Data-MessagePack-Stream
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`msgpack` for C/C++
===================
Version 3.3.0 [](https://travis-ci.org/msgpack/msgpack-c) [](https://ci.appv...
[](https://codecov.io/gh/msgpack/msgpack-c)
It's like JSON but smaller and faster.
Overview
--------
[MessagePack](http://msgpack.org/) is an efficient binary serialization
format, which lets you exchange data among multiple languages like JSON,
except that it's faster and smaller. Small integers are encoded into a
single byte and short strings require only one extra byte in
addition to the strings themselves.
Example
-------
In C:
```c
#include <msgpack.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
/* msgpack::sbuffer is a simple buffer implementation. */
msgpack_sbuffer sbuf;
msgpack_sbuffer_init(&sbuf);
/* serialize values into the buffer using msgpack_sbuffer_write callback function. */
msgpack_packer pk;
msgpack_packer_init(&pk, &sbuf, msgpack_sbuffer_write);
msgpack_pack_array(&pk, 3);
msgpack_pack_int(&pk, 1);
msgpack_pack_true(&pk);
msgpack_pack_str(&pk, 7);
msgpack_pack_str_body(&pk, "example", 7);
/* deserialize the buffer into msgpack_object instance. */
/* deserialized object is valid during the msgpack_zone instance alive. */
msgpack_zone mempool;
msgpack_zone_init(&mempool, 2048);
msgpack_object deserialized;
msgpack_unpack(sbuf.data, sbuf.size, NULL, &mempool, &deserialized);
/* print the deserialized object. */
msgpack_object_print(stdout, deserialized);
puts("");
msgpack_zone_destroy(&mempool);
msgpack_sbuffer_destroy(&sbuf);
return 0;
}
```
See [`QUICKSTART-C.md`](./QUICKSTART-C.md) for more details.
In C++:
```c++
#include <msgpack.hpp>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
int main()
{
msgpack::type::tuple<int, bool, std::string> src(1, true, "example");
// serialize the object into the buffer.
// any classes that implements write(const char*,size_t) can be a buffer.
std::stringstream buffer;
msgpack::pack(buffer, src);
// send the buffer ...
buffer.seekg(0);
// deserialize the buffer into msgpack::object instance.
std::string str(buffer.str());
msgpack::object_handle oh =
msgpack::unpack(str.data(), str.size());
// deserialized object is valid during the msgpack::object_handle instance is alive.
msgpack::object deserialized = oh.get();
// msgpack::object supports ostream.
std::cout << deserialized << std::endl;
// convert msgpack::object instance into the original type.
// if the type is mismatched, it throws msgpack::type_error exception.
msgpack::type::tuple<int, bool, std::string> dst;
deserialized.convert(dst);
// or create the new instance
msgpack::type::tuple<int, bool, std::string> dst2 =
deserialized.as<msgpack::type::tuple<int, bool, std::string> >();
return 0;
}
```
See [`QUICKSTART-CPP.md`](./QUICKSTART-CPP.md) for more details.
Usage
-----
### C++ Header Only Library
When you use msgpack on C++, you can just add
msgpack-c/include to your include path:
g++ -I msgpack-c/include your_source_file.cpp
If you want to use C version of msgpack, you need to build it. You can
also install the C and C++ versions of msgpack.
### Building and Installing
#### Install from git repository
##### Using the Terminal (CLI)
You will need:
- `gcc >= 4.1.0`
- `cmake >= 2.8.0`
C and C++03:
$ git clone https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-c.git
$ cd msgpack-c
$ cmake .
$ make
$ sudo make install
If you want to setup C++11 or C++17 version of msgpack instead,
execute the following commands:
$ git clone https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-c.git
$ cd msgpack-c
$ cmake -DMSGPACK_CXX[11|17]=ON .
$ sudo make install
( run in 0.700 second using v1.01-cache-2.11-cpan-39bf76dae61 )