This is the command json_xsp that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
json_xs - JSON::XS commandline utility
SYNOPSIS
json_xs [-v] [-f inputformat] [-t outputformat]
DESCRIPTION
json_xs converts between some input and output formats (one of them is JSON).
The default input format is "json" and the default output format is "json-pretty".
OPTIONS
-v Be slightly more verbose.
-f fromformat
Read a file in the given format from STDIN.
"fromformat" can be one of:
json - a json text encoded, either utf-8, utf16-be/le, utf32-be/le
cbor - CBOR (RFC 7049, CBOR::XS), a kind of binary JSON
storable - a Storable frozen value
storable-file - a Storable file (Storable has two incompatible formats)
bencode - use Convert::Bencode, if available (used by torrent files, among others)
clzf - Compress::LZF format (requires that module to be installed)
eval - evaluate the given code as (non-utf-8) Perl, basically the reverse of "-t dump"
yaml - YAML (avoid at all costs, requires the YAML module :)
string - do not attempt to decode the file data
none - nothing is read, creates an "undef" scalar - mainly useful with "-e"
-t toformat
Write the file in the given format to STDOUT.
"toformat" can be one of:
json, json-utf-8 - json, utf-8 encoded
json-pretty - as above, but pretty-printed
json-utf-16le, json-utf-16be - little endian/big endian utf-16
json-utf-32le, json-utf-32be - little endian/big endian utf-32
cbor - CBOR (RFC 7049, CBOR::XS), a kind of binary JSON
storable - a Storable frozen value in network format
storable-file - a Storable file in network format (Storable has two incompatible
formats)
bencode - use Convert::Bencode, if available (used by torrent files, among others)
clzf - Compress::LZF format
yaml - YAML
dump - Data::Dump
dumper - Data::Dumper
string - writes the data out as if it were a string
none - nothing gets written, mainly useful together with "-e"
Note that Data::Dumper doesn't handle self-referential data structures correctly -
use "dump" instead.
-e code
Evaluate perl code after reading the data and before writing it out again - can be
used to filter, create or extract data. The data that has been written is in $_, and
whatever is in there is written out afterwards.
EXAMPLES
json_xs -t none <isitreally.json
"JSON Lint" - tries to parse the file isitreally.json as JSON - if it is valid JSON, the
command outputs nothing, otherwise it will print an error message and exit with non-zero
exit status.
<src.json json_xs >pretty.json
Prettify the JSON file src.json to dst.json.
json_xs -f storable-file <file
Read the serialised Storable file file and print a human-readable JSON version of it to
STDOUT.
json_xs -f storable-file -t yaml <file
Same as above, but write YAML instead (not using JSON at all :)
json_xs -f none -e '$_ = [1, 2, 3]'
Dump the perl array as UTF-8 encoded JSON text.
<torrentfile json_xs -f bencode -e '$_ = join "\n", map @$_, @{$_->{"announce-list"}}' -t string
Print the tracker list inside a torrent file.
lwp-request http://cpantesters.perl.org/show/JSON-XS.json | json_xs
Fetch the cpan-testers result summary "JSON::XS" and pretty-print it.
Use json_xsp online using onworks.net services