Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
This is the main public API of the store package. The functions exported here are more likely to be stable between versions.
Usually you won't need to write your own Store
instances, and
instead can rely on either using the Generic
deriving approach or
Data.Store.TH for defining Store
instances for your datatypes.
There are some tradeoffs here - the generics instances do not require
-XTemplateHaskell
, but they do not optimize as well for sum types
that only require a constant number of bytes.
- encode :: Store a => a -> ByteString
- decode :: Store a => ByteString -> Either PeekException a
- decodeWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> Either PeekException a
- decodeEx :: Store a => ByteString -> a
- decodeExWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> a
- decodeExPortionWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> (Offset, a)
- decodeIO :: Store a => ByteString -> IO a
- decodeIOWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> IO a
- decodeIOPortionWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> IO (Offset, a)
- class Store a where
- data Size a
- data Poke a :: * -> *
- data Peek a :: * -> *
- class GStoreSize f
- class GStorePoke f
- class GStorePeek f
- data PeekException :: * = PeekException {}
- peekException :: Text -> Peek a
Encoding and decoding strict ByteStrings.
encode :: Store a => a -> ByteString Source #
Serializes a value to a ByteString
. In order to do this, it
first allocates a ByteString
of the correct size (based on
size
), and then uses poke
to fill it.
Safety of this function depends on correctness of the Store
instance. If size
returns a. The good news is that this isn't an
issue if you use well-tested manual instances (such as those from
this package) combined with auomatic definition of instances.
decode :: Store a => ByteString -> Either PeekException a Source #
Decodes a value from a ByteString
. Returns an exception if
there's an error while decoding, or if decoding undershoots /
overshoots the end of the buffer.
decodeWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> Either PeekException a #
Decodes a value from a ByteString
, potentially throwing
exceptions, and taking a Peek
to run. It is an exception to not
consume all input.
decodeEx :: Store a => ByteString -> a Source #
Decodes a value from a ByteString
, potentially throwing
exceptions. It is an exception to not consume all input.
decodeExWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> a #
Decodes a value from a ByteString
, potentially throwing
exceptions, and taking a Peek
to run. It is an exception to not
consume all input.
decodeExPortionWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> (Offset, a) #
Similar to decodeExWith
, but it allows there to be more of the
buffer remaining. The Offset
of the buffer contents immediately
after the decoded value is returned.
decodeIO :: Store a => ByteString -> IO a Source #
Decodes a value from a ByteString
, potentially throwing
exceptions. It is an exception to not consume all input.
decodeIOWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> IO a #
Decodes a value from a ByteString
, potentially throwing
exceptions, and taking a Peek
to run. It is an exception to not
consume all input.
decodeIOPortionWith :: Peek a -> ByteString -> IO (Offset, a) #
Similar to decodeExPortionWith
, but runs in the IO
monad.
Store class and related types.
The Store
typeclass provides efficient serialization and
deserialization to raw pointer addresses.
The peek
and poke
methods should be defined such that
decodeEx (encode x) == x
.
Yields the Size
of the buffer, in bytes, required to store
the encoded representation of the type.
Note that the correctness of this function is crucial for the
safety of poke
, as it does not do any bounds checking. It is
the responsibility of the invoker of poke
(encode
and similar
functions) to ensure that there's enough space in the output
buffer. If poke
writes beyond, then arbitrary memory can be
overwritten, causing undefined behavior and segmentation faults.
Serializes a value to bytes. It is the responsibility of the
caller to ensure that at least the number of bytes required by
size
are available. These details are handled by encode
and
similar utilities.
Serialized a value from bytes, throwing exceptions if it encounters invalid data or runs out of input bytes.
size :: (Generic a, GStoreSize (Rep a)) => Size a Source #
Yields the Size
of the buffer, in bytes, required to store
the encoded representation of the type.
Note that the correctness of this function is crucial for the
safety of poke
, as it does not do any bounds checking. It is
the responsibility of the invoker of poke
(encode
and similar
functions) to ensure that there's enough space in the output
buffer. If poke
writes beyond, then arbitrary memory can be
overwritten, causing undefined behavior and segmentation faults.
poke :: (Generic a, GStorePoke (Rep a)) => a -> Poke () Source #
Serializes a value to bytes. It is the responsibility of the
caller to ensure that at least the number of bytes required by
size
are available. These details are handled by encode
and
similar utilities.
peek :: (Generic a, GStorePeek (Rep a)) => Peek a Source #
Serialized a value from bytes, throwing exceptions if it encounters invalid data or runs out of input bytes.
Store StoreVersion Source # | |
Store TypeHash Source # | |
(Store a, HasTypeHash a) => Store (Tagged a) Source # | |
KnownNat n => Store (StaticSize n ByteString) Source # | |
Info about a type's serialized length. Either the length is known independently of the value, or the length depends on the value.
Poke
actions are useful for building sequential serializers.
They are actions which write values to bytes into memory specified by
a Ptr
base. The Applicative
and Monad
instances make it easy to
write serializations, by keeping track of the Offset
of the current
byte. They allow you to chain Poke
action such that subsequent
Poke
s write into subsequent portions of the output.
Peek
actions are useful for building sequential deserializers.
They are actions which read from memory and construct values from it.
The Applicative
and Monad
instances make it easy to chain these
together to get more complicated deserializers. This machinery keeps
track of the current Ptr
and end-of-buffer Ptr
.
class GStoreSize f Source #
gsize
GStoreSize V1 Source # | |
GStoreSize U1 Source # | |
Store a => GStoreSize (K1 i a) Source # | |
((<=) (SumArity ((:+:) a b)) 255, GStoreSizeSum 0 ((:+:) a b)) => GStoreSize ((:+:) a b) Source # | |
(GStoreSize a, GStoreSize b) => GStoreSize ((:*:) a b) Source # | |
GStoreSize f => GStoreSize (M1 i c f) Source # | |
class GStorePoke f Source #
gpoke
GStorePoke V1 Source # | |
GStorePoke U1 Source # | |
Store a => GStorePoke (K1 i a) Source # | |
((<=) (SumArity ((:+:) a b)) 255, GStorePokeSum 0 ((:+:) a b)) => GStorePoke ((:+:) a b) Source # | |
(GStorePoke a, GStorePoke b) => GStorePoke ((:*:) a b) Source # | |
GStorePoke f => GStorePoke (M1 i c f) Source # | |
class GStorePeek f Source #
gpeek
GStorePeek V1 Source # | |
GStorePeek U1 Source # | |
Store a => GStorePeek (K1 i a) Source # | |
((<=) (SumArity ((:+:) a b)) 255, GStorePeekSum 0 ((:+:) a b)) => GStorePeek ((:+:) a b) Source # | |
(GStorePeek a, GStorePeek b) => GStorePeek ((:*:) a b) Source # | |
GStorePeek f => GStorePeek (M1 i c f) Source # | |
Exceptions thrown by Peek
data PeekException :: * #
Exception thrown while running peek
. Note that other types of
exceptions can also be thrown. Invocations of fail
in the Poke
monad causes this exception to be thrown.
PeekException
is thrown when the data being decoded is invalid.
peekException :: Text -> Peek a #
Throws a PeekException
.