[Haskell-cafe] Parsing binary 'hierachical' objects for lazy developers
John Obbele
john.obbele at gmail.com
Wed Apr 27 20:16:03 CEST 2011
Hi Haskellers,
I'm currently serializing / unserializing a bunch of bytestrings
which are somehow related to each others and I'm wondering if
there was a way in Haskell to ease my pain.
The first thing I'm looking for, is to be able to automatically
derive "Serializable" objects, for example:
---------------------------------------------------------------
import Data.Serialize -- using cereal as an example
data MyFlag = One | Two | Three
instance Serialize [MyFlag] where
put = putWord16le . marshalFlags
get = unmarshal `fmap` getWord16le
data ObjectA = ObjectA { attribute0 :: Word8
, attribute1 :: Word16le
, attribute2 :: [MyFlag]
} deriving (Serialize) -- magic goes here!
---------------------------------------------------------------
Unfortunately ghci complains that 'Serialize' is not a derivable
class. Yet, deriving the Serialize instance for ObjectA should be
simple, since all the three attributes are already serializable
themselves...
Second issue, I would like to find a way to dispatch parsers. I'm
not very good at expressing my problem in english, so I will use
another code example:
---------------------------------------------------------------
-- let's say we have two objects with almost the same structure:
data ObjectA = ObjectA { objLength :: Int
, objType :: TypeId
, attribute2a :: [MyFlag]
}
data ObjectB = ObjectB { objLength :: Int
, objType :: TypeId
, attribute2b :: Word32le
}
---------------------------------------------------------------
When we begin to deserialize theses objects, we don't know their
final type, we just know how to read their length and their
typeId.
Only then can we determine if what we are parsing is an ObjectA
or an ObjectB.
Once we now the object type, we can resume the parsing and return
either an ObjectA or ObjectB.
Oki, so I may have read too much of Peter Seibel's chapter on
binary-data parsing in Common Lisp or spent too much time working
on object-oriented code, but currently, I have no idea on how to
write this 'simply' in Haskell :(
any help would be welcome
/john
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