Simple and secure binary serialization for Python objects
Project description
urine
urine
encodes and decodes Python objects to and from binary data securely. It only encodes data and leaves out any functionality, which allows for safe deserialization from untrusted sources. Object types are detected automatically and attributes are encoded/decoded recursively, making urine
very simple to use.
Why use urine instead of pickle or JSON?
Unlike pickle
, urine
does not encode nor decode functions. For instance, pickle
provides a __reduce__
method that is intended for reconstructing objects. It gets called every time an object is unpickled (deserialized). An attacker could easily return malicious code that would be executed every time the object is unpickled. This is a big deal braker for network applications that want to exchange Python objects between untrusted peers.
json
on the other hand does not have mentioned security issue. However, JSON is not a binary serializer. It comes with a huge overhead when converted to binary. Furthermore, JSON does not support serialization of class instances or bytes-like objects by default.
The majority of other binary serializers for Python require you to define a custom serialization scheme, wich is often not worth the effort. I did not find a suitable serializer for my projects, so I decided to run my own.
Installation
To install urine
, type:
pip install urine
To install urine
with its development dependencies (e.g. to create pull requests), type:
pip install urine[dev]
Quickstart guide
First of all, import urine
to make use of its functionality.
import urine
Create the object that you want to serialize. This can be any built-in python object or an instance of a class that you defined yourself. Check out the supported object types below for more information. Let's use a list for this example.
obj = ['my data', 50, {3: 'more data'}]
Use urine.encode()
to encode your object and turn it into a bytearray
.
urine.encode(obj)
Output:
bytearray(b'\x01\x00\x10\x03\x00\x00\x00\x0f\x07\x00\x00\x00my data\x062\x14\x01\x00\x00\x00\x06\x03\r\t\x00\x00\x00more data')
Use urine.decode()
to decode the binary data and turn it back into a Python object.
urine.decode(encoded_obj)
Output:
['my data', 50, {3: 'more data'}]
Encoding user defined classes
urine
allows you to encode instances of any class, including classes you defined yourself. Note that methods and functions are not serialized. Only attributes that are objects will be serialized.
Let's start by creating and instantiating a class with arbitrary data attributes.
class MyClass:
def __init__(self, a, b):
self.a = a
self.b = b
my_class = MyClass(25, [True, {3.3: 'test'}])
Use urine.encode()
to encode the class intstance. Note that it does not matter if the instance is part of a list, dictionary or an attribute of another class. It will always be encoded and decoded accordingly.
urine.encode(my_class)
Output:
bytearray(b'\x01\x00\x16\x07\x00\x00\x00MyClass\x02\x00\x00\x00\x01\x00\x00\x00a\x06\x19\x01\x00\x00\x00b\x10\x02\x00\x00\x00\x01\x01\x14\x01\x00\x00\x00\x0bffffff\n@\x0f\x04\x00\x00\x00test')
Use urine.decode()
to decode the binary data back to a class instance.
decoded_class = urine.decode(encoded_class)
print(decoded_class)
print(decoded_class.a)
print(decoded_class.b)
Output:
<urine.decoder.MyClass object at 0x10e96eb80>
25
[True, {3.3: 'test'}]
Excluding class attributes
urine
provides decorators that can be applied to classes that contain attributes that you want to exclude from serialization.
@exclude(*args)
The exclude
decorator prevents the specified attributes from being encoded.
@urine.exclude('b', 'c')
def MyClass:
a = 1 # will be encoded
b = 2 # will not be encoded
c = 3 # will not be encoded
@include(*args)
The include
decorator is the opposite of the exclude
decorator. Only the specified attributes will be encoded.
@urine.include('b', 'c')
def MyClass:
a = 1 # will not be encoded
b = 2 # will be encoded
c = 3 # will be encoded
Extensions
When you want to encode an object type that is not supported and remain its functionality you can write an extension that inherits urine.UrineExtension
. The extension must implement an encode
and decode
function to serialize and reconstruct the object. Use urine.extend()
to register the extension.
class MyExtension(urine.UrineExtension):
def encode(obj):
# Encode obj to a bytes-like object
# ...
return bytes_like_obj
def decode(data):
# Reconstruct the object using data
# ...
return reconstructed_obj
urine.extend(obj_type, MyExtension)
encode(obj)
is used to encode the object to a bytes-like objectobj
is an instance of the object to be serialized- returns a bytes-like object (
bytes
,bytearray
)
decode(data)
is used to reconstruct the original objectdata
is abytearray
containing the encoded object- returns the reconstructed object
obj_type
is the object type the extension will apply to
Note that an extension must be registered using urine.extend()
during both serialization and deserialization.
Example: datetime.datetime
extension
import datetime
import struct
class DatetimeExtension(urine.UrineExtension):
def encode(obj):
return urine.encode([
obj.year,
obj.month,
obj.day,
obj.hour,
obj.minute,
obj.second,
obj.microsecond
])
def decode(data):
decoded_data = urine.decode(data)
return datetime.datetime(*decoded_data)
urine.extend(obj_type, MyExtension)
In order to serialize datetime.datetime
, all required attributes are encoded as a list. Inside decode()
the list is decoded and used to instantiate a new, but identical instance of datetime.datetime
.
Using this extension will produce the following output:
now = datetime.datetime.today()
encoded_datetime = urine.encode(now)
decoded_datetime = urine.decode(encoded_datetime)
print(decoded_datetime)
print(decoded_datetime == now)
Output:
datetime.datetime(2022, 4, 13, 20, 15, 13, 289947)
True
Because of this extension, urine
created an identical instance of datetime.datetime
with all its functionality still available after deserialization.
Supported object types
Type | Scheme | Description |
---|---|---|
bool |
[type<uint8>] [bool<uint8>] |
Boolean |
int |
[type<uint8>] [int<(u)int8/16/32/64>] If int exceeds limit of (u)int64: [type<uint8>] [int<bignum>] |
Integer (Bignums are converted to a list of uint64 and 1 extra byte indicating positive or negative.) |
float |
[type<uint8>] [float<double>] |
Floating point number (Floats are always encoded as a 64 bit double regardless of their value. This is how the Python interpreter treats them.) |
complex |
[type<uint8>] [real<double>] [imag<double>] |
Complex number |
bytes |
[type<uint8>] [len<uint32>] [data] |
bytes object |
bytearray |
[type<uint8>] [len<uint32>] [data] |
bytearray object |
str |
[type<uint8>] [len<uint32>] [string] |
String (UTF-8 encoded) |
list |
[type<uint8>] [list_len<uint32>] [content] |
List |
tuple |
[type<uint8>] [tuple_len<uint32>] [content] |
Tuple |
set |
[type<uint8>] [set_len<uint32>] [content] |
Set |
frozenset |
[type<uint8>] [set_len<uint32>] [content] |
Frozenset |
dict |
[type<uint8>] [dict_len<uint32>] [content] |
Dictionary |
range |
[type<uint8>] [start<int>] [stop<int>] [step<int>] |
Range ( start , stop , step are encoded like int ) |
None |
[type<uint8>] |
Null object |
UrineExtension |
[type<uint8>] [crc32<uin32>] [len<uint32>] [data] |
Extension ( crc32 is the CRC32 hash of the extension's class name used to identify the extension when decoding.) |
object |
[type<uint8>] [name<str>] [attrs_len<uint32>] for each attr: [attr_name<str>] [attr] |
Objects not listed above (User defined classes) |
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