It's like JSON but small and fast.
MessagePack is an efficient binary serialization format, which lets you exchange data among multiple languages like JSON, except that it's faster and smaller. Small integers are encoded into a single byte while typical short strings require only one extra byte in addition to the strings themselves.
In C:
#include <msgpack.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
/* msgpack::sbuffer is a simple buffer implementation. */
msgpack_sbuffer sbuf;
msgpack_sbuffer_init(&sbuf);
/* serialize values into the buffer using msgpack_sbuffer_write callback function. */
msgpack_packer pk;
msgpack_packer_init(&pk, &sbuf, msgpack_sbuffer_write);
msgpack_pack_array(&pk, 3);
msgpack_pack_int(&pk, 1);
msgpack_pack_true(&pk);
msgpack_pack_str(&pk, 7);
msgpack_pack_str_body(&pk, "example", 7);
/* deserialize the buffer into msgpack_object instance. */
/* deserialized object is valid during the msgpack_zone instance alive. */
msgpack_zone mempool;
msgpack_zone_init(&mempool, 2048);
msgpack_object deserialized;
msgpack_unpack(sbuf.data, sbuf.size, NULL, &mempool, &deserialized);
/* print the deserialized object. */
msgpack_object_print(stdout, deserialized);
puts("");
msgpack_zone_destroy(&mempool);
msgpack_sbuffer_destroy(&sbuf);
return 0;
}
See QUICKSTART-C.md
for more details.
In C++:
#include <msgpack.hpp>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
int main(void)
{
msgpack::type::tuple<int, bool, std::string> src(1, true, "example");
// serialize the object into the buffer.
// any classes that implements write(const char*,size_t) can be a buffer.
std::stringstream buffer;
msgpack::pack(buffer, src);
// send the buffer ...
buffer.seekg(0);
// deserialize the buffer into msgpack::object instance.
std::string str(buffer.str());
msgpack::object_handle oh =
msgpack::unpack(str.data(), str.size());
// deserialized object is valid during the msgpack::object_handle instance is alive.
msgpack::object deserialized = oh.get();
// msgpack::object supports ostream.
std::cout << deserialized << std::endl;
// convert msgpack::object instance into the original type.
// if the type is mismatched, it throws msgpack::type_error exception.
msgpack::type::tuple<int, bool, std::string> dst;
deserialized.convert(dst);
return 0;
}
See QUICKSTART-CPP.md
for more details.
When you use msgpack on C++03 and C++11, you can just add msgpack-c/include to your include path:
g++ -I msgpack-c/include your_source_file.cpp
If you want to use C version of msgpack, you need to build it. You can also install the C and C++ versions of msgpack.
You will need:
gcc >= 4.1.0
cmake >= 2.8.0
C and C++03:
$ git clone https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-c.git
$ cd msgpack-c
$ cmake .
$ make
$ sudo make install
If you want to setup C++11 version of msgpack instead, execute the following commands:
$ git clone https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-c.git
$ cd msgpack-c
$ cmake -DMSGPACK_CXX11=ON .
$ sudo make install
Clone msgpack-c git repository.
$ git clone https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-c.git
or using GUI git client.
e.g.) tortoise git https://code.google.com/p/tortoisegit/
-
Launch cmake GUI client.
-
Set 'Where is the source code:' text box and 'Where to build the binaries:' text box.
-
Click 'Configure' button.
-
Choose your Visual Studio version.
-
Click 'Generate' button.
-
Open the created msgpack.sln on Visual Studio.
-
Build all.
You can get addtional information on the wiki.
msgpack-c
is developed on GitHub at msgpack/msgpack-c.
To report an issue or send a pull request, use the
issue tracker.
Here's the list of great contributors.
msgpack-c
is licensed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. See
the LICENSE_1_0.txt
file for details.