Gathering detailed insights and metrics for fast-safe-stringify
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for fast-safe-stringify
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for fast-safe-stringify
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for fast-safe-stringify
safe-stable-stringify
Deterministic and safely JSON.stringify to quickly serialize JavaScript objects
quick-format-unescaped
Solves a problem with util.format
fast-json-stable-stringify
deterministic `JSON.stringify()` - a faster version of substack's json-stable-strigify without jsonify
fast-json-stringify
Stringify your JSON at max speed
Safely and quickly serialize JavaScript objects
npm install fast-safe-stringify
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
348 Stars
153 Commits
27 Forks
9 Watching
1 Branches
16 Contributors
Updated on 06 Nov 2024
JavaScript (100%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
-3.4%
3,005,820
Compared to previous day
Last week
2.9%
16,110,966
Compared to previous week
Last month
14.2%
65,692,832
Compared to previous month
Last year
9.7%
670,728,442
Compared to previous year
5
Safe and fast serialization alternative to JSON.stringify.
Gracefully handles circular structures instead of throwing in most cases. It could return an error string if the circular object is too complex to analyze, e.g. in case there are proxies involved.
Provides a deterministic ("stable") version as well that will also gracefully handle circular structures. See the example below for further information.
The same as JSON.stringify.
stringify(value[, replacer[, space[, options]]])
1const safeStringify = require('fast-safe-stringify') 2const o = { a: 1 } 3o.o = o 4 5console.log(safeStringify(o)) 6// '{"a":1,"o":"[Circular]"}' 7console.log(JSON.stringify(o)) 8// TypeError: Converting circular structure to JSON 9 10function replacer(key, value) { 11 console.log('Key:', JSON.stringify(key), 'Value:', JSON.stringify(value)) 12 // Remove the circular structure 13 if (value === '[Circular]') { 14 return 15 } 16 return value 17} 18 19// those are also defaults limits when no options object is passed into safeStringify 20// configure it to lower the limit. 21const options = { 22 depthLimit: Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER, 23 edgesLimit: Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER 24}; 25 26const serialized = safeStringify(o, replacer, 2, options) 27// Key: "" Value: {"a":1,"o":"[Circular]"} 28// Key: "a" Value: 1 29// Key: "o" Value: "[Circular]" 30console.log(serialized) 31// { 32// "a": 1 33// }
Using the deterministic version also works the same:
1const safeStringify = require('fast-safe-stringify') 2const o = { b: 1, a: 0 } 3o.o = o 4 5console.log(safeStringify(o)) 6// '{"b":1,"a":0,"o":"[Circular]"}' 7console.log(safeStringify.stableStringify(o)) 8// '{"a":0,"b":1,"o":"[Circular]"}' 9console.log(JSON.stringify(o)) 10// TypeError: Converting circular structure to JSON
A faster and side-effect free implementation is available in the [safe-stable-stringify][] module. However it is still considered experimental due to a new and more complex implementation.
[Circular]
- when same reference is found[...]
- when some limit from options object is reachedIn general the behavior is identical to JSON.stringify. The replacer
and space
options are also available.
A few exceptions exist to JSON.stringify while using toJSON
or
replacer
:
Manipulating a circular structure of the passed in value in a toJSON
or the
replacer
is not possible! It is possible for any other value and property.
In case a circular structure is detected and the replacer
is used it
will receive the string [Circular]
as the argument instead of the circular
object itself.
Manipulating the input object either in a toJSON
or the replacer
function will not have any effect on the output. The output entirely relies on
the shape the input value had at the point passed to the stringify function!
In case a circular structure is detected and the replacer
is used it
will receive the string [Circular]
as the argument instead of the circular
object itself.
A side effect free variation without these limitations can be found as well
(safe-stable-stringify
). It is also faster than the current
implementation. It is still considered experimental due to a new and more
complex implementation.
Although not JSON, the Node.js util.inspect
method can be used for similar
purposes (e.g. logging) and also handles circular references.
Here we compare fast-safe-stringify
with some alternatives:
(Lenovo T450s with a i7-5600U CPU using Node.js 8.9.4)
1fast-safe-stringify: simple object x 1,121,497 ops/sec ±0.75% (97 runs sampled) 2fast-safe-stringify: circular x 560,126 ops/sec ±0.64% (96 runs sampled) 3fast-safe-stringify: deep x 32,472 ops/sec ±0.57% (95 runs sampled) 4fast-safe-stringify: deep circular x 32,513 ops/sec ±0.80% (92 runs sampled) 5 6util.inspect: simple object x 272,837 ops/sec ±1.48% (90 runs sampled) 7util.inspect: circular x 116,896 ops/sec ±1.19% (95 runs sampled) 8util.inspect: deep x 19,382 ops/sec ±0.66% (92 runs sampled) 9util.inspect: deep circular x 18,717 ops/sec ±0.63% (96 runs sampled) 10 11json-stringify-safe: simple object x 233,621 ops/sec ±0.97% (94 runs sampled) 12json-stringify-safe: circular x 110,409 ops/sec ±1.85% (95 runs sampled) 13json-stringify-safe: deep x 8,705 ops/sec ±0.87% (96 runs sampled) 14json-stringify-safe: deep circular x 8,336 ops/sec ±2.20% (93 runs sampled)
For stable stringify comparisons, see the performance benchmarks in the
safe-stable-stringify
readme.
Whether fast-safe-stringify
or alternatives are used: if the use case
consists of deeply nested objects without circular references the following
pattern will give best results.
Shallow or one level nested objects on the other hand will slow down with it.
It is entirely dependant on the use case.
1const stringify = require('fast-safe-stringify') 2 3function tryJSONStringify (obj) { 4 try { return JSON.stringify(obj) } catch (_) {} 5} 6 7const serializedString = tryJSONStringify(deep) || stringify(deep)
Sponsored by nearForm
MIT
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
0 existing vulnerabilities detected
Reason
license file detected
Details
Reason
Found 7/19 approved changesets -- score normalized to 3
Reason
0 commit(s) and 0 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 0
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
security policy file not detected
Details
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
Reason
branch protection not enabled on development/release branches
Details
Reason
SAST tool is not run on all commits -- score normalized to 0
Details
Score
Last Scanned on 2024-11-25
The Open Source Security Foundation is a cross-industry collaboration to improve the security of open source software (OSS). The Scorecard provides security health metrics for open source projects.
Learn More