"""Utilities to manipulate JSON objects.""" # Copyright (c) IPython Development Team. # Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License. import math import numbers import re import types from binascii import b2a_base64 from datetime import date, datetime from jupyter_client._version import version_info as jupyter_client_version next_attr_name = "__next__" # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Globals and constants # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # timestamp formats ISO8601 = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f" ISO8601_PAT = re.compile( r"^(\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2}T\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2})(\.\d{1,6})?Z?([\+\-]\d{2}:?\d{2})?$" ) # holy crap, strptime is not threadsafe. # Calling it once at import seems to help. datetime.strptime("1", "%d") # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Classes and functions # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # constants for identifying png/jpeg data PNG = b"\x89PNG\r\n\x1a\n" # front of PNG base64-encoded PNG64 = b"iVBORw0KG" JPEG = b"\xff\xd8" # front of JPEG base64-encoded JPEG64 = b"/9" # constants for identifying gif data GIF_64 = b"R0lGODdh" GIF89_64 = b"R0lGODlh" # front of PDF base64-encoded PDF64 = b"JVBER" JUPYTER_CLIENT_MAJOR_VERSION = jupyter_client_version[0] def encode_images(format_dict): """b64-encodes images in a displaypub format dict Perhaps this should be handled in json_clean itself? Parameters ---------- format_dict : dict A dictionary of display data keyed by mime-type Returns ------- format_dict : dict A copy of the same dictionary, but binary image data ('image/png', 'image/jpeg' or 'application/pdf') is base64-encoded. """ # no need for handling of ambiguous bytestrings on Python 3, # where bytes objects always represent binary data and thus # base64-encoded. return format_dict def json_clean(obj): # pragma: no cover """Deprecated, this is a no-op for jupyter-client>=7. Clean an object to ensure it's safe to encode in JSON. Atomic, immutable objects are returned unmodified. Sets and tuples are converted to lists, lists are copied and dicts are also copied. Note: dicts whose keys could cause collisions upon encoding (such as a dict with both the number 1 and the string '1' as keys) will cause a ValueError to be raised. Parameters ---------- obj : any python object Returns ------- out : object A version of the input which will not cause an encoding error when encoded as JSON. Note that this function does not *encode* its inputs, it simply sanitizes it so that there will be no encoding errors later. """ if int(JUPYTER_CLIENT_MAJOR_VERSION) >= 7: return obj # types that are 'atomic' and ok in json as-is. atomic_ok = (str, type(None)) # containers that we need to convert into lists container_to_list = (tuple, set, types.GeneratorType) # Since bools are a subtype of Integrals, which are a subtype of Reals, # we have to check them in that order. if isinstance(obj, bool): return obj if isinstance(obj, numbers.Integral): # cast int to int, in case subclasses override __str__ (e.g. boost enum, #4598) return int(obj) if isinstance(obj, numbers.Real): # cast out-of-range floats to their reprs if math.isnan(obj) or math.isinf(obj): return repr(obj) return float(obj) if isinstance(obj, atomic_ok): return obj if isinstance(obj, bytes): # unanmbiguous binary data is base64-encoded # (this probably should have happened upstream) return b2a_base64(obj).decode("ascii") if isinstance(obj, container_to_list) or ( hasattr(obj, "__iter__") and hasattr(obj, next_attr_name) ): obj = list(obj) if isinstance(obj, list): return [json_clean(x) for x in obj] if isinstance(obj, dict): # First, validate that the dict won't lose data in conversion due to # key collisions after stringification. This can happen with keys like # True and 'true' or 1 and '1', which collide in JSON. nkeys = len(obj) nkeys_collapsed = len(set(map(str, obj))) if nkeys != nkeys_collapsed: raise ValueError( "dict cannot be safely converted to JSON: " "key collision would lead to dropped values" ) # If all OK, proceed by making the new dict that will be json-safe out = {} for k, v in obj.items(): out[str(k)] = json_clean(v) return out if isinstance(obj, datetime) or isinstance(obj, date): return obj.strftime(ISO8601) # we don't understand it, it's probably an unserializable object raise ValueError("Can't clean for JSON: %r" % obj)