$ gnpm install @iarna/toml
Better TOML parsing and stringifying all in that familiar JSON interface.
The most recent version as of 2019-04-21: 1.0.0-rc.1
1.0.0-rc.1 parsers can load almost any TOML 0.4 and TOML 0.5 document, but TOML 1.0.0-rc.1 docs are not always compatible with TOML 0.4 and TOML 0.5 parsers. If you're using this to generate TOML documents and you want an older parser to be able to read them you may want to use the latest TOML 0.5 version of this module.
const TOML = require('@iarna/toml')
const obj = TOML.parse(`[abc]
foo = 123
bar = [1,2,3]`)
/* obj =
{abc: {foo: 123, bar: [1,2,3]}}
*/
const str = TOML.stringify(obj)
/* str =
[abc]
foo = 123
bar = [ 1, 2, 3 ]
*/
Visit the project github for more examples!
@iarna/toml/parse-string
).> TOML.parse(src)
Error: Unexpected character, expecting string, number, datetime, boolean, inline array or inline table at row 6, col 5, pos 87:
5: "abc\"" = { abc=123,def="abc" }
6> foo=sdkfj
^
7:
Also available with: require('@iarna/toml/parse-string')
Synchronously parse a TOML string and return an object.
Also available with: require('@iarna/toml/stringify)
Serialize an object as TOML.
If an object TOML.stringify
is serializing has a toJSON
method then it
will call it to transform the object before serializing it. This matches
the behavior of JSON.stringify
.
The one exception to this is that toJSON
is not called for Date
objects
because JSON
represents dates as strings and TOML can represent them natively.
moment
objects are treated the
same as native Date
objects, in this respect.
Also available with: require('@iarna/toml/stringify').value
Serialize a value as TOML would. This is a fragment and not a complete valid TOML document.
The parser provides alternative async and streaming interfaces, for times that you're working with really absurdly big TOML files and don't want to tie-up the event loop while it parses.
Also available with: require('@iarna/toml/parse-async')
opts.blocksize
is the amount text to parser per pass through the event loop. Defaults to 40kb.
Asynchronously parse a TOML string and return a promise of the resulting object.
Also available with: require('@iarna/toml/parse-stream')
Given a readable stream, parse it as it feeds us data. Return a promise of the resulting object.
Also available with: require('@iarna/toml/parse-stream')
Returns a transform stream in object mode. When it completes, emit the resulting object. Only one object will ever be emitted.
You construct a parser object, per TOML file you want to process:
const TOMLParser = require('@iarna/toml/lib/toml-parser.js')
const parser = new TOMLParser()
Then you call the parse
method for each chunk as you read them, or in a
single call:
parser.parse(`hello = 'world'`)
And finally, you call the finish
method to complete parsing and retrieve
the resulting object.
const data = parser.finish()
Both the parse
method and finish
method will throw if they find a
problem with the string they were given. Error objects thrown from the
parser have pos
, line
and col
attributes. TOML.parse
adds a visual
summary of where in the source string there were issues using
parse-pretty-error
and you can too:
const prettyError = require('./parse-pretty-error.js')
const newErr = prettyError(err, sourceString)
Version 3 of this module supports TOML 1.0.0-rc.1. Please see the CHANGELOG for details on exactly whats changed.
-nan
is a valid TOML value and is converted into NaN
. There is no way to
produce -nan
when stringifying. Stringification will produce positive nan
.isFloating
, isDate
, isTime
properties) and that
their ISO representation (via toISOString
) are representative of their
TOML value. They will correctly round trip if you pass them to
TOML.stringify
.I write a by hand, honest-to-god, CHANGELOG for this project. It's a description of what went into a release that you the consumer of the module could care about, not a list of git commits, so please check it out!
You can run them yourself with:
$ npm run benchmark
The results below are from my desktop using Node 13.13.0. The library
versions tested were @iarna/toml@3.0.0
, toml-j0.4@1.1.1
, toml@3.0.0
,
@sgarciac/bombadil@2.3.0
, @ltd/j-toml@0.5.107
, and fast-toml@0.5.4
.
The speed value is megabytes-per-second that the parser can process of that
document type. Bigger is better. The percentage after average results is
the margin of error.
New here is fast-toml. fast-toml is very fast, for some datatypes, but it also is missing most error checking demanded by the spec. For 0.4, it is complete except for detail of multiline strings caught by the compliance tests. Its support for 0.5 is incomplete. Check out the spec compliance doc for details.
As this table is getting a little wide, with how npm and github display it, you can also view it seperately in the BENCHMARK document.
@iarna/<wbr>toml | toml-j0.4 | toml | @sgarciac/<wbr>bombadil | @ltd/<wbr>j-toml | fast-toml | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overall | 28MB/sec 0.55% |
- | - | - | - | - |
01-small-doc-mixed-type-inline-array | 5.3MB/sec 0.48% |
- | - | - | - | 12MB/sec 0.13% |
Spec Example: v0.4.0 | 25MB/sec 0.40% |
9.9MB/sec 0.15% |
0.9MB/sec 0.37% |
1.3MB/sec 1.02% |
28MB/sec 0.33% |
- |
Spec Example: Hard Unicode | 63MB/sec 0.47% |
17MB/sec 0.21% |
2MB/sec 0.25% |
0.6MB/sec 0.47% |
65MB/sec 0.27% |
79MB/sec 0.09% |
Types: Array, Inline | 7.2MB/sec 0.53% |
4.1MB/sec 0.09% |
0.1MB/sec 0.69% |
1.4MB/sec 0.86% |
10MB/sec 0.33% |
9MB/sec 0.16% |
Types: Array | 6.8MB/sec 0.09% |
6.8MB/sec 0.20% |
0.2MB/sec 0.81% |
1.3MB/sec 0.82% |
8.9MB/sec 0.36% |
29MB/sec 0.16% |
Types: Boolean, | 20MB/sec 0.22% |
9.3MB/sec 0.29% |
0.2MB/sec 0.91% |
1.9MB/sec 0.85% |
16MB/sec 0.29% |
8.6MB/sec 0.22% |
Types: Datetime | 17MB/sec 0.09% |
11MB/sec 0.17% |
0.3MB/sec 0.75% |
1.6MB/sec 0.42% |
9.8MB/sec 0.40% |
6.5MB/sec 0.11% |
Types: Float | 8.5MB/sec 0.29% |
5.8MB/sec 0.33% |
0.2MB/sec 0.91% |
2.2MB/sec 0.91% |
14MB/sec 0.25% |
7.9MB/sec 0.33% |
Types: Int | 5.8MB/sec 0.13% |
4.5MB/sec 0.14% |
0.1MB/sec 0.63% |
1.5MB/sec 0.73% |
9.8MB/sec 0.14% |
8.1MB/sec 0.16% |
Types: Literal String, 7 char | 25MB/sec 0.15% |
8.3MB/sec 0.38% |
0.2MB/sec 0.71% |
2.3MB/sec 1.04% |
23MB/sec 0.28% |
14MB/sec 0.21% |
Types: Literal String, 92 char | 44MB/sec 0.23% |
12MB/sec 0.14% |
0.3MB/sec 0.63% |
13MB/sec 1.12% |
100MB/sec 0.14% |
77MB/sec 0.15% |
Types: Literal String, Multiline, 1079 char | 23MB/sec 0.35% |
7.2MB/sec 0.34% |
0.9MB/sec 0.86% |
47MB/sec 1.07% |
380MB/sec 0.13% |
641MB/sec 0.14% |
Types: Basic String, 7 char | 25MB/sec 0.09% |
7MB/sec 0.08% |
0.2MB/sec 0.82% |
2.3MB/sec 1.02% |
15MB/sec 0.12% |
13MB/sec 0.14% |
Types: Basic String, 92 char | 44MB/sec 0.15% |
8MB/sec 0.39% |
0.1MB/sec 1.52% |
12MB/sec 1.53% |
70MB/sec 0.17% |
71MB/sec 0.16% |
Types: Basic String, 1079 char | 24MB/sec 0.36% |
5.7MB/sec 0.12% |
0.1MB/sec 3.65% |
42MB/sec 1.67% |
93MB/sec 0.13% |
617MB/sec 0.14% |
Types: Table, Inline | 9.4MB/sec 0.21% |
5.2MB/sec 0.23% |
0.1MB/sec 1.18% |
1.4MB/sec 1.20% |
8.5MB/sec 0.68% |
8.7MB/sec 0.30% |
Types: Table | 6.8MB/sec 0.13% |
5.5MB/sec 0.22% |
0.1MB/sec 1.10% |
1.5MB/sec 1.05% |
7.3MB/sec 0.54% |
19MB/sec 0.21% |
Scaling: Array, Inline, 1000 elements | 40MB/sec 0.27% |
2.4MB/sec 0.20% |
0.1MB/sec 1.90% |
1.6MB/sec 1.14% |
18MB/sec 0.16% |
32MB/sec 0.12% |
Scaling: Array, Nested, 1000 deep | 2MB/sec 0.17% |
1.6MB/sec 0.09% |
0.3MB/sec 0.62% |
- | 1.8MB/sec 0.80% |
13MB/sec 0.19% |
Scaling: Literal String, 40kb | 59MB/sec 0.26% |
10MB/sec 0.14% |
3MB/sec 0.91% |
13MB/sec 0.40% |
479MB/sec 0.25% |
19kMB/sec 0.20% |
Scaling: Literal String, Multiline, 40kb | 61MB/sec 0.23% |
5.3MB/sec 0.30% |
0.2MB/sec 1.78% |
12MB/sec 0.55% |
276MB/sec 0.16% |
21kMB/sec 0.10% |
Scaling: Basic String, Multiline, 40kb | 61MB/sec 0.21% |
6MB/sec 0.40% |
2.8MB/sec 0.75% |
12MB/sec 0.60% |
1kMB/sec 0.13% |
27kMB/sec 0.14% |
Scaling: Basic String, 40kb | 60MB/sec 0.13% |
6.6MB/sec 0.13% |
0.2MB/sec 1.67% |
13MB/sec 0.30% |
504MB/sec 0.26% |
19kMB/sec 0.22% |
Scaling: Table, Inline, 1000 elements | 26MB/sec 0.17% |
7.3MB/sec 0.83% |
0.3MB/sec 0.95% |
2.5MB/sec 1.24% |
5.4MB/sec 0.22% |
13MB/sec 0.22% |
Scaling: Table, Inline, Nested, 1000 deep | 8MB/sec 0.10% |
5.2MB/sec 0.25% |
0.1MB/sec 0.45% |
- | 3.1MB/sec 0.58% |
10MB/sec 0.19% |
The test suite is maintained at 100% coverage:
The spec was carefully hand converted into a series of test framework independent (and mostly language independent) assertions, as pairs of TOML and YAML files. You can find those files here: spec-test.
Further tests were written to increase coverage to 100%, these may be more implementation specific, but they can be found in coverage and coverage-error.
I've also written some quality assurance style tests, which don't contribute to coverage but do cover scenarios that could easily be problematic for some implementations can be found in: test/qa.js and test/qa-error.js.
All of the official example files from the TOML spec are run through this parser and compared to the official YAML files when available. These files are from the TOML spec as of: 357a4ba6 and specifically are:
The stringifier is tested by round-tripping these same files, asserting that
TOML.parse(sourcefile)
deepEqual
TOML.parse(TOML.stringify(TOML.parse(sourcefile))
. This is done in
test/roundtrip-examples.js
There are also some tests written to complete coverage from stringification in:
test/stringify.js
Tests for the async and streaming interfaces are in test/async.js and test/stream.js respectively.
Tests for the parser's debugging mode live in test/devel.js.
And finally, many more stringification tests were borrowed from @othiym23's toml-stream module. They were fetched as of b6f1e26b572d49742d49fa6a6d11524d003441fa and live in test/toml-stream.
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