Creating a BSON Document¶
The bson_t structure¶
BSON documents are created using the bson_t structure. This structure encapsulates the necessary logic for encoding using the BSON Specification. At the core, bson_t is a buffer manager and set of encoding routines.
Let's start by creating a new BSON document on the stack. Whenever using libbson, make sure you #include <bson.h>
.
bson_t b;
bson_init (&b);
This creates an empty document. In JSON, this would be the same as {}
.
We can now proceed to adding items to the BSON document. A variety of functions prefixed with bson_append_
can be used based on the type of field you want to append. Let's append a UTF-8 encoded string.
bson_append_utf8 (&b, "key", -1, "value", -1);
Notice the two -1
parameters. The first indicates that the length of key
in bytes should be determined with strlen()
. Alternatively, we could have passed the number 3
. The same goes for the second -1
, but for value
.
Libbson provides macros to make this less tedious when using string literals. The following two appends are identical.
bson_append_utf8 (&b, "key", -1, "value", -1);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&b, "key", "value");
Now let's take a look at an example that adds a few different field types to a BSON document.
bson_t b = BSON_INITIALIZER;
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&b, "a", 1);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&b, "hello", "world");
BSON_APPEND_BOOL (&b, "bool", true);
Notice that we omitted the call to bson_init(). By specifying BSON_INITIALIZER
we can remove the need to initialize the structure to a base state.
Sub-Documents and Sub-Arrays¶
To simplify the creation of sub-documents and arrays, bson_append_document_begin() and bson_append_array_begin() exist. These can be used to build a sub-document using the parent documents memory region as the destination buffer.
bson_t parent;
bson_t child;
char *str;
bson_init (&parent);
bson_append_document_begin (&parent, "foo", 3, &child);
bson_append_int32 (&child, "baz", 3, 1);
bson_append_document_end (&parent, &child);
str = bson_as_json (&parent, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
bson_destroy (&parent);
{ "foo" : { "baz" : 1 } }
Simplified BSON C Object Notation¶
Creating BSON documents by hand can be tedious and time consuming. BCON, or BSON C Object Notation, was added to allow for the creation of BSON documents in a format that looks closer to the destination format.
The following example shows the use of BCON. Notice that values for fields are wrapped in the BCON_*
macros. These are required for the variadic processor to determine the parameter type.
bson_t *doc;
doc = BCON_NEW ("foo",
"{",
"int",
BCON_INT32 (1),
"array",
"[",
BCON_INT32 (100),
"{",
"sub",
BCON_UTF8 ("value"),
"}",
"]",
"}");
Creates the following document
{ "foo" : { "int" : 1, "array" : [ 100, { "sub" : "value" } ] } }