An implementation of the JSON Canonicalization Scheme for Ruby
Implements RFC8785 (JSON Canonicalization Scheme) in Ruby.
Cryptographic operations like hashing and signing depend on that the target
data does not change during serialization, transport, or parsing.
By applying the rules defined by JCS (JSON Canonicalization Scheme),
data provided in the JSON [RFC8259]
format can be exchanged "as is", while still being subject to secure cryptographic operations.
JCS achieves this by building on the serialization formats for JSON
primitives as defined by ECMAScript [ES6],
constraining JSON data to the
I-JSON [RFC7493] subset,
and through a platform independent property sorting scheme.
RFC: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8785
The JSON Canonicalization Scheme concept in a nutshell:
- Serialization of primitive JSON data types using methods compatible with ECMAScript's
JSON.stringify()
- Lexicographic sorting of JSON
Object
properties in a recursive process - JSON
Array
data is also subject to canonicalization, but element order remains untouched
{
"numbers": [333333333.33333329, 1E30, 4.50,
2e-3, 0.000000000000000000000000001],
"string": "\u20ac$\u000F\u000aA'\u0042\u0022\u005c\\\"\/",
"literals": [null, true, false]
}
{"literals":[null,true,false],"numbers":[333333333.3333333,1e+30,4.5,0.002,1e-27],"string":"€$\u000f\nA'B\"\\\\\"/"}
The library accepts Ruby input and generates canonical JSON via the #to_json_c14n
method. This is based on the standard JSON gem's version of #to_json
with overloads for Hash
, String
and Numeric
data = {
"numbers" => [
333333333.3333333,
1.0e+30,
4.5,
0.002,
1.0e-27
],
"string" => "€$\u000F\nA'B\"\\\\\"/",
"literals" => [nil, true, false]
}
puts data.to_json_c14n
=>
Full documentation available on GitHub
- {JSON::Canonicalization}
- Do your best to adhere to the existing coding conventions and idioms.
- Don't use hard tabs, and don't leave trailing whitespace on any line.
- Do document every method you add using YARD annotations. Read the tutorial or just look at the existing code for examples.
- Don't touch the
json-ld.gemspec
,VERSION
orAUTHORS
files. If you need to change them, do so on your private branch only. - Do feel free to add yourself to the
CREDITS
file and the corresponding list in the theREADME
. Alphabetical order applies. - Do note that in order for us to merge any non-trivial changes (as a rule of thumb, additions larger than about 15 lines of code), we need an explicit public domain dedication on record from you, which you will be asked to agree to on the first commit to a repo within the organization.
This is free and unencumbered public domain software. For more information, see https://unlicense.org/ or the accompanying {file:LICENSE} file.