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Avro support for Erlang/Elixir (http://avro.apache.org/).

Current version implements Apache Avro 1.8.1 specification.

License: Apache License 2.0

Build Status Coverage Status

Avro Type and Erlang Spec Mapping

name_raw() :: atom() | string() | binary().
name() :: binary().
key_raw() :: atom() | sting() | binary().
key() :: binary().
tag() :: binary().
AvroEncoder InputDecoder OutputNotes
nullnullnullNo implicit undefined transformation
booleanboolean()boolean()
intinteger()integer()-2147483648..2147483647
longinteger()integer()-9223372036854775808..9223372036854775807
floatinteger() | float()float()
doubleinteger() | float()float()
bytesbinary()binary()
stringiolist()binary()
enumname_raw()name()
fixedbinary()binary()
array[in()][out()]
map[{key_raw(), in()}] | map()[{key(), out()}] | map()Decoder output depends on map_type option
record[{name_raw(), in()}] | map()[{name(), out()}] | map()Decoder output depends on record_type option
unionin() | {tag(), in()}out() | {tag(), out()}See notes about unions below

Where in() and out() refer to the input and output type specs recursively.

Important Notes about Unicode Strings

The binary encoder/decoder will respect whatever is given in the input (bytes). i.e. The encoder will NOT try to be smart and encode the input string() to utf8 (or whatsoever), and the decoder will not try to validate or decode the input binary() as unicode character list.

The encode caller should make sure the input is of spec [byte()] | binary(), NOT a unicode character list which may possibly contain some code points greater than 255.

Examples

Load Avro Schema file(s) (demonstrating in Erlang shell)

See test/data/interop.avsc for avro schema definition.

1> {ok, SchemaJSON} = file:read_file("test/data/interop.avsc").
2> Term = hd(element(3, avro_ocf:decode_file("test/data/interop.ocf"))).
[{"intField",12},
 {"longField",15234324},
 {"stringField","hey"},
 {"boolField",true},
 {"floatField",1234.0},
 {"doubleField",-1234.0},
 {"bytesField",<<"12312adf">>},
 {"nullField",null},
 {"arrayField",[5.0,0.0,12.0]},
 {"mapField",
  [{"a",[{"label","a"}]},{"bee",[{"label","cee"}]}]},
 {"unionField",12.0},
 {"enumField","C"},
 {"fixedField",<<"1019181716151413">>},
 {"recordField",
  [{"label","blah"},
   {"children",[[{"label","inner"},{"children",[]}]]}]}]
3> Encoder = avro:make_simple_encoder(SchemaJSON, []).
4> Decoder = avro:make_simple_decoder(SchemaJSON, []).
5> Encoded = iolist_to_binary(Encoder(Term)).
6> Term =:= Decoder(Encoded).
true

Define avro schema using erlavro APIs

Avro Binary Encode/Decode

  MyRecordType =
    avro_record:type(
      <<"MyRecord">>,
      [avro_record:define_field(f1, int),
       avro_record:define_field(f2, string)],
      [{namespace, 'com.example'}]),
  Encoder = avro:make_simple_encoder(MyRecordType, []),
  Decoder = avro:make_simple_decoder(MyRecordType, []),
  Term = [{<<"f1">>, 1}, {<<"f2">>, <<"my string">>}],
  Bin = Encoder(Term),
  [{<<"f1">>, 1}, {<<"f2">>, <<"my string">>}] = Decoder(Bin),
  ok.

Avro JSON Encode/Decode

  MyRecordType =
    avro_record:type(
      "MyRecord",
      [avro_record:define_field("f1", int),
       avro_record:define_field("f2", string)],
      [{namespace, "com.example"}]),
  Encoder = avro:make_simple_encoder(MyRecordType, [{encoding, avro_json}]),
  Decoder = avro:make_simple_decoder(MyRecordType, [{encoding, avro_json}]),
  Term = [{<<"f1">>, 1}, {<<"f2">>, <<"my string">>}],
  JSON = Encoder(Term),
  Term = Decoder(JSON),
  io:put_chars(user, JSON),
  ok.

JSON to expect:

{"f1":1,"f2":"my string"}

Encoded Value as a Part of Parent Object

  CodecOptions = [], %% [{encoding, avro_json}] for JSON encode/decode
  NullableInt = avro_union:type([null, int]),
  MyRecordType1 =
    avro_record:type(
      "MyRecord1",
      [avro_record:define_field("f1", NullableInt),
       avro_record:define_field("f2", string)],
      [{namespace, "com.example"}]),
  MyRecordType2 =
    avro_record:type(
      "MyRecord2",
      [avro_record:define_field("f1", string),
       avro_record:define_field("f2", NullableInt)],
      [{namespace, "com.example"}]),
  MyUnion = avro_union:type([MyRecordType1, MyRecordType2]),
  MyArray = avro_array:type(MyUnion),
  Lkup = fun(_) -> erlang:error("not expecting type lookup because "
                                "all types are fully constructed. "
                                "i.e. no name references") end,
  %% Encode Records with type info wrapped
  %% so they can be used as a drop-in part of wrapper object
  WrappedEncoder = avro:make_encoder(Lkup, [wrapped | CodecOptions]),
  T1 = [{"f1", null}, {"f2", <<"str1">>}],
  T2 = [{"f1", <<"str2">>}, {"f2", 2}],
  %% Encode the records with type info wrapped
  R1 = WrappedEncoder(MyRecordType1, T1),
  R2 = WrappedEncoder(MyRecordType2, T2),
  %% Tag the union values for better encoding performance
  U1 = {"com.example.MyRecord1", R1},
  U2 = {"com.example.MyRecord2", R2},
  %% This encoder returns iodata result without type info wrapped
  BinaryEncoder = avro:make_encoder(Lkup, CodecOptions),
  %% Construct the array from encoded elements
  Bin = iolist_to_binary(BinaryEncoder(MyArray, [U1, U2])),
  %% Tag the decoded values
  Hook = avro_decoder_hooks:tag_unions(),
  Decoder = avro:make_decoder(Lkup, [{hook, Hook} | CodecOptions]),
  [ {<<"com.example.MyRecord1">>, [{<<"f1">>, null}, {<<"f2">>, <<"str1">>}]}
  , {<<"com.example.MyRecord2">>, [{<<"f1">>, <<"str2">>}, {<<"f2">>, 2}]}
  ] = Decoder(MyArray, Bin),
  ok.

Decoder Hooks

Decoder hook is an anonymous function to be evaluated by the JSON or binary decoder to amend data before and/or after decoding. Some hook use cases for example:

The default decoder hook does nothing but just passing through the decode call:

fun(__Type__, __SubNameOrId__, Data, DecodeFun) ->
    DecodeFun(Data)
end

This is a typical way to implement a hook which actually does something

fun(Type, SubNameOrIndex, Data0, DecodeFun) ->
    Data = amend_data(Data0),
    Result = DecodeFun(Data),
    amend_result(Result)
end

You can of course also splice-up two hooks by one wrapping around the other:

Hook1 = fun(T, S, D, F) -> ... end,
fun(Type, SubNameOrIndex, Data0, DecodeFun) ->
  Data = amend_data(Data0),
  Result = Hook1(Type, SubNameOrIndex, Data, DecodeFun),
  amend_result(Result)
end

Please find more details and a few examples in avro_decoder_hooks.erl

Important Notes About Unions

Union Values Should be Tagged with Type Name for Better Encoding Performance

For a big union like below

[
  "com.exmpale.MyRecord1",
  "com.example.MyRecord2",
  ... and many more ...
]

There are two ways to encode such unions

For Untagged, the encoder will have to TRY to encode using the union member types one after another until success. This is completely fine for small unions (e.g. a union of null and long), however quite expensive (and sometimes can be problematic) for records. Therefore we are recommending the Tagged way, because it'll help the encoder to find the member quickly.

Caution when unioning string type and int/long arrays.

As [integer()] list is string() in Erlang, this will confuse the encoder. Please make sure to use binary() as avro string encoding input or tag it, and always tag int/long array value like {array, [1, 2, 3]}.

Union Values Are Decoded Without Tags by Default

A bit contradicting to the recommended union encoding, the decoded values are NOT tagged by DEFAULT. Because we believe the use case of tagged unions in decoder output is not as common. You may use the decoder hook avro_decoer_hooks:tag_unions/0 to have the decoded values tagged. NOTE: only named complex types are tagged by this hook, you can of course write your own hook for a different tagging behaviour.

Object container file encoding/decoding

See avro_ocf.erl for details

Logical types and custom type properties.

NOTE: There is no logical type or custom type properties based on avro 'union' type.

erlavro encodes/decodes logical types as well as custom type properties, but (so far) does not validate or transform the encoder/encoder input/output.

e.g. The underlying data type of 'Date' logical type is 'int', in a perfect world, the encoder should accept {Y, M, D} as input and the decoder should transform the integer back to {Y, M, D} --- but this is not supported so far.

Call avro:get_custom_props/2 to access logical type info (as well as any extra customized type properties) for extra data validation/transformation at application level.