Index · Directives systemd 257

Name

sd-json — APIs for Dealing with JSON Objects

Synopsis

#include <systemd/sd-json.h>

pkg-config --cflags --libs libsystemd

Description

sd-json.h is part of libsystemd(3) and provides APIs to parse, generate, format and otherwise operate with JSON objects.

The API's central data structure is JsonVariant which encapsulates a JSON object, array, string, boolean, number or null value. These data structures are mostly considered immutable after construction (i.e. their contents won't change, but some meta-data might, such as reference counters).

The APIs broadly fall into five categories:

  • APIs to directly operate with JsonVariant objects, in the sd_json_variant* namespace.

  • APIs to construct complex JSON objects, in the sd_json_build* namespace.

  • APIs to map JsonVariant objects and their fields to matching fields in C structures, in the sd_json_dispatch* namespace.

  • APIs to convert a string representation of a JSON object into a JsonVariant object, in the sd_json_parse* namespace.

  • APIs to convert an JsonVariant object into its string representation, in the sd_json_format* namespace.

This JSON library will internally encode JSON integer numbers in the range INT64_MINUINT64_MAX into native 64bit signed or unsigned integers, and will reproduce them without loss of precision. Non-integer numbers are stored in 64bit IEEE floating point numbers.

If the functions return string arrays, these are generally NULL terminated and need to be freed by the caller with the libc free(3) call after use, including the strings referenced therein. Similarly, individual strings returned need to be freed, as well.

As a special exception, instead of an empty string array NULL may be returned, which should be treated equivalent to an empty string array.

Notes

Functions described here are available as a shared library, which can be compiled against and linked to with the libsystemd pkg-config(1) file.

The code described here uses getenv(3), which is declared to be not multi-thread-safe. This means that the code calling the functions described here must not call setenv(3) from a parallel thread. It is recommended to only do calls to setenv() from an early phase of the program when no other threads have been started.

See Also

systemd(1), sd-varlink(3), pkg-config(1)