Man page - json_xs(1)
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apt-get install libjson-xs-perl
Manual
JSON_XS
NAMESYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
EXAMPLES
AUTHOR
NAME
json_xs - JSON::XS commandline utility
SYNOPSIS
json_xs [-v] [-f inputformat] [-t outputformat]
DESCRIPTION
json_xs converts between some input and output formats (one of them is JSON).
The default input format is "json" and the default output format is "json-pretty".
OPTIONS
|
-v |
Be slightly more verbose. |
-f fromformat
Read a file in the given format from STDIN.
"fromformat"
can be one of:
json - a json text encoded, either utf-8, utf16-be/le,
utf32-be/le
cbor - CBOR (RFC 7049, CBOR::XS), a kind of binary JSON
storable - a Storable frozen value
storable-file - a Storable file (Storable has two
incompatible
formats)
bencode - use Convert::Bencode, if available (used by
torrent
files, among others)
clzf - Compress::LZF format (requires that module to be
installed)
eval - evaluate the given code as (non-utf-8) Perl,
basically the
reverse of "-t dump"
yaml - YAML format (requires that module to be installed)
string - do not attempt to decode the file data
none - nothing is read, creates an "undef" scalar
- mainly useful
with "-e"
-t toformat
Write the file in the given format to STDOUT.
"toformat"
can be one of:
json, json-utf-8 - json, utf-8 encoded
json-pretty - as above, but pretty-printed
json-utf-16le, json-utf-16be - little endian/big endian
utf-16
json-utf-32le, json-utf-32be - little endian/big endian
utf-32
cbor - CBOR (RFC 7049, CBOR::XS), a kind of binary JSON
cbor-packed - CBOR using extensions to make it smaller
storable - a Storable frozen value in network format
storable-file - a Storable file in network format (Storable
has two
incompatible formats)
bencode - use Convert::Bencode, if available (used by
torrent
files, among others)
clzf - Compress::LZF format
yaml - YAML::XS format
dump - Data::Dump
dumper - Data::Dumper
string - writes the data out as if it were a string
none - nothing gets written, mainly useful together with
"-e"
Note that Data::Dumper doesnβt handle self-referential data structures correctly - use "dump" instead.
-e code
Evaluate perl code after reading the data and before writing it out again - can be used to filter, create or extract data. The data that has been written is in $_, and whatever is in there is written out afterwards.
EXAMPLES
json_xs -t none <isitreally.json
"JSON Lint" - tries to parse the file isitreally.json as JSON - if it is valid JSON, the command outputs nothing, otherwise it will print an error message and exit with non-zero exit status.
<src.json json_xs >pretty.json
Prettify the JSON file src.json to dst.json .
json_xs -f storable-file <file
Read the serialised Storable file file and print a human-readable JSON version of it to STDOUT.
json_xs -f storable-file -t yaml <file
Same as above, but write YAML instead (not using JSON at all :)
json_xs -f none -e '$_ = [1, 2, 3]'
Dump the perl array as UTF-8 encoded JSON text.
<torrentfile json_xs -f bencode -e '$_ = join "\n", map @$_, @{$_->{"announce-list"}}' -t string
Print the tracker list inside a torrent file.
lwp-request http://cpantesters.perl.org/show/JSON-XS.json | json_xs
Fetch the cpan-testers result summary "JSON::XS" and pretty-print it.
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 2008 Marc Lehmann <json@schmorp.de>