I have looked at multiple resources for this, however, none seem to be able to answer my question. I have a local JSON file in my React app called items.json. In that file, is a list of objects, which I want to be able to update. I have tried using fs however this apparently doesn't work in React, as I received this error:
Unhandled Rejection (TypeError): fs.readFileSync is not a function
What I am trying to do, is that when the code gets a new item, it looks through the JSON file to see if there is an existing object with a matching values in its name property. If there is, it increments that objects count property by 1, otherwise it creates a new object, and appends it to the list in the JSON file. This is the code that I have written to do that. The logic seems sound (although its not tested) but I can't figure out how to read/write the data.
let raw = fs.readFileSync("../database/items.json");
let itemList = JSON.parse(raw);
let found = false;
for (let item of itemList.averages) {
if (item.name === this.state.data.item_name) {
found = true;
item.count += 1;
}
}
if (!found) {
let newItem = {
name: this.state.data.item_name,
count: 1,
}
itemList.averages.push(newItem);
}
let newRaw = JSON.stringify(itemList);
fs.writeFileSync("../database/items.json", newRaw);
The JSON file:
{
"averages": [
{
"name": "Example",
"count": 1,
}
]
}
First of all, the browser itself doesn't have access to the filesystem, so you won't be able to achieve that using your react app. However, this can be achieved if you use Node.js(or any other FW) at the backend and create an API endpoint which can help you to write to the filesystem.
Secondly, if you wanted to only do things on the frontend side without creating an extra API just for saving the data in a JSON file which I think is not necessary in your case. You can use localstorage to save the data and ask the user to download a text file using this :
TextFile = () => {
const element = document.createElement("a");
const textFile = new Blob([[JSON.stringify('pass data from localStorage')], {type: 'text/plain'}); //pass data from localStorage API to blob
element.href = URL.createObjectURL(textFile);
element.download = "userFile.txt";
document.body.appendChild(element);
element.click();
}
Now, To use local storage API you can check here - https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/localStorage
reading and writing JSON file to local storage is quite simple with NodeJs, which means a tiny piece of backend API in express would help get this job done.
few piece of code that might help you. Assuming you JSON structure would be such as below;
{
"name":"arif",
"surname":"shariati"
}
Read JSON file;
// import * as fs from 'fs';
const fs = require('fs')
fs.readFile('./myFile.json', 'utf8', (err, jsonString) => {
if (err) {
return;
}
try {
const customer = JSON.parse(jsonString);
} catch(err) {
console.log('Error parsing JSON string:', err);
}
})
customer contains your JSON, and values can be accessed by customer.name;
Write to JSON File
Let's say you have an update on your JSON object such as below;
const updatedJSON = {
"name":"arif updated",
"surname":"shariati updated"
}
Now you can write to your file. If file does not exist, it will create one. If already exists, it will overwrite.
fs.writeFile('./myFile.json', JSON.stringify(updatedJSON), (err) => {
if (err) console.log('Error writing file:', err);
})
Importing and reading from json can be like:
import data from ‘./data/data.json’;
then use .map() to iterate data.
for writing locally you can use some libraries like https://www.npmjs.com/package/write-json-file
Suppose that for every response from an API, i need to map the value from the response to an existing json file in my web application and display the value from the json. What are the better approach in this case to read the json file? require or fs.readfile. Note that there might be thousands of request comes in at a same time.
Note that I do not expect there is any changes to the file during runtime.
request(options, function(error, response, body) {
// compare response identifier value with json file in node
// if identifier value exist in the json file
// return the corresponding value in json file instead
});
I suppose you'll JSON.parse the json file for the comparison, in that case, require is better because it'll parse the file right away and it's sync:
var obj = require('./myjson'); // no need to add the .json extension
If you have thousands of request using that file, require it once outside your request handler and that's it:
var myObj = require('./myjson');
request(options, function(error, response, body) {
// myObj is accessible here and is a nice JavaScript object
var value = myObj.someValue;
// compare response identifier value with json file in node
// if identifier value exist in the json file
// return the corresponding value in json file instead
});
There are two versions for fs.readFile, and they are
Asynchronous version
require('fs').readFile('path/test.json', 'utf8', function (err, data) {
if (err)
// error handling
var obj = JSON.parse(data);
});
Synchronous version
var json = JSON.parse(require('fs').readFileSync('path/test.json', 'utf8'));
To use require to parse json file as below
var json = require('path/test.json');
But, note that
require is synchronous and only reads the file once, following calls return the result from cache
If your file does not have a .json extension, require will not treat the contents of the file as JSON.
Since no one ever cared to write a benchmark, and I had a feeling that require works faster, I made one myself.
I compared fs.readFile (promisified version) vs require (without cache) vs fs.readFileSync.
You can see benchmark here and results here.
For 1000 iterations, it looks like this:
require: 835.308ms
readFileSync: 666.151ms
readFileAsync: 1178.361ms
So what should you use? The answer is not so simple.
Use require when you need to cache object forever. And better use Object.freeze to avoid mutating it in application.
Use readFileSync in unit tests or on blocking application startup - it is fastest.
Use readFile or promisified version when application is running and you don't wanna block event loop.
Use node-fixtures if dealing with JSON fixtures in your tests.
The project will look for a directory named fixtures which must be child of your test directory in order to load all the fixtures (*.js or *.json files):
// test/fixtures/users.json
{
"dearwish": {
"name": "David",
"gender": "male"
},
"innaro": {
"name": "Inna",
"gender": "female"
}
}
// test/users.test.js
var fx = require('node-fixtures');
fx.users.dearwish.name; // => "David"
I only want to point out that it seems require keeps the file in memory even when the variables should be deleted. I had following case:
for (const file of fs.readdirSync('dir/contains/jsons')) {
// this variable should be deleted after each loop
// but actually not, perhaps because of "require"
// it leads to "heap out of memory" error
const json = require('dir/contains/jsons/' + file);
}
for (const file of fs.readdirSync('dir/contains/jsons')) {
// this one with "readFileSync" works well
const json = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('dir/contains/jsons/' + file));
}
The first loop with require can't read all JSON files because of "heap out of memory" error. The second loop with readFile works.
If your file is empty, require will break. It will throw an error:
SyntaxError ... Unexpected end of JSON input.
With readFileSync/readFile you can deal with this:
let routesJson = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('./routes.json', 'UTF8') || '{}');
or:
let routesJson
fs.readFile('./dueNfe_routes.json', 'UTF8', (err, data) => {
routesJson = JSON.parse(data || '{}');
});
{
"country": [
"INDIA",
"USA"
],
"codes": [
"IN",
"US"
]
}
// countryInfo.json
const { country, code } = require('./countryInfo.json');
console.log(country[0]); // "INDIA"
console.log(code[0]); // "IN"
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How should I parse JSON using Node.js? Is there some module which will validate and parse JSON securely?
You can simply use JSON.parse.
The definition of the JSON object is part of the ECMAScript 5 specification. node.js is built on Google Chrome's V8 engine, which adheres to ECMA standard. Therefore, node.js also has a global object JSON[docs].
Note - JSON.parse can tie up the current thread because it is a synchronous method. So if you are planning to parse big JSON objects use a streaming json parser.
you can require .json files.
var parsedJSON = require('./file-name');
For example if you have a config.json file in the same directory as your source code file you would use:
var config = require('./config.json');
or (file extension can be omitted):
var config = require('./config');
note that require is synchronous and only reads the file once, following calls return the result from cache
Also note You should only use this for local files under your absolute control, as it potentially executes any code within the file.
You can use JSON.parse().
You should be able to use the JSON object on any ECMAScript 5 compatible JavaScript implementation. And V8, upon which Node.js is built is one of them.
Note: If you're using a JSON file to store sensitive information (e.g. passwords), that's the wrong way to do it. See how Heroku does it: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/config-vars#setting-up-config-vars-for-a-deployed-application. Find out how your platform does it, and use process.env to retrieve the config vars from within the code.
Parsing a string containing JSON data
var str = '{ "name": "John Doe", "age": 42 }';
var obj = JSON.parse(str);
Parsing a file containing JSON data
You'll have to do some file operations with fs module.
Asynchronous version
var fs = require('fs');
fs.readFile('/path/to/file.json', 'utf8', function (err, data) {
if (err) throw err; // we'll not consider error handling for now
var obj = JSON.parse(data);
});
Synchronous version
var fs = require('fs');
var json = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('/path/to/file.json', 'utf8'));
You wanna use require? Think again!
You can sometimes use require:
var obj = require('path/to/file.json');
But, I do not recommend this for several reasons:
require is synchronous. If you have a very big JSON file, it will choke your event loop. You really need to use JSON.parse with fs.readFile.
require will read the file only once. Subsequent calls to require for the same file will return a cached copy. Not a good idea if you want to read a .json file that is continuously updated. You could use a hack. But at this point, it's easier to simply use fs.
If your file does not have a .json extension, require will not treat the contents of the file as JSON.
Seriously! Use JSON.parse.
load-json-file module
If you are reading large number of .json files, (and if you are extremely lazy), it becomes annoying to write boilerplate code every time. You can save some characters by using the load-json-file module.
const loadJsonFile = require('load-json-file');
Asynchronous version
loadJsonFile('/path/to/file.json').then(json => {
// `json` contains the parsed object
});
Synchronous version
let obj = loadJsonFile.sync('/path/to/file.json');
Parsing JSON from streams
If the JSON content is streamed over the network, you need to use a streaming JSON parser. Otherwise it will tie up your processor and choke your event loop until JSON content is fully streamed.
There are plenty of packages available in NPM for this. Choose what's best for you.
Error Handling/Security
If you are unsure if whatever that is passed to JSON.parse() is valid JSON, make sure to enclose the call to JSON.parse() inside a try/catch block. A user provided JSON string could crash your application, and could even lead to security holes. Make sure error handling is done if you parse externally-provided JSON.
use the JSON object:
JSON.parse(str);
Another example of JSON.parse :
var fs = require('fs');
var file = __dirname + '/config.json';
fs.readFile(file, 'utf8', function (err, data) {
if (err) {
console.log('Error: ' + err);
return;
}
data = JSON.parse(data);
console.dir(data);
});
I'd like to mention that there are alternatives to the global JSON object.
JSON.parse and JSON.stringify are both synchronous, so if you want to deal with big objects you might want to check out some of the asynchronous JSON modules.
Have a look: https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Modules#wiki-parsers-json
Include the node-fs library.
var fs = require("fs");
var file = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync("./PATH/data.json", "utf8"));
For more info on 'fs' library , refer the documentation at http://nodejs.org/api/fs.html
Since you don't know that your string is actually valid, I would put it first into a try catch. Also since try catch blocks are not optimized by node, i would put the entire thing into another function:
function tryParseJson(str) {
try {
return JSON.parse(str);
} catch (ex) {
return null;
}
}
OR in "async style"
function tryParseJson(str, callback) {
process.nextTick(function () {
try {
callback(null, JSON.parse(str));
} catch (ex) {
callback(ex)
}
})
}
Parsing a JSON stream? Use JSONStream.
var request = require('request')
, JSONStream = require('JSONStream')
request({url: 'http://isaacs.couchone.com/registry/_all_docs'})
.pipe(JSONStream.parse('rows.*'))
.pipe(es.mapSync(function (data) {
return data
}))
https://github.com/dominictarr/JSONStream
Everybody here has told about JSON.parse, so I thought of saying something else. There is a great module Connect with many middleware to make development of apps easier and better. One of the middleware is bodyParser. It parses JSON, html-forms and etc. There is also a specific middleware for JSON parsing only noop.
Take a look at the links above, it might be really helpful to you.
JSON.parse("your string");
That's all.
as other answers here have mentioned, you probably want to either require a local json file that you know is safe and present, like a configuration file:
var objectFromRequire = require('path/to/my/config.json');
or to use the global JSON object to parse a string value into an object:
var stringContainingJson = '\"json that is obtained from somewhere\"';
var objectFromParse = JSON.parse(stringContainingJson);
note that when you require a file the content of that file is evaluated, which introduces a security risk in case it's not a json file but a js file.
here, i've published a demo where you can see both methods and play with them online (the parsing example is in app.js file - then click on the run button and see the result in the terminal):
http://staging1.codefresh.io/labs/api/env/json-parse-example
you can modify the code and see the impact...
Using JSON for your configuration with Node.js? Read this and get your configuration skills over 9000...
Note: People claiming that data = require('./data.json'); is a
security risk and downvoting people's answers with zealous zeal: You're exactly and completely wrong.
Try placing non-JSON in that file... Node will give you an error, exactly like it would if you did the same thing with the much slower and harder to code manual file read and then subsequent JSON.parse(). Please stop spreading misinformation; you're hurting the world, not helping. Node was designed to allow this; it is not a security risk!
Proper applications come in 3+ layers of configuration:
Server/Container config
Application config
(optional) Tenant/Community/Organization config
User config
Most developers treat their server and app config as if it can change. It can't. You can layer changes from higher layers on top of each other, but you're modifying base requirements. Some things need to exist! Make your config act like it's immutable, because some of it basically is, just like your source code.
Failing to see that lots of your stuff isn't going to change after startup leads to anti-patterns like littering your config loading with try/catch blocks, and pretending you can continue without your properly setup application. You can't. If you can, that belongs in the community/user config layer, not the server/app config layer. You're just doing it wrong. The optional stuff should be layered on top when the application finishes it's bootstrap.
Stop banging your head against the wall: Your config should be ultra simple.
Take a look at how easy it is to setup something as complex as a protocol-agnostic and datasource-agnostic service framework using a simple json config file and simple app.js file...
container-config.js...
{
"service": {
"type" : "http",
"name" : "login",
"port" : 8085
},
"data": {
"type" : "mysql",
"host" : "localhost",
"user" : "notRoot",
"pass" : "oober1337",
"name" : "connect"
}
}
index.js... (the engine that powers everything)
var config = require('./container-config.json'); // Get our service configuration.
var data = require(config.data.type); // Load our data source plugin ('npm install mysql' for mysql).
var service = require(config.service.type); // Load our service plugin ('http' is built-in to node).
var processor = require('./app.js'); // Load our processor (the code you write).
var connection = data.createConnection({ host: config.data.host, user: config.data.user, password: config.data.pass, database: config.data.name });
var server = service.createServer(processor);
connection.connect();
server.listen(config.service.port, function() { console.log("%s service listening on port %s", config.service.type, config.service.port); });
app.js... (the code that powers your protocol-agnostic and data-source agnostic service)
module.exports = function(request, response){
response.end('Responding to: ' + request.url);
}
Using this pattern, you can now load community and user config stuff on top of your booted app, dev ops is ready to shove your work into a container and scale it. You're read for multitenant. Userland is isolated. You can now separate the concerns of which service protocol you're using, which database type you're using, and just focus on writing good code.
Because you're using layers, you can rely on a single source of truth for everything, at any time (the layered config object), and avoid error checks at every step, worrying about "oh crap, how am I going to make this work without proper config?!?".
If you need to parse JSON with Node.js in a secure way (aka: the user can input data, or a public API) I would suggest using secure-json-parse.
The usage is like the default JSON.parse but it will protect your code from:
prototype poisoning
and constructor abuse:
const badJson = '{ "a": 5, "b": 6, "__proto__": { "x": 7 }, "constructor": {"prototype": {"bar": "baz"} } }'
const infected = JSON.parse(badJson)
console.log(infected.x) // print undefined
const x = Object.assign({}, infected)
console.log(x.x) // print 7
const sjson = require('secure-json-parse')
console.log(sjson.parse(badJson)) // it will throw by default, you can ignore malicious data also
My solution:
var fs = require('fs');
var file = __dirname + '/config.json';
fs.readFile(file, 'utf8', function (err, data) {
if (err) {
console.log('Error: ' + err);
return;
}
data = JSON.parse(data);
console.dir(data);
});
Just want to complete the answer (as I struggled with it for a while), want to show how to access the json information, this example shows accessing Json Array:
var request = require('request');
request('https://server/run?oper=get_groups_joined_by_user_id&user_id=5111298845048832', function (error, response, body) {
if (!error && response.statusCode == 200) {
var jsonArr = JSON.parse(body);
console.log(jsonArr);
console.log("group id:" + jsonArr[0].id);
}
})
Just to make this as complicated as possible, and bring in as many packages as possible...
const fs = require('fs');
const bluebird = require('bluebird');
const _ = require('lodash');
const readTextFile = _.partial(bluebird.promisify(fs.readFile), _, {encoding:'utf8',flag:'r'});
const readJsonFile = filename => readTextFile(filename).then(JSON.parse);
This lets you do:
var dataPromise = readJsonFile("foo.json");
dataPromise.then(console.log);
Or if you're using async/await:
let data = await readJsonFile("foo.json");
The advantage over just using readFileSync is that your Node server can process other requests while the file is being read off disk.
JSON.parse will not ensure safety of json string you are parsing. You should look at a library like json-safe-parse or a similar library.
From json-safe-parse npm page:
JSON.parse is great, but it has one serious flaw in the context of JavaScript: it allows you to override inherited properties. This can become an issue if you are parsing JSON from an untrusted source (eg: a user), and calling functions on it you would expect to exist.
Leverage Lodash's attempt function to return an error object, which you can handle with the isError function.
// Returns an error object on failure
function parseJSON(jsonString) {
return _.attempt(JSON.parse.bind(null, jsonString));
}
// Example Usage
var goodJson = '{"id":123}';
var badJson = '{id:123}';
var goodResult = parseJSON(goodJson);
var badResult = parseJSON(badJson);
if (_.isError(goodResult)) {
console.log('goodResult: handle error');
} else {
console.log('goodResult: continue processing');
}
// > goodResult: continue processing
if (_.isError(badResult)) {
console.log('badResult: handle error');
} else {
console.log('badResult: continue processing');
}
// > badResult: handle error
Always be sure to use JSON.parse in try catch block as node always throw an Unexpected Error if you have some corrupted data in your json so use this code instead of simple JSON.Parse
try{
JSON.parse(data)
}
catch(e){
throw new Error("data is corrupted")
}
As mentioned in the above answers, We can use JSON.parse() to parse the strings to JSON
But before parsing, be sure to parse the correct data or else it might bring your whole application down
it is safe to use it like this
let parsedObj = {}
try {
parsedObj = JSON.parse(data);
} catch(e) {
console.log("Cannot parse because data is not is proper json format")
}
Use JSON.parse(str);. Read more about it here.
Here are some examples:
var jsonStr = '{"result":true, "count":42}';
obj = JSON.parse(jsonStr);
console.log(obj.count); // expected output: 42
console.log(obj.result); // expected output: true
If you want to add some comments in your JSON and allow trailing commas you might want use below implemention:
var fs = require('fs');
var data = parseJsData('./message.json');
console.log('[INFO] data:', data);
function parseJsData(filename) {
var json = fs.readFileSync(filename, 'utf8')
.replace(/\s*\/\/.+/g, '')
.replace(/,(\s*\})/g, '}')
;
return JSON.parse(json);
}
Note that it might not work well if you have something like "abc": "foo // bar" in your JSON. So YMMV.
If the JSON source file is pretty big, may want to consider the asynchronous route via native async / await approach with Node.js 8.0 as follows
const fs = require('fs')
const fsReadFile = (fileName) => {
fileName = `${__dirname}/${fileName}`
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fs.readFile(fileName, 'utf8', (error, data) => {
if (!error && data) {
resolve(data)
} else {
reject(error);
}
});
})
}
async function parseJSON(fileName) {
try {
return JSON.parse(await fsReadFile(fileName));
} catch (err) {
return { Error: `Something has gone wrong: ${err}` };
}
}
parseJSON('veryBigFile.json')
.then(res => console.log(res))
.catch(err => console.log(err))
I use fs-extra. I like it a lot because -although it supports callbacks- it also supports Promises. So it just enables me to write my code in a much more readable way:
const fs = require('fs-extra');
fs.readJson("path/to/foo.json").then(obj => {
//Do dome stuff with obj
})
.catch(err => {
console.error(err);
});
It also has many useful methods which do not come along with the standard fs module and, on top of that, it also bridges the methods from the native fs module and promisifies them.
NOTE: You can still use the native Node.js methods. They are promisified and copied over to fs-extra. See notes on fs.read() & fs.write()
So it's basically all advantages. I hope others find this useful.
You can use JSON.parse() (which is a built in function that will probably force you to wrap it with try-catch statements).
Or use some JSON parsing npm library, something like json-parse-or
Use this to be on the safe side
var data = JSON.parse(Buffer.concat(arr).toString());
NodeJs is a JavaScript based server, so you can do the way you do that in pure JavaScript...
Imagine you have this Json in NodeJs...
var details = '{ "name": "Alireza Dezfoolian", "netWorth": "$0" }';
var obj = JSON.parse(details);
And you can do above to get a parsed version of your json...
No further modules need to be required.
Just use
var parsedObj = JSON.parse(yourObj);
I don think there is any security issues regarding this
It's simple, you can convert JSON to string using JSON.stringify(json_obj), and convert string to JSON using JSON.parse("your json string").