enhancement for the python package 'construct' that adds support for dataclasses.
Project description
construct-dataclasses
This small repository is an enhancement of the python package construct, which is a powerful tool to declare symmetrical parsers and builders for binary data. This project combines construct with python's dataclasses with support for nested structs.
Installation
You can install the package via pip or just copy the python file as it is only one.
pip install construct-dataclasses
Usage
More usage examples are placed in the examples/ directory.
Define dataclasses
Before we can start declaring fields on a dataclass, the class itself has to be created. Currently, there are two ways on how to create a dataclass usable by this package.
-
Use the standard
@dataclass
decorator and create the parser instance afterwards:from construct_dataclasses import DataclassStruct @dataclasses.dataclass class Foo: ... # Create the parser manually parser = DataclassStruct(Foo) instance = parser.parse(...)
-
Use the
@dataclass_struct
decorator to define a new dataclass and automatically create a parser instance that will be assigned as a class attribute:from construct_dataclasses import dataclass_struct @dataclass_struct class Foo: ... # Use the class-parser to parse instance = Foo.parser.parse(...) # or to build data = Foo.parser.build(instance)
Define fields
This module defines a new way how to declare fields of a dataclass. In order to combine the python package construct with python's dataclasses module, this project introduces the following two methods:
-
csfield
: Default definition of a field using a subcon or other dataclass@dataclass_struct class ImageHeader: signature: bytes = csfield(cs.Const(b"BMP")) orientation: Orientation = csfield(cs.Enum(cs.Int8ub, Orientation))
-
subcsfield
: Definition of nested constructs that are contained in list-like structures.@dataclass_struct class Image: header: ImageHeader = csfield(ImageHeader) # dataclass reference width: int = csfield(cs.Int8ub) height: int = csfield(cs.Int8ub) # Note that we have to convert our dataclass into a struct using # the method "to_struct(...)" pixels: list[Pixel] = subcsfield(Pixel, cs.Array(this.width * this.height, to_struct(Pixel)))
-
tfield
: a simple typed field that tries to return an instance of the given model class. Usesubcsfield
for dataclass models and enum types with this function.@dataclass_struct class ImageHeader: orientation: Orientation = tfield(Orientation, cs.Enum(cs.Int8ul, Orientation))
Convert dataclasses
By default, all conversion is done automatically if you don't use instances of SubContruct
classes in your field definitions. If you have to define a subcon that needs a nested subcon, like Array
or RepeatUntil
and you would like to parse a dataclass struct, it is required to convert the defined dataclass into a struct.
-
to_struct
: This method converts all fields defined in a dataclass into a singleStruct
orAlignedStruct
instance.@dataclass_struct class Pixel: data: int = csfield(cs.Int8ub) pixel_struct: construct.Struct = to_struct(Pixel)
-
to_object
: In order to use data returned byStruct.parse
, this method can be used to apply this data and create a dataclass object from it.data = pixel_struct.parse(b"...") pixel = to_object(data, Pixel)
The complete example is shown below:
# Example modifed from here: https://github.com/timrid/construct-typing/
import dataclasses
import enum
import construct as cs
from construct_dataclasses import dataclass_struct, csfield, to_struct, subcsfield
class Orientation(enum.IntEnum):
NONE = 0
HORIZONTAL = 1
VERTICAL = 2
@dataclass_struct
class ImageHeader:
signature: bytes = csfield(cs.Const(b"BMP"))
orientation: Orientation = csfield(cs.Enum(cs.Int8ub, Orientation))
@dataclass_struct
class Pixel:
data: int = csfield(cs.Int8ub)
@dataclass_struct
class Image:
header: ImageHeader = csfield(ImageHeader)
width: int = csfield(cs.Int8ub)
height: int = csfield(cs.Int8ub)
pixels: list[Pixel] = subcsfield(Pixel, cs.Array(this.width * this.height, to_struct(Pixel)))
obj = Image(
header=ImageHeader(
orientation=Orientation.VERTICAL
),
width=3,
height=2,
pixels=[Pixel(1), Pixel(2), Pixel(3), Pixel(4), Pixel(5), Pixel(6)]
)
print(Image.parser.build(obj))
print(Image.parser.parse(b"BMP\x02\x03\x02\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\06"))
The expected output would be:
b'BMP\x02\x03\x02\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06'
Image(
header=ImageHeader(signature=b'BMP', orientation=<Orientation.VERTICAL: 2>),
width=3, height=2,
pixels=[Pixel(data=1), Pixel(data=2), Pixel(data=3), Pixel(data=4), Pixel(data=5), Pixel(data=6)]
)
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