A minimalistic MessagePack encoder and decoder for JavaScript.
- Tiny Size (3.95 kB minified and gzipped)
- Fast performance
- Extension support
- No other bells or whistles
By default, msgpack can encode numbers, bigints, strings, booleans, nulls, arrays, objects, and binary data (Uint8Array in browsers, Buffer in Node.js). However, additional types can be registered by using extensions.
npm install --save tiny-msgpackconst msgpack = require('tiny-msgpack');
const uint8array = msgpack.encode({ foo: 'bar', baz: 123 });
const object = msgpack.decode(uint8array);for (const object of msgpack.decodeEach(uint8array)) {
console.log(object);
}You can encode 64-bit integers by using BigInt. Likewise, decoding a 64-bit integer will result in a BigInt. If BigInt is not supported on your platform, decoding a 64-bit integer will throw an exception.
const msgpack = require('tiny-msgpack');
function encodeDate(date) {
return msgpack.encode(Number(date));
}
function decodeDate(uint8array) {
return new Date(msgpack.decode(uint8array));
}
const codec = new msgpack.Codec();
codec.register(0xff, Date, encodeDate, decodeDate);
const uint8array = msgpack.encode({ timestamp: new Date() }, codec);
const object = msgpack.decode(uint8array, codec);
console.log(object.timestamp instanceof Date); // => trueIn the browser, tiny-msgpack requires the Encoding API, which is only supported by modern browsers. However, if you polyfill it, this package is supported by the following browsers:
- Chrome 9+
- Firefox 15+
- Safari 5.1+
- Opera 12.1+
- Internet Explorer 10+
In the MessagePack format, binary data is encoded as... binary data! To maximize performance, tiny-msgpack does not copy binary data when encoding or decoding it. So after decoding, the contents of a returned Uint8Array can be affected by modifying the input Uint8Array (the same can happen with encoding).