Skip to content

dlad/preon

 
 

Repository files navigation

README

Preon aims to provide a framework for dealing with binary encoded data; or more specifically, it aims to deal with situations in which bytes are considered to be overkill. The project is named after the "point-like" particles, conceived to be subcomponents of quarks and leptons. Let's just say very small particles that you don't see with the naked eye, but you probably rely on them without knowing.

Preon is to bitstream encoded content what JAXB is to XML, or Hibernate to relational databases. You define your in memory representation of the data structure in Java classes, and add annotations to 'tell' how it should be mapped onto a bitstream encoded representation. Preon takes care of the rest: it will give you a decoder, hyperlinked documentation on the encoding format, and - if you want - annotated hexdumps explaining you exactly what you're looking at.

Distinctive features

  • Preon does not a assume a finite set of compression algorithms. There are many ways to compress data. Preon allows compression experts to add components that from that part on become part of Preon's declarative language. Preon is extensible.
  • Preon is capable of generating documentation that would not look bad on Wikipedia.
  • Preon does not assume all data can be loaded in memory in a single go. Instead, it will pull data in on demand, only if it's needed. All logic required to understand how to jump to different parts of the file are hidden from the user.
  • Preon does not assume there will only be a single thread consuming the data.
  • Preon is declarative in nature, but the dependencies between different data elements inside an encoded representation can be modelled as complex expressions.
  • Preon was used to creata a Java bytecode parser without writing a single line of imperative code.

More documentation

Issue tracker, JavaDocs, etc.

We gratefully use the issue tracker and other services provided by Codehaus. The Maven generated documentation can be found over there, as well as the issue tracker, JavaDoc documentation and a bunch of other things.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published