2 releases
0.1.1 | Jul 21, 2024 |
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0.1.0 | Jul 20, 2024 |
#1018 in Parser implementations
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JSON-threat-protection.rs
A Rust library to protect against malicious JSON payloads.
This project is not a parser, and never give you the deserialized JSON Value!
Features
This crate provides functionality to validate JSON payloads against a set of constraints.
- Maximum depth of the JSON structure.
- Maximum length of strings.
- Maximum number of entries in arrays.
- Maximum number of entries in objects.
- Maximum length of object entry names.
- Whether to allow duplicate object entry names.
The typical use case for this crate is to validate JSON payloads before the bussiness logic of your application that is deployed in a separated place.
Docs
https://docs.rs/json-threat-protection
Performance
This crate is designed to be fast and efficient,
and has its own benchmark suite under the benches
directory.
You can run the benchmarks with the following command:
JSON_FILE=/path/to/file.json cargo bench --bench memory -- --verbose
This suite validates the JSON syntax and checks the above constraints.
For comparison, the serde_json
crate is used to parse the JSON
and get the serde_json::Value
and travel through the JSON structure
to check the above constraints.
Here are the table of the results of the benchmark suite for three different datasets:
Dataset | Size | serde_json | json-threat-protection | Faster (%) | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
kernel_stargazers.json | 1.2M | 12.996 ms | 8.8530 ms | 31.89% | 1000 stargazers JSON information from torvalds/linux |
kernel_stargazers_small.json | 568K | 5.8825 ms | 3.7504 ms | 36.29% | 472 stargazers JSON information from torvalds/linux |
kernel_commits.json | 4.6M | 45.059 ms | 29.682 ms | 34.25% | 1000 commits JSON infomation from torvalds/linux |
tokio_issues.json | 5.1M | 61.935 ms | 33.959 ms | 45.20% | 1000 issues JSON information from tokio-rs/tokio |
tokio_forks.json | 6.1M | 90.984 ms | 45.686 ms | 49.80% | 1000 forks JSON information from tokio-rs/tokio |
tokio_workflow_runs.json | 15M | 221.89 ms | 103.65 ms | 53.22% | 1000 workflow runs JSON information from tokio-rs/tokio |
It is expected that the json-threat-protection
crate
will be faster than the serde_json
crate
because it never store the deserialized JSON Value in memory,
which reduce the cost on memory allocation and deallocation.
As you can see from the table,
the json-threat-protection
crate is faster than the serde_json
crate
for all datasets, but the number depends on the dataset.
So you could get your own performance number by
specifying the JSON_FILE
to your dataset.
Fuzzing
The library is fuzz tested using the cargo-fuzz
tool.
The fuzzing target is located in the fuzz
directory.
THe initial set of corpus files are from nlohmann/json_test_data.
Thanks
- cargo-fuzz: For providing a simple way to fuzz test the library.
- nlohmann/json_test_data: For providing a initial set of corpus files for fuzzing.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
Dependencies
~235–690KB
~16K SLoC