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jsoncolor

Package neilotoole/jsoncolor is a drop-in replacement for stdlib encoding/json that outputs colorized JSON.

Why? Well, jq colorizes its output by default, and color output is desirable for many Go CLIs. This package performs colorization (and indentation) inline in the encoder, and is significantly faster than stdlib at indentation.

From the example jc app:

jsoncolor-output

Usage

Get the package per the normal mechanism (requires Go 1.16+):

go get -u github.com/neilotoole/jsoncolor

Then:

package main

import (
  "fmt"
  "github.com/mattn/go-colorable"
  json "github.com/neilotoole/jsoncolor"
  "os"
)

func main() {
  var enc *json.Encoder

  // Note: this check will fail if running inside Goland (and
  // other IDEs?) as IsColorTerminal will return false.
  if json.IsColorTerminal(os.Stdout) {
    // Safe to use color
    out := colorable.NewColorable(os.Stdout) // needed for Windows
    enc = json.NewEncoder(out)

    // DefaultColors are similar to jq
    clrs := json.DefaultColors()

    // Change some values, just for fun
    clrs.Bool = json.Color("\x1b[36m") // Change the bool color
    clrs.String = json.Color{}         // Disable the string color

    enc.SetColors(clrs)
  } else {
    // Can't use color; but the encoder will still work
    enc = json.NewEncoder(os.Stdout)
  }

  m := map[string]interface{}{
    "a": 1,
    "b": true,
    "c": "hello",
  }

  if err := enc.Encode(m); err != nil {
    fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
    os.Exit(1)
  }
}

Configuration

To enable colorization, invoke enc.SetColors.

The Colors struct holds color config. The zero value and nil are both safe for use (resulting in no colorization).

The DefaultColors func returns a Colors struct that produces results similar to jq:

// DefaultColors returns the default Colors configuration.
// These colors largely follow jq's default colorization,
// with some deviation.
func DefaultColors() *Colors {
  return &Colors{
    Null:   Color("\x1b[2m"),
    Bool:   Color("\x1b[1m"),
    Number: Color("\x1b[36m"),
    String: Color("\x1b[32m"),
    Key:    Color("\x1b[34;1m"),
    Bytes:  Color("\x1b[2m"),
    Time:   Color("\x1b[32;2m"),
    Punc:   Color{}, // No colorization
  }
}

As seen above, use the Color zero value (Color{}) to disable colorization for that JSON element.

Helper for fatih/color

It can be inconvenient to use terminal codes, e.g. json.Color("\x1b[36m"). A helper package provides an adapter for fatih/color.

  // import "github.com/neilotoole/jsoncolor/helper/fatihcolor"
  // import "github.com/fatih/color"
  // import "github.com/mattn/go-colorable"
  
  out := colorable.NewColorable(os.Stdout) // needed for Windows
  enc = json.NewEncoder(out)
  
  fclrs := fatihcolor.DefaultColors()
  // Change some values, just for fun
  fclrs.Number = color.New(color.FgBlue)
  fclrs.String = color.New(color.FgCyan)
  
  clrs := fatihcolor.ToCoreColors(fclrs)
  enc.SetColors(clrs)

Drop-in for encoding/json

This package is a full drop-in for stdlib encoding/json (thanks to the ancestral segmentio/encoding/json pkg being a full drop-in).

To drop-in, just use an import alias:

  import json "github.com/neilotoole/jsoncolor"

Example app: jc

See cmd/jc for a trivial CLI implementation that can accept JSON input, and output that JSON in color.

# From project root
$ go install ./cmd/jc
$ cat ./testdata/sakila_actor.json | jc

Benchmarks

Note that this package contains golang_bench_test.go, which is inherited from segmentj. But here we're interested in benchmark_test.go:BenchmarkEncode, which benchmarks encoding performance versus other JSON encoder packages. The results below benchmark the following:

  • Stdlib encoding/json (go1.17.1).
  • segmentj: v0.1.14, which was when jsoncolor was forked. The newer segmentj code performs even better.
  • neilotoole/jsoncolor: (this package) v0.6.0.
  • nwidger/jsoncolor: v0.3.0, latest at time of benchmarks.

Note that two other Go JSON colorization packages (hokaccha/go-prettyjson and TylerBrock/colorjson) are excluded from these benchmarks because they do not provide a stdlib-compatible Encoder impl.

$ go test -bench=BenchmarkEncode -benchtime="5s"
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/neilotoole/jsoncolor
cpu: Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-9880H CPU @ 2.30GHz
BenchmarkEncode/stdlib_NoIndent-16                           181          33047390 ns/op         8870685 B/op     120022 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/stdlib_Indent-16                             124          48093178 ns/op        10470366 B/op     120033 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/segmentj_NoIndent-16                         415          14658699 ns/op         3788911 B/op      10020 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/segmentj_Indent-16                           195          30628798 ns/op         5404492 B/op      10025 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/neilotoole_NoIndent_NoColor-16               362          16522399 ns/op         3789034 B/op      10020 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/neilotoole_Indent_NoColor-16                 303          20146856 ns/op         5460753 B/op      10021 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/neilotoole_NoIndent_Color-16                 295          19989420 ns/op        10326019 B/op      10029 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/neilotoole_Indent_Color-16                   246          24714163 ns/op        11996890 B/op      10030 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/nwidger_NoIndent_NoColor-16                   10         541107983 ns/op        92934231 B/op    4490210 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/nwidger_Indent_NoColor-16                      7         798088086 ns/op        117258321 B/op   6290213 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/nwidger_indent_NoIndent_Colo-16               10         542002051 ns/op        92935639 B/op    4490224 allocs/op
BenchmarkEncode/nwidger_indent_Indent_Color-16                 7         799928353 ns/op        117259195 B/op   6290220 allocs/op

As always, take benchmarks with a large grain of salt, as they're based on a (small) synthetic benchmark. More benchmarks would give a better picture (and note as well that the benchmarked segmentj is an older version, v0.1.14).

All that having been said, what can we surmise from these particular results?

  • segmentj performs better than stdlib at all encoding tasks.
  • jsoncolor performs better than segmentj for indentation (which makes sense, as indentation is performed inline).
  • jsoncolor performs better than stdlib at all encoding tasks.

Again, trust these benchmarks at your peril. Create your own benchmarks for your own workload.

Notes

  • The .golangci.yml linter settings have been fiddled with to hush some linting issues inherited from the segmentio codebase at the time of forking. Thus, the linter report may not be of great use. In an ideal world, the jsoncolor functionality would be ported to a more recent (and better-linted) version of the segementio codebase.
  • The segmentio encoder (at least as of v0.1.14) encodes time.Duration as string, while stdlib outputs as int64. This package follows stdlib.
  • The Colors.Punc field controls all punctuation colorization, i.e. []{},:". It is probably worthwhile to separate these out into individually-configurable elements.

CHANGELOG

History: this package is an extract of sq's JSON encoding package, which itself is a fork of the segmentio/encoding JSON encoding package. Note that the original sq JSON encoder was forked from Segment's codebase at v0.1.14, so the codebases have drifted significantly by now.

  • #27: Improved Windows terminal color support checking.

Acknowledgments

  • jq: sine qua non.
  • segmentio/encoding: jsoncolor is layered into Segment's JSON encoder. They did the hard work. Much gratitude to that team.
  • sq: jsoncolor is effectively an extract of code created specifically for sq.
  • mattn/go-colorable: no project is complete without mattn having played a role.
  • fatih/color: the color library.
  • @hermannm: for several PRs.

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