A leaner and meaner implementation of JSON-Patch. Small footprint. High performance. Also support dual directions! I.e. you can both apply patches and generate patches.
JSON-Patch (RFC6902) is a standard format that allows you to update a JSON document by sending the changes rather than the whole document. JSON Patch plays well with the HTTP PATCH verb (method) and REST style programming.
Mark Nottingham has a nice blog about it.
0.5 KB minified and gzipped (1.1 KB minified)
- Allows you to apply patches on object trees for incoming traffic.
- Allows you to freely manipulate object trees and then generate patches for outgoing traffic.
- ES7 Object.observe() is used when available.
- Tested in IE 8-10, Firefox, Chrome and Node.js
- A /bin directory will be added with minified versions
- More unit tests
Install the current version (and save it as a dependency):
$ npm install fast-json-patch --save$ bower install fast-json-patch --saveInclude json-patch.js if you want support for applying patches or
include json-patch-duplex.js if you also want to generate patches.
Call require to get the instance:
var jsonpatch = require('fast-json-patch')💡 Node.js supports native Object.observe in preview release 0.11.x (and only when started with --harmony_observation flag). With stable versions of Node, a shimmed version of Object.observe is used.
Applying patches:
var myobj = { firstName:"Albert", contactDetails: { phoneNumbers: [ ] } };
var patches = [
{op:"replace", path:"/firstName", value:"Joachim" },
{op:"add", path:"/lastName", value:"Wester" },
{op:"add", path:"/contactDetails/phoneNumbers/0", value:{ number:"555-123" } }
];
jsonpatch.apply( myobj, patches );
// myobj == { firstName:"Joachim", lastName:"Wester", contactDetails:{ phoneNumbers[ {number:"555-123"} ] } };Generating patches:
var myobj = { firstName:"Joachim", lastName:"Wester", contactDetails: { phoneNumbers: [ { number:"555-123" }] } };
observer = jsonpatch.observe( myobj );
myobj.firstName = "Albert";
myobj.contactDetails.phoneNumbers[0].number = "123";
myobj.contactDetails.phoneNumbers.push({number:"456"});
var patches = jsonpatch.generate(observer);
// patches == [
// { op:"replace", path="/firstName", value:"Albert"},
// { op:"replace", path="/contactDetails/phoneNumbers/0/number", value:"123"},
// { op:"add", path="/contactDetails/phoneNumbers/1", value:{number:"456"}}];Comparing two object trees:
var objA = {user: {firstName: "Albert", lastName: "Einstein"}};
var objB = {user: {firstName: "Albert", lastName: "Collins"}};
var diff = jsonpatch.compare(objA, objB));
//diff == [{op: "replace", path: "/user/lastName", value: "Collins"}]
- Testing json-patch.js
- Load
test/SpecRunner.htmlin your web browser
- Testing json-patch-duplex.js
- Load
test/SpecRunnerDuplex.htmlin your web browser
Each of the test suite files contains Jasmine unit test suite and Benchmark.js performance test suite.
To run Benchmark.js performance tests, press "Run Tests" button.
- Go to directory where you have cloned the repo
- Install Jasmine Node.js module by running command
npm install jasmine-node -g - Testing json-patch.js
- Run command
jasmine-node --matchall --config duplex no test/spec/coreSpec.js
- Testing json-patch-duplex.js
- Run command
jasmine-node --matchall --config duplex yes test/spec/coreSpec.js test/spec/duplexSpec.js
Available in json-patch.js and json-patch-duplex.js
Applies patches array on obj.
If patch was succesfully applied, returns true. Otherwise returns false.
If there was a test patch in patches array, returns the result of the test.
If there was more than one patch in the array, the result of the last patch is returned.
Available in json-patch-duplex.js
Sets up an deep observer on obj that listens for changes in object tree. When changes are detected, the optional
callback is called with the generated patches array as the parameter.
Returns observer.
Available in json-patch-duplex.js
If there are pending changes in obj, returns them synchronously. If a callback was defined in observe
method, it will be triggered synchronously as well.
If there are no pending changes in obj, returns an empty array.
Available in json-patch-duplex.js
Destroys the observer set up on obj.
Any remaining changes are delivered synchronously (as in jsonpatch.generate). Note: this is different that ES6/7 Object.unobserve, which delivers remaining changes asynchronously.
Available in json-patch-duplex.js
Compares object trees obj1 and obj2 and returns the difference relative to obj1 as a patches array.
If there are no differences, returns an empty array.
To see the list of recent changes, see Releases.
