOR stream is not found at the beginning of the device (e.g., beginning of a file), then this function will likely do the wrong thing. Instead, position the QIODevice to the right offset and call setDevice(). \sa clear(), setDevice() */ void QCborStreamReader::reset() { if (d->device) d->device->reset(); d->lastError = {}; d->initDecoder(); preparse(); } /*! Returns the last error in decoding the stream, if any. If no error was encountered, this returns an QCborError::NoError. \sa isValid() */ QCborError QCborStreamReader::lastError() { return d->lastError; } /*! Returns the offset in the input stream of the item currently being decoded. The current offset is the number of decoded bytes so far only if the source data is a QByteArray or it is a QIODevice that was positioned at its beginning when decoding started. \sa reset(), clear(), device() */ qint64 QCborStreamReader::currentOffset() const { return (d->device ? d->device->pos() : 0) + d->bufferStart; } /*! Returns the number of containers that this stream has entered with enterContainer() but not yet left. \sa enterContainer(), leaveContainer() */ int QCborStreamReader::containerDepth() const { return d->containerStack.size(); } /*! Returns either QCborStreamReader::Array or QCborStreamReader::Map, indicating whether the container that contains the current item was an array or map, respectively. If we're currently parsing the root element, this function returns QCborStreamReader::Invalid. \sa containerDepth(), enterContainer() */ QCborStreamReader::Type QCborStreamReader::parentContainerType() const { if (d->containerStack.isEmpty()) return Invalid; return Type(cbor_value_get_type(&qAsConst(d->containerStack).top())); } /*! Returns true if there are more items to be decoded in the current container or false of we've reached its end. If we're parsing the root element, hasNext() returning false indicates the parsing is complete; otherwise, if the container depth is non-zero, then the outer code needs to call leaveContainer(). \sa parentContainerType(), containerDepth(), leaveContainer() */ bool QCborStreamReader::hasNext() const noexcept { return cbor_value_is_valid(&d->currentElement) && !cbor_value_at_end(&d->currentElement); } /*! Advance the CBOR stream decoding one element. You should usually call this function when parsing fixed-width basic elements (that is, integers, simple values, tags and floating point values). But this function can be called when the current item is a string, array or map too and it will skip over that entire element, including all contained elements. This function returns true if advancing was successful, false otherwise. It may fail if the stream is corrupt, incomplete or if the nesting level of arrays and maps exceeds \a maxRecursion. Calling this function when hasNext() has returned false is also an error. If this function returns false, lastError() will return the error code detailing what the failure was. \sa lastError(), isValid(), hasNext() */ bool QCborStreamReader::next(int maxRecursion) { if (lastError() != QCborError::NoError) return false; if (!hasNext()) { d->handleError(CborErrorAdvancePastEOF); } else if (maxRecursion < 0) { d->handleError(CborErrorNestingTooDeep); } else if (isContainer()) { // iterate over each element enterContainer(); while (lastError() == QCborError::NoError && hasNext()) next(maxRecursion - 1); if (lastError() == QCborError::NoError) leaveContainer(); } else if (isString() || isByteArray()) { auto r = _readByteArray_helper(); while (r.status == Ok) { if (isString() && !QUtf8::isValidUtf8(r.data, r.data.size()).isValidUtf8) { d->handleError(CborErrorInvalidUtf8TextString); break; } r = _readByteArray_helper(); } } else { // fixed types CborError err = cbor_value_advance_fixed(&d->currentElement); if (err) d->handleError(err); } preparse(); return d->lastError == QCborError::NoError; } /*! Returns true if the length of the current array, map, byte array or string is known (explicit in the CBOR stream), false otherwise. This function should only be called if the element is one of those. If the length is known, it may be obtained by calling length(). If the length of a map or an array is not known, it is implied by the number of elements present in the stream. QCborStreamReader has no API to calculate the length in that condition. Strings and byte arrays may also have indeterminate length (that is, they may be transmitted in multiple chunks). Those cannot currently be created with QCborStreamWriter, but they could be with other encoders, so QCborStreamReader supports them. \sa length(), QCborStreamWriter::startArray(), QCborStreamWriter::startMap() */ bool QCborStreamReader::isLengthKnown() const noexcept { return cbor_value_is_length_known(&d->currentElement); } /*! Returns the length of the string or byte array, or the number of items in an array or the number, of item pairs in a map, if known. This function must not be called if the length is unknown (that is, if isLengthKnown() returned false). It is an error to do that and it will cause QCborStreamReader to stop parsing the input stream. \sa isLengthKnown(), QCborStreamWriter::startArray(), QCborStreamWriter::startMap() */ quint64 QCborStreamReader::length() const { CborError err; switch (type()) { case String: case ByteArray: case Map: case Array: if (isLengthKnown()) return value64; err = CborErrorUnknownLength; break; default: err = CborErrorIllegalType; break; } d->handleError(err); return quint64(-1); } /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::enterContainer() Enters the array or map that is the current item and prepares for iterating the elements contained in the container. Returns true if entering the container succeeded, false otherwise (usually, a parsing error). Each call to enterContainer() must be paired with a call to leaveContainer(). This function may only be called if the current item is an array or a map (that is, if isArray(), isMap() or isContainer() is true). Calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa leaveContainer(), isContainer(), isArray(), isMap() */ bool QCborStreamReader::_enterContainer_helper() { d->containerStack.push(d->currentElement); CborError err = cbor_value_enter_container(&d->containerStack.top(), &d->currentElement); if (!err) { preparse(); return true; } d->handleError(err); return false; } /*! Leaves the array or map whose items were being processed and positions the decoder at the next item after the end of the container. Returns true if leaving the container succeeded, false otherwise (usually, a parsing error). Each call to enterContainer() must be paired with a call to leaveContainer(). This function may only be called if hasNext() has returned false and containerDepth() is not zero. Calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa enterContainer(), parentContainerType(), containerDepth() */ bool QCborStreamReader::leaveContainer() { if (d->containerStack.isEmpty()) { qWarning("QCborStreamReader::leaveContainer: trying to leave top-level element"); return false; } if (d->corrupt) return false; CborValue container = d->containerStack.pop(); CborError err = cbor_value_leave_container(&container, &d->currentElement); d->currentElement = container; if (err) { d->handleError(err); return false; } preparse(); return true; } /*! \fn bool QCborStreamReader::toBool() const Returns the boolean value of the current element. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from integer. Therefore, it may only be called if isTrue(), isFalse() or isBool() returned true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa isBool(), isTrue(), isFalse(), toInteger() */ /*! \fn QCborTag QCborStreamReader::toTag() const Returns the tag value of the current element. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from integer. Therefore, it may only be called if isTag() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. Tags are 64-bit numbers attached to generic CBOR types that give them further meaning. For a list of known tags, see the \l QCborKnownTags enumeration. \sa isTag(), toInteger(), QCborKnownTags */ /*! \fn quint64 QCborStreamReader::toUnsignedInteger() const Returns the unsigned integer value of the current element. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from boolean or CBOR tag. Therefore, it may only be called if isUnsignedInteger() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. This function may be used to obtain numbers beyond the range of the return type of toInteger(). \sa type(), toInteger(), isUnsignedInteger(), isNegativeInteger() */ /*! \fn QCborNegativeValue QCborStreamReader::toNegativeInteger() const Returns the negative integer value of the current element. QCborNegativeValue is a 64-bit unsigned integer containing the absolute value of the negative number that was stored in the CBOR stream. Additionally, QCborNegativeValue(0) represents the number -2\sup{64}. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from boolean or CBOR tag. Therefore, it may only be called if isNegativeInteger() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. This function may be used to obtain numbers beyond the range of the return type of toInteger(). However, use of negative numbers smaller than -2\sup{63} is extremely discouraged. \sa type(), toInteger(), isNegativeInteger(), isUnsignedInteger() */ /*! \fn qint64 QCborStreamReader::toInteger() const Returns the integer value of the current element, be it negative, positive or zero. If the value is larger than 2\sup{63} - 1 or smaller than -2\sup{63}, the returned value will overflow and will have an incorrect sign. If handling those values is required, use toUnsignedInteger() or toNegativeInteger() instead. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from boolean or CBOR tag. Therefore, it may only be called if isInteger() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa isInteger(), toUnsignedInteger(), toNegativeInteger() */ /*! \fn QCborSimpleType QCborStreamReader::toSimpleType() const Returns value of the current simple type. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from integer. Therefore, it may only be called if isSimpleType() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa isSimpleType(), isTrue(), isFalse(), isBool(), isNull(), isUndefined() */ /*! \fn qfloat16 QCborStreamReader::toFloat16() const Returns the 16-bit half-precision floating point value of the current element. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from other floating point types or from integer values. Therefore, it may only be called if isFloat16() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa isFloat16(), toFloat(), toDouble() */ /*! \fn float QCborStreamReader::toFloat() const Returns the 32-bit single-precision floating point value of the current element. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from other floating point types or from integer values. Therefore, it may only be called if isFloat() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa isFloat(), toFloat16(), toDouble() */ /*! \fn double QCborStreamReader::toDouble() const Returns the 64-bit double-precision floating point value of the current element. This function does not perform any type conversions, including from other floating point types or from integer values. Therefore, it may only be called if isDouble() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa isDouble(), toFloat16(), toFloat() */ /*! \fn QCborStreamReader::StringResult QCborStreamReader::readString() Decodes one string chunk from the CBOR string and returns it. This function is used for both regular and chunked string contents, so the caller must always loop around calling this function, even if isLengthKnown() has is true. The typical use of this function is as follows: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 27 This function does not perform any type conversions, including from integers or from byte arrays. Therefore, it may only be called if isString() returned true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa readByteArray(), isString(), readStringChunk() */ QCborStreamReader::StringResult QCborStreamReader::_readString_helper() { auto r = _readByteArray_helper(); QCborStreamReader::StringResult result; result.status = r.status; if (r.status == Ok) { QTextCodec::ConverterState cs; result.data = QUtf8::convertToUnicode(r.data, r.data.size(), &cs); if (cs.invalidChars == 0 && cs.remainingChars == 0) return result; d->handleError(CborErrorInvalidUtf8TextString); result.data.clear(); result.status = Error; return result; } return result; } /*! \fn QCborStreamReader::StringResult QCborStreamReader::readByteArray() Decodes one byte array chunk from the CBOR string and returns it. This function is used for both regular and chunked contents, so the caller must always loop around calling this function, even if isLengthKnown() has is true. The typical use of this function is as follows: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 28 This function does not perform any type conversions, including from integers or from strings. Therefore, it may only be called if isByteArray() is true; calling it in any other condition is an error. \sa readString(), isByteArray(), readStringChunk() */ QCborStreamReader::StringResult QCborStreamReader::_readByteArray_helper() { QCborStreamReader::StringResult result; result.status = Error; qsizetype len = _currentStringChunkSize(); if (len < 0) return result; result.data.resize(len); auto r = readStringChunk(result.data.data(), len); Q_ASSERT(r.status != Ok || r.data == len); result.status = r.status; return result; } /*! \fn qsizetype QCborStreamReader::currentStringChunkSize() const Returns the size of the current text or byte string chunk. If the CBOR stream contains a non-chunked string (that is, if isLengthKnown() returns \c true), this function returns the size of the entire string, the same as length(). This function is useful to pre-allocate the buffer whose pointer can be passed to readStringChunk() later. \sa readString(), readByteArray(), readStringChunk() */ qsizetype QCborStreamReader::_currentStringChunkSize() const { if (!d->ensureStringIteration()) return -1; size_t len; CborError err = cbor_value_get_string_chunk_size(&d->currentElement, &len); if (err == CborErrorNoMoreStringChunks) return 0; // not a real error else if (err) d->handleError(err); else if (qsizetype(len) < 0) d->handleError(CborErrorDataTooLarge); else return qsizetype(len); return -1; } /*! Reads the current string chunk into the buffer pointed to by \a ptr, whose size is \a maxlen. This function returns a \l StringResult object, with the number of bytes copied into \a ptr saved in the \c \l StringResult::data member. The \c \l StringResult::status member indicates whether there was an error reading the string, whether data was copied or whether this was the last chunk. This function can be called for both \l String and \l ByteArray types. For the latter, this function will read the same data that readByteArray() would have returned. For strings, it returns the UTF-8 equivalent of the \l QString that would have been returned. This function is usually used alongside currentStringChunkSize() in a loop. For example: \snippet code/src_corelib_serialization_qcborstream.cpp 29 Unlike readByteArray() and readString(), this function is not limited by implementation limits of QByteArray and QString. \note This function does not perform verification that the UTF-8 contents are properly formatted. That means this function does not produce the QCborError::InvalidUtf8String error, even when readString() does. \sa currentStringChunkSize(), readString(), readByteArray(), isString(), isByteArray() */ QCborStreamReader::StringResult QCborStreamReader::readStringChunk(char *ptr, qsizetype maxlen) { CborError err; size_t len; const void *content = nullptr; QCborStreamReader::StringResult result; result.data = 0; result.status = Error; d->lastError = {}; if (!d->ensureStringIteration()) return result; #if 1 // Using internal TinyCBOR API! err = _cbor_value_get_string_chunk(&d->currentElement, &content, &len, &d->currentElement); #else // the above is effectively the same as: if (cbor_value_is_byte_string(¤tElement)) err = cbor_value_get_byte_string_chunk(&d->currentElement, reinterpret_cast(&content), &len, &d->currentElement); else err = cbor_value_get_text_string_chunk(&d->currentElement, reinterpret_cast(&content), &len, &d->currentElement); #endif // Range check: using implementation-defined behavior in converting an // unsigned value out of range of the destination signed type (same as // "len > size_t(std::numeric_limits::max())", but generates // better code with ICC and MSVC). if (!err && qsizetype(len) < 0) err = CborErrorDataTooLarge; if (err) { if (err == CborErrorNoMoreStringChunks) { d->preread(); err = cbor_value_finish_string_iteration(&d->currentElement); result.status = EndOfString; } if (err) d->handleError(err); else preparse(); return result; } // Read the chunk into the user's buffer. qint64 actuallyRead; qptrdiff offset = qptrdiff(content); qsizetype toRead = qsizetype(len); qsizetype left = toRead - maxlen; if (left < 0) left = 0; // buffer bigger than string else toRead = maxlen; // buffer smaller than string if (d->device) { // This first skip can't fail because we've already read this many bytes. d->device->skip(d->bufferStart + qptrdiff(content)); actuallyRead = d->device->read(ptr, toRead); if (actuallyRead != toRead) { actuallyRead = -1; } else if (left) { qint64 skipped = d->device->skip(left); if (skipped != left) actuallyRead = -1; } if (actuallyRead < 0) { d->handleError(CborErrorIO); return result; } d->updateBufferAfterString(offset, len); } else { actuallyRead = toRead; memcpy(ptr, d->buffer.constData() + d->bufferStart + offset, toRead); d->bufferStart += QByteArray::size_type(offset + len); } d->preread(); result.data = actuallyRead; result.status = Ok; return result; } QT_END_NAMESPACE #include "moc_qcborcommon.cpp" #include "moc_qcborstream.cpp"