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Definitely Fastest and Zero Allocation JSON Serializer for C#(NET, .NET Core, Unity, Xamarin).

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Utf8Json - Fast JSON Serializer for C#

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Definitely Fastest and Zero Allocation JSON Serializer for C#(.NET, .NET Core, Unity and Xamarin), this serializer write/read directly to UTF8 binary so boostup performance. And I adopt the same architecture as the fastest binary serializer, MessagePack for C# that I've developed.

image

This benchmark is convert object to UTF8 and UTF8 to object benchmark. It is not to string(.NET UTF16), so Jil, NetJSON and Json.NET contains additional UTF8.GetBytes/UTF8.GetString call. Definitely means does not exists encoding/decoding cost. Benchmark code is in sandbox/PerfBenchmark by BenchmarkDotNet.

I've tested more benchmark - Benchmark of Jil vs Utf8Json for test many dataset patterns(borrwed from Jil Benchmark) and three input/output compare(Object <-> byte[](Utf8), Object <-> Stream(Utf8) and Object <-> String(UTF16)). If target is UTF8(both byte[] and Stream), Utf8Json wins and memory allocated is extremely small.

Utf8Json does not beat MessagePack for C#(binary), but shows a similar memory consumption(there is no additional memory allocation) and achieves higher performance than other JSON serializers.

The crucial difference is that read and write directly to UTF8 binaries means that there is no overhead. Normaly serialization requires serialize to Stream or byte[], it requires additional UTF8.GetBytes cost or StreamReader/Writer overhead(it is very slow!).

TargetClass obj1;

// Object to UTF8 byte[]
[Benchmark]
public byte[] Utf8JsonSerializer()
{
    return Utf8Json.JsonSerializer.Serialize(obj1, jsonresolver);
}

// Object to String to UTF8 byte[]
[Benchmark]
public byte[] Jil()
{
    return utf8.GetBytes(global::Jil.JSON.Serialize(obj1));
}

// Object to Stream with StreamWriter
[Benchmark]
public void JilTextWriter()
{
    using (var ms = new MemoryStream())
    using (var sw = new StreamWriter(ms, utf8))
    {
        global::Jil.JSON.Serialize(obj1, sw);
    }
}

For example, the OutputFormatter of ASP.NET Core needs to write to Body(Stream), but using Jil's TextWriter overload is slow. (This not means Jil is slow, for example StreamWriter allocate many memory(char[1024] and byte[3075]) on constructor (streamwriter.cs#L203-L204) and other slow features unfortunately).

// ASP.NET Core, OutputFormatter
public class JsonOutputFormatter : IOutputFormatter //, IApiResponseTypeMetadataProvider
{
    const string ContentType = "application/json";
    static readonly string[] SupportedContentTypes = new[] { ContentType };

    public Task WriteAsync(OutputFormatterWriteContext context)
    {
        context.HttpContext.Response.ContentType = ContentType;

        // Jil, normaly JSON Serializer requires serialize to Stream or byte[].
        using (var writer = new StreamWriter(context.HttpContext.Response.Body))
        {
            Jil.JSON.Serialize(context.Object, writer, _options);
            writer.Flush();
            return Task.CompletedTask;
        }

        // Utf8Json
        // Utf8Json.JsonSerializer.NonGeneric.Serialize(context.ObjectType, context.HttpContext.Response.Body, context.Object, resolver);
    }
}

The approach of directly write/read from JSON binary is similar to corefxlab/System.Text.Json and corefxlab/System.Text.Formatting. But it is not yet finished and not be general serializer.

Corefxlab has UTF8String and C# discussing UTF8String Constants but maybe it is far future.

Install and QuickStart

The library provides in NuGet except for Unity. Standard library availables for .NET Framework 4.5 and .NET Standard 2.0.

Install-Package Utf8Json

And official Extension Packages for support other library(ImmutableCollection) or binding for framework(ASP.NET Core MVC).

Install-Package Utf8Json.ImmutableCollection
Install-Package Utf8Json.UnityShims
Install-Package Utf8Json.AspNetCoreMvcFormatter

NuGet page links - Utf8Json, Utf8Json.ImmutableCollection, Utf8Json.UnityShims, Utf8Json.AspNetCoreMvcFormatter

for Unity, you can download from releases page. There providing .unitypackage. Unity support details, see Unity section.

You can find third-party extension package like Utf8Json.FSharpExtensions for F# types, NServiceBus.Utf8Json or others.

QuickStart, you can call Utf8Json.JsonSerializer.Serialize/Deserialize.

var p = new Person { Age = 99, Name = "foobar" };

// Object -> byte[] (UTF8)
byte[] result = JsonSerializer.Serialize(p);

// byte[] -> Object
var p2 = JsonSerializer.Deserialize<Person>(result);

// Object -> String
var json = JsonSerializer.ToJsonString(p2);

// Write to Stream
JsonSerializer.Serialize(stream, p2);

In default, you can serialize all public members. You can customize serialize to private, exclude null, change DateTime format(default is ISO8601), enum handling, etc. see the Resolver section.

Performance of Serialize

This image is what code is generated when object serializing.

image

// Disassemble generated serializer code.
public sealed class PersonFormatter : IJsonFormatter<Person>
{
    private readonly byte[][] stringByteKeys;
    
    public PersonFormatter()
    {
        // pre-encoded escaped string byte with "{", ":" and ",".
        this.stringByteKeys = new byte[][]
        {
            JsonWriter.GetEncodedPropertyNameWithBeginObject("Age"), // {\"Age\":
            JsonWriter.GetEncodedPropertyNameWithPrefixValueSeparator("Name") // ,\"Name\":
        };
    }

    public sealed Serialize(ref JsonWriter writer, Person person, IJsonFormatterResolver jsonFormatterResolver)
    {
        if (person == null) { writer.WriteNull(); return; }

        // WriteRawX is optimize byte->byte copy when we know src size.
        UnsafeMemory64.WriteRaw7(ref writer, this.stringByteKeys[0]);
        writer.WriteInt32(person.Age); // itoa write directly to avoid ToString + UTF8 encode
        UnsafeMemory64.WriteRaw8(ref writer, this.stringByteKeys[1]);
        writer.WriteString(person.Name);

        writer.WriteEndObject();
    }

    // public unsafe Person Deserialize(ref JsonReader reader, IJsonFormatterResolver jsonFormatterResolver)
}

Object to JSON's main serialization cost is write property name. Utf8Json create cache at first and after that only do memory copy. Optimize part1, concatenate "{", ":" and "." to cached propertyname. Optimize part2, use optimized custom memory copy method(see: UnsafeMemory.cs). Normally memory copy is used Buffer.BlockCopy but it has some overhead when target binary is small enough, releated to dotnet/coreclr - issue #9786 Optimize Buffer.MemoryCopy and dotnet/coreclr - Add a fast path for byte[] to Buffer.BlockCopy #3118. Utf8Json don't use Buffer.BlockCopy and generates length specialized copy code that can reduce branch cost.

Number conversion is often high cost. If target encoding is UTF8 only, we can use itoa algorithm so avoid int.ToString and UTF8 encode cost. Especialy double-conversion, Utf8Json ported google/double-conversion algorithm, it is fast dtoa and atod works.

Other optimize techniques.

  • High-level API uses internal memory pool, don't allocate working memory under 64K
  • Struct JsonWriter does not allocate any more and write underlying byte[] directly, don't use TextWriter
  • Avoid boxing all codes, all platforms(include Unity/IL2CPP)
  • Heavyly tuned dynamic IL code generation, it generates per option so reduce option check: see:DynamicObjectResolver.cs
  • Call Primitive API directly when IL code generation knows target is primitive
  • Getting cached generated formatter on static generic field(don't use dictionary-cache because lookup is overhead)
  • Don't use IEnumerable<T> abstraction on iterate collection, specialized each collection types, see:CollectionFormatter.cs
  • Uses optimized type key dictionary for non-generic methods, see: ThreadsafeTypeKeyHashTable.cs

Performance of Deserialize

When deserializing, requires property name to target member name matching. Utf8Json avoid string key decode for matching, generate automata based IL inlining code.

image

use raw byte[] slice and try to match each ulong type (per 8 character, if it is not enough, pad with 0).

// Disassemble generated serializer code.
public sealed class PersonFormatter : IJsonFormatter<Person>
{
    // public sealed Serialize(ref JsonWriter writer, Person person, IJsonFormatterResolver jsonFormatterResolver)

    public unsafe Person Deserialize(ref JsonReader reader, IJsonFormatterResolver jsonFormatterResolver)
    {
        if (reader.ReadIsNull()) return null;
        
        reader.ReadIsBeginObjectWithVerify(); // "{"
        
        byte[] bufferUnsafe = reader.GetBufferUnsafe();
        int age;
        string name;
        fixed (byte* ptr2 = &bufferUnsafe[0])
        {
            int num;
            while (!reader.ReadIsEndObjectWithSkipValueSeparator(ref num)) // "}" or ","
            {
                // don't decode string, get raw slice
                ArraySegment<byte> arraySegment = reader.ReadPropertyNameSegmentRaw();
                byte* ptr3 = ptr2 + arraySegment.Offset;
                int count = arraySegment.Count;
                if (count != 0)
                {
                    // match automata per long
                    ulong key = AutomataKeyGen.GetKey(ref ptr3, ref count);
                    if (count == 0)
                    {
                        if (key == 6645569uL)
                        {
                            age = reader.ReadInt32(); // atoi read directly to avoid GetString + int.Parse
                            continue;
                        }
                        if (key == 1701667150uL)
                        {
                            name = reader.ReadString();
                            continue;
                        }
                    }
                }
                reader.ReadNextBlock();
            }
        }

        return new PersonSample
        {
            Age = age,
            Name = name
        };
    }
}

Of course number conversion(decode to string -> try parse) is high cost. Utf8Json directly convert byte[] to number by atoi/atod algorithm.

Built-in support types

These types can serialize by default.

Primitives(int, string, etc...), Enum, Nullable<>, TimeSpan, DateTime, DateTimeOffset, Guid, Uri, Version, StringBuilder, BitArray, Type, ArraySegment<>, BigInteger, Complext, ExpandoObject , Task, Array[], Array[,], Array[,,], Array[,,,], KeyValuePair<,>, Tuple<,...>, ValueTuple<,...>, List<>, LinkedList<>, Queue<>, Stack<>, HashSet<>, ReadOnlyCollection<>, IList<>, ICollection<>, IEnumerable<>, Dictionary<,>, IDictionary<,>, SortedDictionary<,>, SortedList<,>, ILookup<,>, IGrouping<,>, ObservableCollection<>, ReadOnlyOnservableCollection<>, IReadOnlyList<>, IReadOnlyCollection<>, ISet<>, ConcurrentBag<>, ConcurrentQueue<>, ConcurrentStack<>, ReadOnlyDictionary<,>, IReadOnlyDictionary<,>, ConcurrentDictionary<,>, Lazy<>, Task<>, custom inherited ICollection<> or IDictionary<,> with paramterless constructor, IEnumerable, ICollection, IList, IDictionary and custom inherited ICollection or IDictionary with paramterless constructor(includes ArrayList and Hashtable), Exception and inherited exception types(serialize only) and your own class or struct(includes anonymous type).

Utf8Json has sufficient extensiblity. You can add custom type support and has some official/third-party extension package. for example ImmutableCollections(ImmutableList<>, etc), Utf8Json.FSharpExtensions(FSharpOption, FSharpList, etc...). Please see extensions section.

Object Serialization

Utf8Json can serialze your own public Class or Struct. In default, serializer search all public instance member(field or property) and uses there member name as json property name. If you want to avoid serialization target, you can use [IgnoreDataMember] attribute of System.Runtime.Serialization to target member. If you want to change property name, you can use [DataMember(Name = string)] attribute of System.Runtime.Serialization.

// JsonSerializer.Serialize(new FooBar { FooProperty = 99, BarProperty = "BAR" });
// Result : {"foo":99}
public class FooBar
{
    [DataMember(Name = "foo")]
    public int FooProperty { get; set; }

    [IgnoreDataMember]
    public string BarProperty { get; set; }
}

Utf8Json has other option, allows private/internal member serialization, convert property name to camelCalse/snake_case, if value is null does not create property. Or you can use a different DateTime format(default is ISO8601). The details, please read Resolver section. Here is sample.

// default serializer change to allow private/exclude null/snake_case serializer.
JsonSerializer.SetDefaultResolver(StandardResolver.AllowPrivateExcludeNullSnakeCase);

var json = JsonSerializer.ToJsonString(new Person { Age = 23, FirstName = null, LastName = "Foo" });

// {"age":23,"last_name":"Foo"}
Console.WriteLine(json);

Serialize ImmutableObject(SerializationConstructor)

Utf8Json can deserialize immutable object like this.

public struct CustomPoint
{
    public readonly int X;
    public readonly int Y;

    public CustomPoint(int x, int y)
    {
        this.X = x;
        this.Y = y;
    }
}

Utf8Json choose constructor with the most matched argument by name(ignore case).

MessagePack for C# choose least matched argument, please be aware of the opposite. This is design miss of MessagePack for C#.

If can not match automatically, you can specify to use constructor manually by [SerializationConstructorAttribute].

public class CustomPoint
{
    public readonly int X;
    public readonly int Y;

    public CustomPoint(int x, int y)
    {
        this.X = x;
        this.Y = y;
    }

    // used this constructor.
    [SerializationConstructor]
    public CustomPoint(int x)
    {
        this.X = x;
    }
}

ShouldSerializeXXX pattern

UtfJson supports ShouldSerialize feature of Json.NET. If defined public bool ShouldMemberName() method, call method before serialize member value and if false does not output member.

public class MyPerson
{
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public string[] Addresses { get; set; }

    // ShouldSerialize*membername**
    // method must be `public` and return `bool` and parameter less.
    public bool ShouldSerializeAddresses()
    {
        if (Addresses != null && Addresses.Length != 0)
        {
            return true;
        }
        else
        {
            return false;
        }
    }
}

--

// {"Name":"foo"}
JsonSerializer.ToJsonString(new MyPerson { Name = "foo", Addresses = new string[0] });
        
// {"Name":"bar","Addresses":["tokyo","kyoto"]}
JsonSerializer.ToJsonString(new MyPerson { Name = "bar", Addresses = new[] { "tokyo", "kyoto" } });

Dynamic Deserialization

If use JsonSerializer.Deserialize or JsonSerializer.Deserialize, convert json to bool, double, string, IDictionary<string, object>, List<object>.

// dynamic json deserialize
var json = JsonSerializer.Deserialize<dynamic>(@"{""foo"":""json"",""bar"":100,""nest"":{""foobar"":true}}");

var r1 = json["foo"]; // "json" - dynamic(string)
var r2 = json["bar"]; // 100 - dynamic(double), it can cast to int or other number.
var r3 = json["nest"]["foobar"]; // true

If target is object, you access by string indexer.

JSON Comments

JSON Comments is invalid JSON Format but used widely(for example, VSCode - settings.json) and also supports JSON.NET. Utf8Json suports both single-line comment and multi-line comment.

{
    // allow single line comment
    "foo": true, // trailing
    /*
      allow
      multi
      line
      comment
    */
    "bar": 999 /* trailing */
}

Encoding

Utf8Json only supports UTF-8 but it is valid on latest JSON Spec - RFC8259 The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format, DECEMBER 2017.

It mentions about encoding.

8.1. Character Encoding JSON text exchanged between systems that are not part of a closed ecosystem MUST be encoded using UTF-8 [RFC3629].

Previous specifications of JSON have not required the use of UTF-8 when transmitting JSON text. However, the vast majority of JSON based software implementations have chosen to use the UTF-8 encoding, to the extent that it is the only encoding that achieves interoperability.

Which serializer should be used

The performance of binary(protobuf, msgpack, avro, etc...) vs text(json, xml, yaml, etc...) depends on the implementation. However, binary has advantage basically. Utf8Json write directly to byte[] it is close to the binary serializer. But especialy double is still slower than binary write(Utf8Json uses google/double-conversion algorithm, it is good but there are many processes, it can not be the fastest), write string requires escape and large payload must pay copy cost.

I recommend use MessagePack for C# for general use serializer, C# to C#, C# to NoSQL, Save to File, communicate internal cross platform(multi-language), etc. MessagePack for C# has many options(Union ,Typeless, Compression) and definitely fastest.

But JSON is still better on web, for public Web API, send for JavaScript and easy to integrate between multi-language communication. For example, use Utf8Json for Web API formatter and use MessagePack for C# for Redis. It is perfect.

For that reason Utf8Json is focusing performance and cross-platform compatibility. I don't implement original format(like Union, Typeless, Cyclic-Reference) if you want to use it should be use binary serializer. But customizability for serialize/deserialize JSON is important for cross-platform communication. IJsonFormatterResolver can serialize/deserialize all patterns and you can create own pattern.

High-Level API(JsonSerializer)

JsonSerializer is the entry point of Utf8Json. Its static methods are main API of Utf8Json.

API Description
DefaultResolver FormatterResolver that used resolver less overloads. If does not set it, used StandardResolver.Default.
SetDefaultResolver Set default resolver of JsonSerializer APIs.
Serialize<T> Convert object to byte[] or write to stream. There has IJsonFormatterResolver overload, used specified resolver.
SerializeUnsafe<T> Same as Serialize<T> but return ArraySegement<byte>. The result of ArraySegment is contains internal buffer pool, it can not share across thread and can not hold, so use quickly.
SerializeAsync<T> Convert object to byte[] and write to stream async.
ToJsonString<T> Convert object to string.
Deserialize<T> Convert byte[] or ArraySegment<byte> or stream to object. There has IFormatterResolver overload, used specified resolver.
DeserializeAsync<T> Convert stream(read async to buffer byte[]) to object.
PrettyPrint Output indented json string.
PrettyPrintByteArray Output indented json string(UTF8 byte[]).
NonGeneric.* NonGeneric APIs of Serialize/Deserialize. There accept type parameter at first argument. This API is bit slower than generic API but useful for framework integration such as ASP.NET formatter.

Utf8Json operates at the byte[] level, so Deserialize<T>(Stream) read to end at first, it is not truly streaming deserialize.

High-Level API uses memory pool internaly to avoid unnecessary memory allocation. If result size is under 64K, allocates GC memory only for the return bytes.

Low-Level API(IJsonFormatter)

IJsonFormatter is serializer by each type. For example Int32Formatter : IJsonFormatter<Int32> represents Int32 JSON serializer.

public interface IJsonFormatter<T> : IJsonFormatter
{
    void Serialize(ref JsonWriter writer, T value, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver);
    T Deserialize(ref JsonReader reader, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver);
}

Many builtin formatters exists under Utf8Json.Formatters. You can get sub type serializer by formatterResolver.GetFormatter<T>. Here is sample of write own formatter.

// serialize fileinfo as string fullpath.
public class FileInfoFormatter<T> : IJsonFormatter<FileInfo>
{
    public void Serialize(ref JsonWriter writer, FileInfo value, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver)
    {
        if (value == null) { writer.WriteNull(); return; }

        // if target type is primitive, you can also use writer.Write***.
        formatterResolver.GetFormatterWithVerify<string>().Serialize(ref writer, value.FullName, formatterResolver);
    }

    public FileInfo Deserialize(ref JsonReader reader, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver)
    {
        if (reader.ReadIsNull()) return null;

        // if target type is primitive, you can also use reader.Read***.
        var path = formatterResolver.GetFormatterWithVerify<string>().Deserialize(ref reader, formatterResolver);
        return new FileInfo(path);
    }
}

Created formatter needs to register to IFormatterResolver. Please see Resolver section.

You can see many other samples from builtin formatters.

If target type requires support dictionary key, you need to implements IObjectPropertyNameFormatter<T>, too.

Primitive API(JsonReader/JsonWriter)

JsonReader and JsonWriter is most low-level API. It is mutable struct so it must pass by ref and must does not store to field. C# 7.2 supports ref-like types(see: csharp-7.2/span-safety.md) and readonly-ref(see: csharp-7.2/Readonly references) but not yet implements in C#, be careful to use.

JsonReader and JsonWriter is too primitive(performance reason), slightly odd. Internal state manages only int offset. You should manage other state(in array, in object...) manualy in outer.

JsonReader

Method Description
AdvanceOffset Advance offset manually.
SkipWhiteSpace Skip whitespace.
ReadNext Skip JSON token.
ReadNextBlock Skip JSON token with sub structures(array/object). This is useful for create deserializer.
ReadNextBlockSegment Read next block and returns there array-segment.
ReadIsNull If is null return true.
ReadIsBeginArray If is '[' return true.
ReadIsBeginArrayWithVerify If is '[' return true.
ReadIsEndArray If is ']' return true.
ReadIsEndArrayWithVerify If is not ']' throws exception.
ReadIsEndArrayWithSkipValueSeparator check reached ']' or advance ',' when (ref int count) is not zero.
ReadIsInArray Convinient pattern of ReadIsBeginArrayWithVerify + while(!ReadIsEndArrayWithSkipValueSeparator)
ReadIsBeginObject If is '{' return true.
ReadIsBeginObjectWithVerify If is not '{' throws exception.
ReadIsEndObject If is '}' return true.
ReadIsEndObjectWithVerify If is not '}' throws exception.
ReadIsEndObjectWithSkipValueSeparator check reached '}' or advance ',' when (ref int count) is not zero.
ReadIsInObject Convinient pattern of ReadIsBeginObjectWithVerify + while(!ReadIsEndObjectWithSkipValueSeparator).
ReadIsValueSeparator If is ',' return true.
ReadIsValueSeparatorWithVerify If is not ',' throws exception.
ReadIsNameSeparator If is ':' return true.
ReadIsNameSeparatorWithVerify If is not ':' throws exception.
ReadString ReadString, unescaped.
ReadStringSegmentUnsafe ReadString block but does not decode string. Return buffer is in internal buffer pool, be careful to use.
ReadNumberSegment Read number as buffer slice.
ReadPropertyName ReadString + ReadIsNameSeparatorWithVerify.
ReadPropertyNameSegmentRaw Get raw string-span(do not unescape) + ReadIsNameSeparatorWithVerify.
ReadBoolean ReadBoolean.
ReadSByte atoi.
ReadInt16 atoi.
ReadInt32 atoi.
ReadInt64 atoi.
ReadByte atoi.
ReadUInt16 atoi.
ReadUInt32 atoi.
ReadUInt64 atoi.
ReadUInt16 atoi.
ReadSingle atod.
ReadDouble atod.
GetBufferUnsafe return underlying buffer.
GetCurrentOffsetUnsafe return underlying offset.
GetCurrentJsonToken Get current token(skip whitespace), do not advance.

Read*** methods advance next token when called. JsonReader reads utf8 byte[] to primitive directly.

How to use, see the List formatter.

// JsonReader is struct, always pass ref and do not set local variable.
public List<T> Deserialize(ref JsonReader reader, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver)
{
    // check current state is null. when null, advanced offset. if not, do not.
    if (reader.ReadIsNull()) return null;

    var formatter = formatterResolver.GetFormatterWithVerify<T>();
    var list = new List<T>();

    var count = 0; // managing array-count state in outer(this is count, not index(index is always count - 1)

    // loop helper for Array or Object, you can use ReadIsInArray/ReadIsInObject.
    while (reader.ReadIsInArray(ref count)) // read '[' or ',' when until reached ']'
    {
        list.Add(formatter.Deserialize(ref reader, formatterResolver));
    }

    return list;
}

JsonWriter

Method Description
static GetEncodedPropertyName Get JSON Encoded byte[].
static GetEncodedPropertyNameWithPrefixValueSeparator Get JSON Encoded byte[] with ',' on prefix.
static GetEncodedPropertyNameWithBeginObject Get JSON Encoded byte[] with '{' on prefix.
static GetEncodedPropertyNameWithoutQuotation Get JSON Encoded byte[] without pre/post '"'.
CurrentOffset Get current offset.
AdvanceOffset Advance offset manually.
GetBuffer Get current buffer.
ToUtf8ByteArray Finish current buffer to byte[].
ToString Finish current buffer to json stirng.
EnsureCapacity Ensure inner buffer capacity.
WriteRaw Write byte/byte[] directly.
WriteRawUnsafe WriteRaw but don't check and ensure capacity.
WriteBeginArray Write '['.
WriteEndArray Write ']'.
WriteBeginObject Write '{'.
WriteEndObject Write '}'.
WriteValueSeparator Write ','.
WriteNameSeparator Write ':'.
WritePropertyName WriteString + WriteNameSeparator.
WriteQuotation Write '"'.
WriteNull Write 'null'.
WriteBoolean Write 'true' or 'false'.
WriteTrue Write 'true'.
WriteFalse Write 'false'.
WriteSByte itoa.
WriteInt16 itoa.
WriteInt32 itoa.
WriteInt64 itoa.
WriteByte itoa.
WriteUInt16 itoa.
WriteUInt32 itoa.
WriteUInt64 itoa.
WriteUInt16 itoa.
WriteSingle dtoa.
WriteDouble dtoa.

GetBuffer, ToUtf8ByteArray, ToString get the wrote result. JsonWriter writes primitive to utf8 bytes directly.

How to use, see the List formatter.

// JsonWriter is struct, always pass ref and do not set local variable.
public void Serialize(ref JsonWriter writer, List<T> value, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver)
{
    if (value == null) { writer.WriteNull(); return; }

    var formatter = formatterResolver.GetFormatterWithVerify<T>();

    writer.WriteBeginArray(); // "["
    if (value.Count != 0)
    {
        formatter.Serialize(ref writer, value[0], formatterResolver);
    }
    for (int i = 1; i < value.Count; i++)
    {
        writer.WriteValueSeparator(); // write "," manually
        formatter.Serialize(ref writer, value[i], formatterResolver);
    }
    writer.WriteEndArray(); // "]"
}

How to write complex type formatter, you can refer KeyValuePairFormatter, it caches string table for serialize and automata dictionary for deserialize in outer helper class. How to add the custom formatter to custom resolver, you can see DynamicGenericResolver for generic formatter, BuiltinResolver for nongeneric formatter.

Resolver

IJsonFormatterResolver is storage of typed serializers. Serializer api accepts resolver and can customize serialization.

Resovler Name Description
BuiltinResolver Builtin primitive and standard classes resolver. It includes primitive(int, bool, string...) and there nullable, array and list. and some extra builtin types(Guid, Uri, BigInteger, etc...).
DynamicGenericResolver Resolver of generic type(Tuple<>, List<>, Dictionary<,>, Array, etc). It uses reflection call for resolve generic argument at first time.
AttributeFormatterResolver Get formatter from [JsonFormatter] attribute.
EnumResolver EnumResolver.Default serialize as name, EnumResolver.UnderlyingValue serialize as underlying value. Deserialize, can be both.
StandardResolver Composited resolver. It resolves in the following order object fallback -> (builtin -> enum -> dynamic generic -> attribute -> dynamic object). StandardResolver.Default is default resolver of JsonSerialzier and has many option resolvers, see below.
CompositeResolver Singleton custom composite resolver.

StandardResolver has 12 option resolvers it combinate

  • AllowPrivate = true/false
  • ExcludeNull = true/false
  • NameMutate = Original/CamelCase/SnakeCase.

for example StandardResolver.SnakeCase, StandardResolver.ExcludeNullCamelCase, StandardResolver.AllowPrivateExcludeNullSnakeCase. StandardResolver.Default is AllowPrivate:False, ExcludeNull:False, NameMutate:Original.

If AllowPrivate = true and does not match any constructor, deserializer uses FormatterServices.GetUninitializedObject to create new instance so AllowPrivate = true can deserialize all concrete types.

Assemble the resolver's priority is the only configuration point of Utf8Json. It is too simple but well works. In most cases, it is sufficient to have one custom resolver globally. CompositeResolver will be its helper. It is also necessary to use extension resolver like Utf8Json.ImmutableCollection that add support for for System.Collections.Immutable library. It adds ImmutableArray<>, ImmutableList<>, ImmutableDictionary<,>, ImmutableHashSet<>, ImmutableSortedDictionary<,>, ImmutableSortedSet<>, ImmutableQueue<>, ImmutableStack<>, IImmutableList<>, IImmutableDictionary<,>, IImmutableQueue<>, IImmutableSet<>, IImmutableStack<> serialization support.

// use global-singleton CompositeResolver.
// This method initialize CompositeResolver and set to default JsonSerializer
CompositeResolver.RegisterAndSetAsDefault(new IJsonFormatter[] {
    // add custome formatters, use other DateTime format.
    // if target type is struct, requires add nullable formatter too(use NullableXxxFormatter or StaticNullableFormatter(innerFormatter))
    new DateTimeFormatter("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"),
    new NullableDateTimeFormatter("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss")
}, new[] {
    // resolver custom types first
    ImmutableCollectionResolver.Instance,
    EnumResolver.UnderlyingValue,

    // finaly choose standard resolver
    StandardResolver.AllowPrivateExcludeNullSnakeCase
});
// select resolver per invoke.
JsonSerializer.Serialize(value, StandardResolver.Default);
JsonSerializer.Serialize(value, StandardResolver.SnakeCase);
JsonSerializer.Serialize(value, CompositeResolver.Instance);

You can also build own custom composite resolver.

// create custom composite resolver per project is recommended way.
// let's try to copy and paste:)
public class ProjectDefaultResolver : IJsonFormatterResolver
{
    public static IJsonFormatterResolver Instance = new ProjectDefaultResolver();

    // configure your resolver and formatters.
    static IJsonFormatter[] formatters = new IJsonFormatter[]{
        new DateTimeFormatter("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"),
        new NullableDateTimeFormatter("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss")
    };

    static readonly IJsonFormatterResolver[] resolvers = new[]
    {
        ImmutableCollectionResolver.Instance,
        EnumResolver.UnderlyingValue,
        StandardResolver.AllowPrivateExcludeNullSnakeCase
    };

    ProjectDefaultResolver()
    {
    }

    public IJsonFormatter<T> GetFormatter<T>()
    {
        return FormatterCache<T>.formatter;
    }

    static class FormatterCache<T>
    {
        public static readonly IJsonFormatter<T> formatter;

        static FormatterCache()
        {
            foreach (var item in formatters)
            {
                foreach (var implInterface in item.GetType().GetTypeInfo().ImplementedInterfaces)
                {
                    var ti = implInterface.GetTypeInfo();
                    if (ti.IsGenericType && ti.GenericTypeArguments[0] == typeof(T))
                    {
                        formatter = (IJsonFormatter<T>)item;
                        return;
                    }
                }
            }

            foreach (var item in resolvers)
            {
                var f = item.GetFormatter<T>();
                if (f != null)
                {
                    formatter = f;
                    return;
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

Or you can create and store dynamic CompositeResolver.

public static MyOwnProjectResolver
{
    // CompositeResolver.Create can create dynamic composite resolver.
    // It can `not` garbage collect and create is slightly high cost.
    // so you should store to static field.
    public static readonly IJsonFormatterResolver Instance = CompositeResolver.Create(
        /* IJsonFormatter[] */,
        /* IJsonFormatterResolver[] */
    );
}

JsonFormatterAttribute

JsonFormatterAttribute is lightweight extension point. This is like JSON.NET's JsonConverterAttribute. You can change to use formatter per type and member.

// if serializing, choosed CustomObjectFormatter.
[JsonFormatter(typeof(CustomObjectFormatter))]
public class CustomObject
{
    string internalId;

    public CustomObject()
    {
        this.internalId = Guid.NewGuid().ToString();
    }

    class CustomObjectFormatter : IJsonFormatter<CustomObject>
    {
        public void Serialize(ref JsonWriter writer, CustomObject value, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver)
        {
            formatterResolver.GetFormatterWithVerify<string>().Serialize(ref writer, value.internalId, formatterResolver);
        }

        public CustomObject Deserialize(ref JsonReader reader, IJsonFormatterResolver formatterResolver)
        {
            var id = formatterResolver.GetFormatterWithVerify<string>().Deserialize(ref reader, formatterResolver);
            return new CustomObject { internalId = id };
        }
    }
}

JsonFormatter can receive parameter and can attach to member. For example, configure DateTime format.

public class Person
{
    public int Age { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }

    [JsonFormatter(typeof(DateTimeFormatter), "yyyy-MM-dd")]
    public DateTime Birth { get; set; }
}

DateTime, DateTimeOffset, TimeSpan is used ISO8601 format in default by ISO8601DateTimeFormatter, ISO8601DateTimeOffsetFormatter, ISO8601TimeSpanFormatter but if you want to configure format, you can use DateTimeFormatter, DateTimeOffsetFormatter, TimeSpanFormatter with format string argument.

Framework Integration

The guide of provide integrate other framework with Utf8Json. For provides customizability of serialization, can be pass the IJsonFormatterResolver by user and does not use CompositeResolver on provided library. For example, AWS Lambda Function's custom serializer.

// with `Amazon.Lambda.Core package`
public class Utf8JsonLambdaSerializer : Amazon.Lambda.Core.ILambdaSerializer
{
    // Note: Default AWS Lambda's JSON.NET Serializer uses special resolver for handle below types.
    // Amazon.S3.Util.S3EventNotification+ResponseElementsEntity
    // Amazon.Lambda.KinesisEvents.KinesisEvent+Record
    // Amazon.DynamoDBv2.Model.StreamRecord
    // Amazon.DynamoDBv2.Model.AttributeValue
    // If you want to serialize these types, create there custom formatter and setup custom resolver.

    readonly IJsonFormatterResolver resolver;

    public Utf8JsonLambdaSerializer()
    {
        // if you want to customize other configuration change your own choose resolver directly
        // (Lambda uses default constructor and does not exists configure chance of DefaultResolver)
        this.resolver = JsonSerializer.DefaultResolver;
    }

    public Utf8JsonLambdaSerializer(IJsonFormatterResolver resolver)
    {
        this.resolver = resolver;
    }

    public void Serialize<T>(T response, Stream responseStream)
    {
        Utf8Json.JsonSerializer.Serialize<T>(responseStream, response, resolver);
    }

    public T Deserialize<T>(Stream requestStream)
    {
        return Utf8Json.JsonSerializer.Deserialize<T>(requestStream, resolver);
    }
}

Utf8Json provides for ASP.NET Core MVC formatter. Utf8Json.AspNetCoreMvcFormatter. This is sample of use it.

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services.AddMvc().AddMvcOptions(option =>
    {
        option.OutputFormatters.Clear();
        // can pass IJsonFormatterResolver for customize.
        option.OutputFormatters.Add(new JsonOutputFormatter(StandardResolver.Default));
        option.InputFormatters.Clear();
        // if does not pass, library should use JsonSerializer.DefaultResolver.
        option.InputFormatters.Add(new JsonInputFormatter());
    });
}

HTML encodoing only requires UTF8, whatwg/html accepts on 2017-10-06. So don't worry about other encoding:)

Text Protocol Foundation

Utf8Json implements fast itoa/atoi, dtoa/atod. It can be useful for text protocol serialization. For example I'm implementing MySqlSharp that aims fastest MySQL Driver on C#(work in progress yet), MySQL protocol is noramlly text so requires fast parser for text protocol.

Utf8Json.Internal.NumberConverter is Read/Write primitive to bytes. It is public API so you can use if requires itoa/atoi, dtoa/atod algorithm.

byte[] buffer = null; // buffer is automatically ensure.
var offset = 0;
var writeSize = NumberConverter.WriteInt64(ref buffer, offset, 99999);

int readCount;
var value = NumberConverter.ReadInt64(buffer, 0, out readCount);

for Unity

Unity has the JsonUtility. It is well fast but has many limitations, can not serialize/deserialize dictionary or other collections and nullable, can not root array, can not handle null correctly, etc... Utf8Json has no limitation and performance is same or better especialy convert to/from byte[], Utf8Json achieves true no zero-allocation.

In Unity version, added UnityResolver to StandardResolver in default. It enables serialize Vector2, Vector3, Vector4, Quaternion, Color, Bounds, Rect.

.unitypackage is exists in releases page. If you are using IL2CPP environment, requires code generator too, see following section.

Pre Code Generation(Unity/Xamarin Supports)

Utf8Json generates object formatter dynamically by ILGenerator. It is fast and transparently generated at run time. But it does not work on AOT environment(Xamarin, Unity IL2CPP, etc.).

If you want to run on IL2CPP(or other AOT env), you need pre-code generation. Utf8Json.UniversalCodeGenerator.exe is code generator of Utf8Json. It is exists in releases page's Utf8Json.UniversalCodeGenerator.zip that run on win/mac/linux. It is using Roslyn so analyze source code and created by .NET Core for cross platform application.

arguments help:
  -i, --inputFiles=VALUE        [optional]Input path of cs files(',' separated)
  -d, --inputDirs=VALUE         [optional]Input path of dirs(',' separated)
  -o, --output=VALUE            [required]Output file path
  -f, --allowInternal           [optional, default=false]Allow generate internal(friend)
  -c, --conditionalsymbol=VALUE [optional, default=empty]conditional compiler symbol
  -r, --resolvername=VALUE      [optional, default=GeneratedResolver]Set resolver name
  -n, --namespace=VALUE         [optional, default=Utf8Json]Set namespace root name
// Simple usage(directory)
Utf8Json.UniversalCodeGenerator.exe -d "..\src\Shared\Request,..\src\Shared\Response" -o "Utf8JsonGenerated.cs"

If you create DLL by msbuild project, you can use Pre/Post build event or hook your Unity's post/pre process.

<PropertyGroup>
    <PreBuildEvent>
        Utf8Json.UniversalCodeGenerator.exe, here is useful for analyze/generate target is self project.
    </PreBuildEvent>
    <PostBuildEvent>
        Utf8Json.UniversalCodeGenerator.exe, here is useful for analyze target is another project.
    </PostBuildEvent>
</PropertyGroup>

In default, generates resolver to Utf8Json.Resolvers.GeneratedResolver and formatters generates to Utf8Json.Formatters.***. And application launch, you need to set Resolver at first.

// CompositeResolver is singleton helper for use custom resolver.
// Ofcourse you can also make custom resolver.
Utf8Json.Resolvers.CompositeResolver.RegisterAndSetAsDefault(
    // use generated resolver first, and combine many other generated/custom resolvers
    Utf8Json.Resolvers.GeneratedResolver.Instance,

    // set StandardResolver or your use resolver chain
    Utf8Json.Resolvers.StandardResolver.Default,
);

How to Build

Open Utf8Json.sln on Visual Studio 2017(latest) and install .NET Core 2.0 SDK.

Unity Project is using symbolic link. At first, run make_unity_symlink.bat so linked under Unity project. You can open src\Utf8Json.UnityClient on Unity Editor.

Author Info

Yoshifumi Kawai(a.k.a. neuecc) is a software developer in Japan.
He is the Director/CTO at Grani, Inc.
Grani is a mobile game developer company in Japan and well known for using C#.
He is awarding Microsoft MVP for Visual C# since 2011.
He is known as the creator of UniRx(Reactive Extensions for Unity)

Blog: https://medium.com/@neuecc (English)
Blog: http://neue.cc/ (Japanese)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/neuecc (Japanese)

License

This library is under the MIT License.