Author: | INADA Naoki |
---|---|
Version: | 0.4.6 |
Date: | 2015-03-13 |
MessagePack is a fast, compact binary serialization format, suitable for similar data to JSON. This package provides CPython bindings for reading and writing MessagePack data.
$ pip install msgpack-python
msgpack-python provides pure python implementation. PyPy can use this.
When you can't use binary distribution, you need to install Visual Studio or Windows SDK on Windows. Without extension, using pure python implementation on CPython runs slowly.
For Python 2.7, Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler for Python 2.7 is recommended solution.
For Python 3.5, Microsoft Visual Studio 2015 Community Edition or Express Edition can be used to build extension module.
Use packb
for packing and unpackb
for unpacking.
msgpack provides dumps
and loads
as alias for compatibility with
json
and pickle
.
pack
and dump
packs to file-like object.
unpack
and load
unpacks from file-like object.
>>> import msgpack
>>> msgpack.packb([1, 2, 3])
'\x93\x01\x02\x03'
>>> msgpack.unpackb(_)
[1, 2, 3]
unpack
unpacks msgpack's array to Python's list, but can unpack to tuple:
>>> msgpack.unpackb(b'\x93\x01\x02\x03', use_list=False)
(1, 2, 3)
You should always pass the use_list
keyword argument. See performance issues relating to use_list option below.
Read the docstring for other options.
Unpacker
is a "streaming unpacker". It unpacks multiple objects from one
stream (or from bytes provided through its feed
method).
import msgpack
from io import BytesIO
buf = BytesIO()
for i in range(100):
buf.write(msgpack.packb(range(i)))
buf.seek(0)
unpacker = msgpack.Unpacker(buf)
for unpacked in unpacker:
print unpacked
It is also possible to pack/unpack custom data types. Here is an example for
datetime.datetime
.
import datetime
import msgpack
useful_dict = {
"id": 1,
"created": datetime.datetime.now(),
}
def decode_datetime(obj):
if b'__datetime__' in obj:
obj = datetime.datetime.strptime(obj["as_str"], "%Y%m%dT%H:%M:%S.%f")
return obj
def encode_datetime(obj):
if isinstance(obj, datetime.datetime):
return {'__datetime__': True, 'as_str': obj.strftime("%Y%m%dT%H:%M:%S.%f")}
return obj
packed_dict = msgpack.packb(useful_dict, default=encode_datetime)
this_dict_again = msgpack.unpackb(packed_dict, object_hook=decode_datetime)
Unpacker
's object_hook
callback receives a dict; the
object_pairs_hook
callback may instead be used to receive a list of
key-value pairs.
It is also possible to pack/unpack custom data types using the ext type.
>>> import msgpack
>>> import array
>>> def default(obj):
... if isinstance(obj, array.array) and obj.typecode == 'd':
... return msgpack.ExtType(42, obj.tostring())
... raise TypeError("Unknown type: %r" % (obj,))
...
>>> def ext_hook(code, data):
... if code == 42:
... a = array.array('d')
... a.fromstring(data)
... return a
... return ExtType(code, data)
...
>>> data = array.array('d', [1.2, 3.4])
>>> packed = msgpack.packb(data, default=default)
>>> unpacked = msgpack.unpackb(packed, ext_hook=ext_hook)
>>> data == unpacked
True
As an alternative to iteration, Unpacker
objects provide unpack
,
skip
, read_array_header
and read_map_header
methods. The former two
read an entire message from the stream, respectively deserialising and returning
the result, or ignoring it. The latter two methods return the number of elements
in the upcoming container, so that each element in an array, or key-value pair
in a map, can be unpacked or skipped individually.
Each of these methods may optionally write the packed data it reads to a callback function:
from io import BytesIO
def distribute(unpacker, get_worker):
nelems = unpacker.read_map_header()
for i in range(nelems):
# Select a worker for the given key
key = unpacker.unpack()
worker = get_worker(key)
# Send the value as a packed message to worker
bytestream = BytesIO()
unpacker.skip(bytestream.write)
worker.send(bytestream.getvalue())
In old days, msgpack doesn't distinguish string and binary types like Python 1. The type for represent string and binary types is named raw.
msgpack can distinguish string and binary type for now. But it is not like Python 2. Python 2 added unicode string. But msgpack renamed raw to str and added bin type. It is because keep compatibility with data created by old libs. raw was used for text more than binary.
Currently, while msgpack-python supports new bin type, default setting doesn't use it and decodes raw as bytes instead of unicode (str in Python 3).
You can change this by using use_bin_type=True option in Packer and encoding="utf-8" option in Unpacker.
>>> import msgpack
>>> packed = msgpack.packb([b'spam', u'egg'], use_bin_type=True)
>>> msgpack.unpackb(packed, encoding='utf-8')
['spam', u'egg']
To use ext type, pass msgpack.ExtType
object to packer.
>>> import msgpack
>>> packed = msgpack.packb(msgpack.ExtType(42, b'xyzzy'))
>>> msgpack.unpackb(packed)
ExtType(code=42, data='xyzzy')
You can use it with default
and ext_hook
. See below.
The msgpack-python 0.3 have some incompatible changes.
The default value of use_list
keyword argument is True
from 0.3.
You should pass the argument explicitly for backward compatibility.
Unpacker.unpack() and some unpack methods now raises OutOfData instead of StopIteration. StopIteration is used for iterator protocol only.
CPython's GC starts when growing allocated object.
This means unpacking may cause useless GC.
You can use gc.disable()
when unpacking large message.
List is the default sequence type of Python.
But tuple is lighter than list.
You can use use_list=False
while unpacking when performance is important.
Python's dict can't use list as key and MessagePack allows array for key of mapping.
use_list=False
allows unpacking such message.
Another way to unpacking such object is using object_pairs_hook
.
MessagePack uses pytest for testing. Run test with following command:
$ py.test