# bzipper [bzipper](https://crates.io/crates/bzipper/) is a binary (de)serialiser for the Rust language. Contrary to [Serde](https://crates.io/crates/serde/)/[Bincode](https://crates.io/crates/bincode/), the goal of bzipper is to serialise with a known size constraint. Therefore, this crate may be more suited for networking or other cases where a fixed-sized buffer is needed. Keep in mind that this project is still work-in-progress. This crate is compatible with `no_std`. ## Data model Most primitive types serialise losslessly, with the exception being `usize` and `isize`. These serialise as `u32` and `i32`, respectively, for portability reasons. Unsized types, such as `str` and slices, are not supported. Instead, arrays should be used. For strings, the `FixedString` type is also provided. ## Usage This crate revolves around the `Serialise` and `Deserialise` traits, both of which are commonly used in conjunction with streams (more specifically, s-streams and d-streams). Many core types come implemented with bzipper, including primitives as well as some standard library types such as `Option` and `Result`. It is recommended in most cases to just derive these traits for custom types (enumerations and structures only). Here, each field is chained in declaration order: ```rs use bzipper::{Deserialise, Serialise}; #[derive(Debug, Deserialise, PartialEq, Serialise)] struct IoRegister { addr: u32, value: u16, } let mut buf: [u8; IoRegister::SERIALISED_SIZE] = Default::default(); IoRegister { addr: 0x04000000, value: 0x0402 }.serialise(&mut buf).unwrap(); assert_eq!(buf, [0x04, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x04, 0x02]); assert_eq!(IoRegister::deserialise(&buf).unwrap(), IoRegister { addr: 0x04000000, value: 0x0402 }); ``` ### Serialisation To serialise an object implementing `Serialise`, simply allocate a buffer for the serialisation. The required size of any given serialisation is specified by the `SERIALISED_SIZE` constant: ```rs use bzipper::Serialise; let mut buf: [u8; char::SERIALISED_SIZE] = Default::default(); 'Ж'.serialise(&mut buf).unwrap(); assert_eq!(buf, [0x00, 0x00, 0x04, 0x16]); ``` The only special requirement of the `serialise` method is that the provided byte slice has an element count of exactly `SERIALISED_SIZE`. We can also use streams to *chain* multiple elements together: ```rs use bzipper::Serialise; let mut buf: [u8; char::SERIALISED_SIZE * 5] = Default::default(); let mut stream = bzipper::Sstream::new(&mut buf); stream.append(&'ل'); stream.append(&'ا'); stream.append(&'م'); stream.append(&'د'); stream.append(&'ا'); assert_eq!(buf, [0x00, 0x00, 0x06, 0x44, 0x00, 0x00, 0x06, 0x27, 0x00, 0x00, 0x06, 0x45, 0x00, 0x00, 0x06, 0x2F, 0x00, 0x00, 0x06, 0x27]); ``` When serialising primitives, the resulting byte stream is in big endian (a.k.a. network endian). It is recommended for implementors to adhere to this convention as well. ### Deserialisation Deserialisation works with an almost identical syntax to serialisation. To deserialise a buffer, simply call the `deserialise` method: ```rs use bzipper::Deserialise; let data = [0x45, 0x54]; assert_eq!(::deserialise(&data).unwrap(), 0x4554); ``` Just like with serialisations, the `Dstream` can be used to deserialise chained elements: ```rs use bzipper::Deserialise; let data = [0x45, 0x54]; let stream = bzipper::Dstream::new(&data); assert_eq!(stream.take::().unwrap(), 0x45); assert_eq!(stream.take::().unwrap(), 0x54); ```