'use strict' const INDENT = Symbol.for('indent') const NEWLINE = Symbol.for('newline') const DEFAULT_NEWLINE = '\n' const DEFAULT_INDENT = ' ' const BOM = /^\uFEFF/ // only respect indentation if we got a line break, otherwise squash it // things other than objects and arrays aren't indented, so ignore those // Important: in both of these regexps, the $1 capture group is the newline // or undefined, and the $2 capture group is the indent, or undefined. const FORMAT = /^\s*[{[]((?:\r?\n)+)([\s\t]*)/ const EMPTY = /^(?:\{\}|\[\])((?:\r?\n)+)?$/ // Node 20 puts single quotes around the token and a comma after it const UNEXPECTED_TOKEN = /^Unexpected token '?(.)'?(,)? /i const hexify = (char) => { const h = char.charCodeAt(0).toString(16).toUpperCase() return `0x${h.length % 2 ? '0' : ''}${h}` } // Remove byte order marker. This catches EF BB BF (the UTF-8 BOM) // because the buffer-to-string conversion in `fs.readFileSync()` // translates it to FEFF, the UTF-16 BOM. const stripBOM = (txt) => String(txt).replace(BOM, '') const makeParsedError = (msg, parsing, position = 0) => ({ message: `${msg} while parsing ${parsing}`, position, }) const parseError = (e, txt, context = 20) => { let msg = e.message if (!txt) { return makeParsedError(msg, 'empty string') } const badTokenMatch = msg.match(UNEXPECTED_TOKEN) const badIndexMatch = msg.match(/ position\s+(\d+)/i) if (badTokenMatch) { msg = msg.replace( UNEXPECTED_TOKEN, `Unexpected token ${JSON.stringify(badTokenMatch[1])} (${hexify(badTokenMatch[1])})$2 ` ) } let errIdx if (badIndexMatch) { errIdx = +badIndexMatch[1] } else if (msg.match(/^Unexpected end of JSON.*/i)) { errIdx = txt.length - 1 } if (errIdx == null) { return makeParsedError(msg, `'${txt.slice(0, context * 2)}'`) } const start = errIdx <= context ? 0 : errIdx - context const end = errIdx + context >= txt.length ? txt.length : errIdx + context const slice = `${start ? '...' : ''}${txt.slice(start, end)}${end === txt.length ? '' : '...'}` return makeParsedError( msg, `${txt === slice ? '' : 'near '}${JSON.stringify(slice)}`, errIdx ) } class JSONParseError extends SyntaxError { constructor (er, txt, context, caller) { const metadata = parseError(er, txt, context) super(metadata.message) Object.assign(this, metadata) this.code = 'EJSONPARSE' this.systemError = er Error.captureStackTrace(this, caller || this.constructor) } get name () { return this.constructor.name } set name (n) {} get [Symbol.toStringTag] () { return this.constructor.name } } const parseJson = (txt, reviver) => { const result = JSON.parse(txt, reviver) if (result && typeof result === 'object') { // get the indentation so that we can save it back nicely // if the file starts with {" then we have an indent of '', ie, none // otherwise, pick the indentation of the next line after the first \n If the // pattern doesn't match, then it means no indentation. JSON.stringify ignores // symbols, so this is reasonably safe. if the string is '{}' or '[]', then // use the default 2-space indent. const match = txt.match(EMPTY) || txt.match(FORMAT) || [null, '', ''] result[NEWLINE] = match[1] ?? DEFAULT_NEWLINE result[INDENT] = match[2] ?? DEFAULT_INDENT } return result } const parseJsonError = (raw, reviver, context) => { const txt = stripBOM(raw) try { return parseJson(txt, reviver) } catch (e) { if (typeof raw !== 'string' && !Buffer.isBuffer(raw)) { const msg = Array.isArray(raw) && raw.length === 0 ? 'an empty array' : String(raw) throw Object.assign( new TypeError(`Cannot parse ${msg}`), { code: 'EJSONPARSE', systemError: e } ) } throw new JSONParseError(e, txt, context, parseJsonError) } } module.exports = parseJsonError parseJsonError.JSONParseError = JSONParseError parseJsonError.noExceptions = (raw, reviver) => { try { return parseJson(stripBOM(raw), reviver) } catch { // no exceptions } }