versionedobj
Object serialization & versioning framework for python 3x
versionedobj is an object serialization framework that allows you to create complex python objects that can be serialized/deserialized to and from strings, or dicts, or JSON files.
versionedobj also provides a versioning mechanism, to track changes in object structure across time, and to migrate between different object versions.
Installing
Install versionedobj
using pip:
pip install versionedobj
Getting started
Object definition
Define objects by creating a new class that inherits from VersionedObject
,
and set class attributes to define your object attributes:
from versionedobj import VersionedObjbect
class UserConfig(VersionedObject):
version = "v1.0.0"
username = "john smith"
friend_list = ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
You can also nest VersionedObjects by simply assigning another VersionedObject
class or instance object to a class attribute:
from versionedobj import VersionedObject
class DisplayConfig(VersionedObject):
display_mode = "windowed"
resolution = "1920x1080"
volume = 0.66
# Populate class attributes to build your object
class UserConfig(VersionedObject):
version = "v1.0.0"
username = "john smith"
friend_list = ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
display_config = DisplayConfig() # VersionedObjects can be nested
# Nested VersionedObjects can be a class object, or an instance of the
# class, either way will behave the same
# display_config = DisplayConfig
Creating object instances and accessing object attributes
The values you set on the class attributes of a VersionedObject
serve as the default
values for that object. When you create an instance of your VersionedObject
class,
instance attributes will automatically be created to match the class attributes, and
the values of the class attributes will be copied over to the instance attributes:
obj = UserConfig()
print(obj.friend_list)
# Output looks like this: ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
print(obj.display_config.display_mode)
# Output looks like this: "windowed"
As well as regular dot notation, you can also treat an object instance like a dict, and access individual attributes using their full dot name as the key:
print(obj['friend_list'])
# Output looks like this: ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
print(obj['display_config.display_mode'])
# Output looks like this: "windowed"
# Change the value of an instance attribute
obj['display_config.display_mode'] = "fullscreen"
print(obj['display_config.display_mode'])
# Output looks like this: "fullscreen"
You can also treat a VersionedObjbect
instance as an iterable, to iterate
over all object attribute names, as you would with keys in a dict:
for attr_name in obj:
print(f"{attr_name}: {obj[attr_name]}")
# Output looks like this:
#
# version: v1.0.0
# username: john smith
# friend_list: ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
# display_config.display_mode: windowed
# display_config.resolution: 1920x1080
# display_config.volume: 0.66
Serializing and de-serializing
Create an instance of the versionedobj.Serializer
class, and use the to_file
and from_file
methods to serialize/deserialize data to/from a JSON file:
from versionedobj import VersionedObject, Serializer
class DisplayConfig(VersionedObject):
display_mode = "windowed"
resolution = "1920x1080"
volume = 0.66
class UserConfig(VersionedObject):
version = "v1.0.0"
username = "john smith"
friend_list = ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
display_config = DisplayConfig() # VersionedObjects can be nested
# Create an instance of our VersionedObject
obj = UserConfig()
# Create a serializer instance
serializer = Serializer(obj)
# Save object instance to JSON file
serializer.to_file('user_config.json', indent=4)
# Load JSON file and populate the same object instance
serializer.from_file('user_config.json')
You can also save/load object data as a JSON string:
# Save object instance to JSON string
obj_as_json = serializer.to_json(indent=4)
# Load object instance from JSON string
serializer.from_json(obj_as_json)
Or, as a dict:
# Save object instance to dict
obj_as_dict = serializer.to_dict()
# Load object instance from dict
serializer.from_dict(obj_as_dict)
Using one Serializer instance with multiple object types
For convenience, you can pass an object instance when you create a versionedobj.Serializer
,
and this object will be used for all future serialization/deserialization operations,
so that you don’t have to pass in the object instance every time (as shown in previous
examples).
However, this is not required, and you can optionally provide an object instance
for all serialization/deserialization methods, if you want to (for example) use
a single versionedobj.Serializer
instance for multiple object types:
from versionedobj import VersionedObject, Serializer
class ObjectA(VersionedObject):
name = "john"
age = 44
class ObjectB(VersionedObject):
last_login_time = 12345678
enabled = False
# Create an instance of each object
a = ObjectA()
b = ObjectB()
serializer = Serializer()
# Serialize both objects using the same serializer
a_jsonstr = serializer.to_json(a)
b_jsonstr = serializer.to_json(b)
# De-serialize both objects using the same serializer
serializer.from_json(a_jsonstr, a)
serializer.from_json(b_jsonstr, b)
Filtering serialization/deserialization output
Whitelisting by field name
When serializing, if you only want to output certain fields, you can use the ‘only’ parameter to specify which fields should be output (effectively a whitelist by field name):
serializer.to_file('user_config.json', only=['version', 'username', 'display_config.resolution'])
# Output looks like this:
#
# {
# "version": "v1.0.0",
# "username": "jane doe",
# "display_config": {
# "resolution": "1920x1080",
# }
# }
The same parameter can be used for de-serializing:
serializer.from_file('user_config.json', only=['display_config.display_mode'])
# Only the 'display_config.display_mode' field is loaded from the file
Blacklisting by field name
When serializing, if you don’t want to output certain fields, you can use the ‘ignore’ parameter to specify which fields should be excluded from output (effectively a blacklist by field name):
serializer.to_file('user_config.json', ignore=['friend_list', 'display_config.volume'])
# Output looks like this:
#
# {
# "version": "v1.0.0",
# "username": "jane doe",
# "display_config": {
# "display_mode": "windowed",
# "resolution": "1920x1080"
# }
# }
The same parameter can be used for de-serializing:
serializer.from_file('user_config.json', ignore=['friend_list'])
# Every field except for the 'friend_list' field is loaded from the file
versionedobj.ListField: store a sequence of objects in a single field
versionedobj.ListField
is a list class that behaves exactly like a regular python list,
except for the following 2 differences:
Only instances of a class which is a subclass of the
VersionedObject
may be added to lists (ValueError is raised otherwise)Only instances of the same class may be added to a single list (ValueError is raised otherwise)
You can assign a versionedobj.ListField
instance as the value for a field in your versioned object
class definition, and that field can then hold a sequence of multiple versioned objects. This
is useful if you need to store a variably-sized collection of objects that are created a runtime.
from versionedobj import VersionedObject, Serializer, ListField
# The list will contain objects of this type only
class UserData(VersionedObject):
name = "john"
age = 30
# This object will contain a list of multiple users
class AllUserData(VersionedObject):
# a List may only contain instances of the same class
users = ListField(UserData)
all_user_data = AllUserData()
# Add some users to the list
all_user_data.users.append(UserData(initial_values={'name': 'sam', 'age': 66}))
all_user_data.users.append(UserData(initial_values={'name': 'sally', 'age': 28}))
# Serialize object and print out JSON data
print(Serializer(all_user_data).to_json(indent=4))
# Output looks like this:
#
# {
# "users": [
# {
# "name": "sam",
# "age": 66
# },
# {
# "name": "sally",
# "age": 28
# }
# ]
# }
Context manager for loading & editing saved object data
If you want to load object data from a JSON file, make some changes to the data,
and save it back to the same JSON file, then you can use the FileLoader
context
manager, which will load/create the file for you on entry, return a deserialized
object for you to modify, and then serializes your modified object back to the same
file on exit. This may be useful if you are worried about forgetting to re-serialize
the object when you are done.
from versionedobj import VersionedObject, FileLoader
class Recipe(VersionedObject):
ingredient_1 = "onions"
ingredient_2 = "tomatoes"
ingredient_3 = "garlic"
# Creates a new instance of the object, and loads data from
# "recipe.json" if the file already exists
with FileLoader(Recipe, "recipe.json") as obj:
# Change something
obj.ingredient_3 = "celery"
# recipe.json now looks like this:
#
# {
# "ingredient_1": "onions",
# "ingredient_2": "tomatoes",
# "ingredient_3": "celery",
# }
Migrations: making use of the version number
A VersionedObject object can have a version
attribute, which can be any object,
although it is typically a string (e.g. "v1.2.3"
). This version attribute can be
used to support migrations for older objects, in the event that you need to
change the format of your object.
Example scenario, part 1: you have created a beautiful versioned object
Let’s take the same config file definition from the previous example:
from versionedobj import VersionedObject
# Nested config object
class DisplayConfig(VersionedObject):
display_mode = "windowed"
resolution = "1920x1080"
volume = 0.66
# Top-level config object with another nested config object
class UserConfig(VersionedObject):
version = "v1.0.0"
username = "john smith"
friend_list = ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
display_config = DisplayConfig()
Imagine you’ve already released this code out into the world. People are already
using it, and they have JSON files generated by your UserConfig
class sitting
on their computers.
Example scenario, part 2: you update your software, modifying the versioned object
Now, imagine you are making a new release of your software, and some new features require you to make the following changes to your versioned object:
remove the the
DisplayConfig.resolution
field entirelychange the name of
DisplayConfig.volume
toDisplayConfig.volumes
change the value of
DisplayConfig.volumes
from a float to a list
from versionedobj import VersionedObject
# Nested config object
class DisplayConfig(VersionedObject):
display_mode = "windowed"
# 'resolution' field is deleted
volumes = [0.66, 0.1] # 'volume' is now called 'volumes', and is a list
# Top-level config object with another nested config object
class UserConfig(VersionedObject):
version = "v1.0.0"
username = "john smith"
friend_list = ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
display_config = DisplayConfig()
Uh-oh, you have a problem…
Right now, if you send this updated UserConfig class to your existing users, it will fail
to load their existing JSON files with version v1.0.0
, since those files will contain
the DisplayConfig.resolution
field that we deleted in v1.0.1
, and
DisplayConfig.volume
will similarly be gone, having been replaced with
DisplayConfig.volumes
. This situation is what migrations are for.
Solution– migrations!
The solution is to:
Change the version number to something new, e.g.
v1.0.0
becomesv1.0.1
Write a migration function to transform
v1.0.0
object data intov1.0.1
object dataUse the
versionedobj.migration
decorator to register your migration function
from versionedobj import VersionedObject, migration
# Nested config object
class DisplayConfig(VersionedObject):
display_mode = "windowed"
# 'resolution' field is deleted
volumes = [0.66, 0.1] # 'volume' is now called 'volumes', and is a list
# Top-level config object with another nested config object
class UserConfig(VersionedObject):
version = "v1.0.1" # Version has been updated to 1.0.1
username = "john smith"
friend_list = ["user1", "user2", "user3"]
display_config = DisplayConfig()
# Create the migration function for v1.0.0 to v1.0.1
@migration(UserConfig, "v1.0.0", "v1.0.1")
def migrate_100_to_101(attrs):
del attrs['display_config']['resolution'] # Delete resolution field
del attrs['display_config']['volume'] # Delete volume field
attrs['display_config']['volumes'] = [0.66, 0.1] # Add defaults for new volume values
return attrs # Return modified data (important!)
after you add the migration function and update the version to v1.0.1
, JSON files
that are loaded and contain the version v1.0.0
will be automatically migrated to version
v1.0.1
using the migration function you added.
The downside to this approach, is that you have to manually udpate the version number, and write a new migration function, anytime the structure of your config data changes.
The upside, of course, is that you can relatively easily support migrating any older version of your config file to the current version.
If you don’t need the versioning/migration functionality, just never change your version
number, or don’t create a version
attribute on your VersionedObject
classes.
Migrations: migrating an unversioned object
You may run into a situation where you release an unversioned object, but then later you need to make changes, and migrate an unversioned object to a versioned object.
This can be handled simply by passing “None” to the “add_migration()” method, for the “from_version” parameter. For example:
from versionedobj import VersionedObj, migration
class UserConfig(VersionedObject):
version = "v1.0.0"
username = ""
friend_list = []
@migration(UserConfig, None, "v1.0.0")
def migrate_none_to_100(attrs);
attrs['friend_list'] = [] # Add new 'friend_list' field
return attrs
Validating input data without deserializing
You may want to validate some serialized object data without actually deserializing
and loading the object values. You can use the Serializer.validate_dict
method for this.
from versionedobj import VersionedObject, Serializer
class Recipe(VersionedObject):
ingredient_1 = "onions"
ingredient_2 = "tomatoes"
ingredient_3 = "garlic"
rcp = Recipe()
serializer = Serializer(rcp)
serializer.validate_dict({"ingredient_1": "celery", "ingredient_2": "carrots"})
# Raises versionedobj.exceptions.InputValidationError because 'ingredient_3' is missing
serializer.validate_dict({"ingredient_1": "celery", "ingredient_2": "carrots", "ingredient_12": "cumin"})
# Raises versionedobj.exceptions.InputValidationError because 'ingredient_12' is not a valid attribute
Resetting object instance to default values
You can use the Serializer.reset_to_defaults
method to set all instance attributes to
the default values defined in the matching class attributes.
from versionedobj import VersionedObject, Serializer
class Recipe(VersionedObject):
ingredient_1 = "onions"
ingredient_2 = "tomatoes"
ingredient_3 = "garlic"
rcp = Recipe()
serializer = Serializer(rcp)
# Change a value
rcp.ingredient_1 = "celery"
print(serializer.to_dict())
# {"ingredient_1": "celery", "ingredient_2": "tomatoes", "ingredient_3": "garlic"}
# Reset object instance to defaults
serializer.reset_to_defaults()
print(serializer.to_dict())
# {"ingredient_1": "onions", "ingredient_2": "tomatoes", "ingredient_3": "garlic"}
Testing object instance equality
You can test whether two VersionedObject
instances are equal in both structure and
values, the same way in which you would check equality of any other two objects:
from versionedobj import VersionedObject
class Recipe(VersionedObject):
ingredient_1 = "onions"
ingredient_2 = "tomatoes"
ingredient_3 = "garlic"
rcp1 = Recipe()
rcp2 = Recipe()
print(rcp1 == rcp2)
# True
rcp1.ingredient_3 = "ginger"
print(rcp1 == rcp2)
# False
In order for two VersionedObject
instances to be considered equal, the following
conditions must be true:
Both objects are instances of the same class
Both objects contain matching attribute names and values
Object instance hashing
Objects can be uniquely hashed based on their instance attribute values, using the builtin
hash()
function. This means, for example, that you can use object instances as dict keys:
from versionedobj import VersionedObject
class Person(VersionedObject):
name = "sam"
age = 31
p1 = Person()
p2 = Person()
# Change 1 value on p2 so the hash value is different
p2.age = 32
d = {p1: "a", p2: "b"}
print(d)
# { Person({"name": "sam", "age": 31}): "a", Person({"name": "sam", "age": 32}): "b" }
Testing whether object instances contain specific values
You can check whether an object instance contains a particular attribute value using the in
keyword:
from versionedobj import VersionedObject
class Person(VersionedObject):
name = "sam"
age = 31
p = Person()
print("sam" in p)
# True
p.name = "sally"
print("sam" in p)
# False
print("sally" in p)
# True
Performance/stress test visualization
The following image is generated by the tests/performance_tests/big_class_performance_test.py
script,
which creates and serializes/deserializes multiple versioned objects of an incrementally increasing size,
and simultaneously having an increasing depth of contained nested objects.
Each data point in the graph represents measurements taken for an object of a particular size.
The time taken to serialize the object to a dict, and also to deserialize the object data
from a dict, and also to create an instance of the object, is measured for each object size. It is
worth mentioning that measuring the from/to_json
and from/to_file
methods is not very
useful in this case, since that would only be measuring to/from_dict
with additional JSON
parser or file I/O overhead. That is why this graph only measures to/from_dict
.
This test was executed on a system with an Intel Core-i7 running Debian GNU/Linux 10 (buster) with Linux debian 4.19.0-21-amd64.
Contributions
Contributions are welcome, please open a pull request at https://github.com/eriknyquist/versionedobj and ensure that:
All existing unit tests pass (run tests via
python setup.py test
)New unit tests are added to cover any modified/new functionality (run
python code_coverage.py
to ensure that coverage is above 98%)
You will need to install packages required for development, these are listed in dev_requirements.txt
:
pip install -r dev_requirements.txt
If you have any questions about / need help with contributions or unit tests, please contact Erik at eknyquist@gmail.com.