⛑️ JSON serialization should never fail
⛑️ JSON serialization should never fail.
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Prevent JSON.stringify()
from:
import safeJsonValue from 'safe-json-value'
const input = { one: true }
input.self = input
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to cycle
const { value, changes } = safeJsonValue(input)
JSON.stringify(value) // '{"one":true}"
console.log(changes) // List of changed properties
// [
// {
// path: ['self'],
// oldValue: <ref *1> { one: true, self: [Circular *1] },
// newValue: undefined,
// reason: 'unsafeCycle'
// }
// ]
npm install safe-json-value
This package works in both Node.js >=18.18.0 and
browsers.
This is an ES module. It must be loaded using
an import
or import()
statement,
not require()
. If TypeScript is used, it must be configured to
output ES modules,
not CommonJS.
value
any
options
Options?
Return value: object
Makes value
JSON-safe by:
JSON.stringify()
JSON.stringify()
This never throws.
Object with the following properties.
Type: number
Default: 1e7
Big JSON strings can make a process, filesystem operation or network request
crash. maxSize
prevents it by setting a maximum
JSON.stringify(value).length
.
Additional properties beyond the size limit are omitted. They are
completely removed, not truncated (including strings).
const input = { one: true, two: 'a'.repeat(1e6) }
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input, { maxSize: 1e5 }).value) // '{"one":true}"
Type: boolean
Default: false
If false
, object/array properties are processed recursively. Please note that
cycles are not removed when this is true
.
Object with the following properties.
Type: any
Copy of the input value
after applying all the changes to make
it JSON-safe.
The top-level value
itself might be changed (including to undefined
) if it
is either invalid JSON or has a toJSON()
method.
The value
is not serialized to a JSON string. This allows choosing the
serialization format (JSON, YAML, etc.), processing the value, etc.
Type: Change[]
List of changes applied to value
. Each item is an
individual change to a specific property. A given property might have multiple
changes, listed in order.
Type: Array<string | symbol | number>
Property path.
Type: any
Property value before the change.
Type: any
Property value after the change. undefined
means the property was omitted.
Type: string
Reason for the change among:
"unsafeCycle"
,"unsafeBigInt"
, "unsafeSize"
,"unsafeException"
,"unsafeToJSON"
,"unsafeGetter"
"descriptorNotWritable"
,"descriptorNotConfigurable"
"unstableInfinite"
"ignoredFunction"
,"ignoredUndefined"
, "ignoredSymbolValue"
,"ignoredSymbolKey"
,"ignoredNotEnumerable"
,"ignoredArrayProperty"
"unresolvedToJSON"
,"unresolvedClass"
, "unresolvedGetter"
Type: Error?
Error that triggered the change. Only present if reason
is
"unsafeException"
,
"unsafeToJSON"
or
"unsafeGetter"
.
This is a list of all possible changes applied to make the value JSON-safe.
JSON.stringify()
can throw on specific properties. Those are omitted.
const input = { one: true }
input.self = input
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to cycle
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{"one":true}"
const input = { toJSON: () => ({ one: true, input }) }
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to infinite `toJSON()` recursion
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{"one":true,"input":{...}}"
const input = { one: true, two: 0n }
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to BigInt
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{"one":true}"
const input = { one: true, two: '\n'.repeat(5e8) }
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to max string length
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{"one":true}"
toJSON()
const input = {
one: true,
two: {
toJSON: () => {
throw new Error('example')
},
},
}
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to `toJSON()`
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{"one":true}"
const input = {
one: true,
get two() {
throw new Error('example')
},
}
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to `get two()`
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{"one":true}"
const input = new Proxy(
{ one: false },
{
get: () => {
throw new Error('example')
},
},
)
JSON.stringify(input) // Throws due to proxy
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{}'
const input = {}
Object.defineProperty(input, 'one', {
value: true,
enumerable: true,
writable: false,
configurable: true,
})
input.one = false // Throws: non-writable
const safeInput = safeJsonValue(input).value
safeInput.one = false // Does not throw: now writable
const input = {}
Object.defineProperty(input, 'one', {
value: true,
enumerable: true,
writable: true,
configurable: false,
})
// Throws: non-configurable
Object.defineProperty(input, 'one', { value: false, enumerable: false })
const safeInput = safeJsonValue(input).value
// Does not throw: now configurable
Object.defineProperty(safeInput, 'one', { value: false, enumerable: false })
JSON.stringify()
changes the types of specific values unexpectedly. Those are
omitted.
const input = { one: true, two: Number.NaN, three: Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY }
JSON.stringify(input) // '{"one":true,"two":null,"three":null}"
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '{"one":true}"
const input = [true, undefined, Symbol(), false]
JSON.stringify(input) // '[true, null, null, false]'
JSON.stringify(safeJsonValue(input).value) // '[true, false]'
JSON.stringify()
omits some specific types. Those are omitted right away to
prevent any unexpected output.
const input = { one: true, two: () => {} }
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
undefined
const input = { one: true, two: undefined }
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
const input = { one: true, two: Symbol() }
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
const input = { one: true, [Symbol()]: true }
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
const input = { one: true }
Object.defineProperty(input, 'two', { value: true, enumerable: false })
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
const input = [true]
input.prop = true
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // [true]
safeJsonValue(input).value // [true]
JSON.stringify()
can transform some values. Those are resolved right away to
prevent any unexpected output.
toJSON()
const input = {
toJSON: () => ({ one: true }),
}
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
const input = { one: new Date() }
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: '2022-07-29T14:37:40.865Z' }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: '2022-07-29T14:37:40.865Z' }
const input = { one: new Set([]) }
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: {} }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: {} }
const input = {
get one() {
return true
},
}
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
const input = new Proxy(
{ one: false },
{
get: () => true,
},
)
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(input)) // { one: true }
safeJsonValue(input).value // { one: true }
is-json-value
: Check if a valuetruncate-json
: Truncate a JSONguess-json-indent
: Guess theerror-serializer
: ConvertFor any question, don’t hesitate to submit an issue on GitHub.
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Pedro Augusto de Paula Barbosa 📖 |