This package provides an encoding/decoding package for the Concise Binary Object Representation as documented in RFC8949.
CBOR is increasingly used as a line protocol in the IOT world where the overhead of transmitting JSON on constrained devices can be large in packet size and processing overheads.
- Streamlined encoding and decoding of CBOR, including indefinite length and streamed decoding.
- Set of types that semantically handles types, nesting, and tags.
- Automatic conversion for the smallest size needed for integers.
- Automatic conversion for the smallest precision needed for floating point numbers.
- Any value can be the key for a map.
- Optional simple API for encoding and decoding directly to Dart objects.
- Pretty-printing and conversion to JSON.
- Rational numbering encoding is supported on tag 30.
Two APIs are provided, cbor.dart
and simple.dart
.
Encodes from CborValue
and decodes to CborValue
.
The CborValue
contains the tags for this item, and its subtypes are used to
identify the type and tags for the item. This allows one to handle information
encoded in a more lossless way.
Inheritance tree for CborValue
looks something like this:
CborValue
├── CborInt
│ ├── CborSmallInt
│ └── CborDateTimeInt
├── CborBytes
│ └── CborBigInt
├── CborString
│ ├── CborDateTimeString
│ ├── CborBase64
│ ├── CborBase64Url
│ ├── CborMime
│ └── CborRegex
├── CborFloat
│ └── CborDateTimeFloat
├── CborSimpleValue
│ ├── CborNull
│ ├── CborBool
│ └── CborUndefined
├── CborMap
└── CborList
├── CborDecimalFraction
├── CborRationalNumber
└── CborBigFloat
import 'package:cbor/cbor.dart';
test('{1:2,3:4}', () {
final encoded = cbor.encode(CborMap({
CborSmallInt(1): CborSmallInt(2),
CborSmallInt(3): CborSmallInt(4),
}));
expect(encoded, [0xa2, 0x01, 0x02, 0x03, 0x04]);
});
Check out the example folder for more examples.
Less powerful, but may be the best option for simple applications that do not
need any of the fancy features of the cbor
API above.
The encoder in simple API will operate similarly to constructing a CborValue
from the input and the encoding it.
Decoder will translate the input to a common Dart object, ignoring any extra tags after the type is decided.
import 'package:cbor/simple.dart';
test('{1:2,3:4}', () {
final encoded = cbor.encode({
1: 2,
3: 4,
});
expect(encoded, [0xa2, 0x01, 0x02, 0x03, 0x04]);
});