* Test equality of different length strings.
* Add tab to json_pack whitespace test.
* Test json_sprintf with empty result and invalid UTF.
* Test json_get_alloc_funcs with NULL arguments.
* Test invalid arguments.
* Add test_chaos to test allocation failure code paths.
* Remove redundant json_is_string checks from json_string_equal and
json_string_copy. Both functions are static and can only be called
with a json string.
Fixes to issues found by test_chaos:
* Fix crash on OOM in pack_unpack.c:read_string().
* Unconditionally free string in string_create upon allocation failure.
Update load.c:parse_value() to reflect this. This resolves a leak on
allocation failure for pack_unpack.c:pack_string() and
value.c:json_sprintf().
Although not visible from CodeCoverage these changes significantly
increase branch coverage. Especially in src/value.c where we previously
covered 67.4% of branches and now cover 96.3% of branches.
In the "/* perform the same update again */" area the error
message should be "unable to update an non-empty object"
instead of "unable to update an empty object".
Signed-off-by: Andrei Epure <epure.andrei@gmail.com>
The decimal point '.' is changed to locale's decimal point
before/after JSON conversion to make C standard library's
locale-specific string conversion functions work correctly.
All the tests now call setlocale(LC_ALL, "") on startup to use the
locale set in the environment.
Fixes GH-32.
With this encoding flag, the object key-value pairs in output are in
the same order in which they were first inserted into the object.
To make this possible, a key of an object is now a serial number plus
a string. An object keeps an increasing counter which is used to
assign serial number to the keys. Hashing, comparison and public API
functions were changed to act only on the string part, i.e. the serial
number is ignored everywhere else but in the encoder, where it's used
to order object keys if JSON_PRESERVE_ORDER flag is used.
Added functions are:
* json_string_nocheck()
* json_string_set_nocheck()
* json_object_set_nocheck()
* json_object_set_new_nocheck()
These functions don't check that their string argument is valid UTF-8,
but assume that the user has already performed the check.