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The app library component of SDL is meant to run on the end user’s smart-device from within SDL enabled apps, as an embedded app, or connected to the cloud. App libraries allow the apps to connect to SDL enabled head-units and hardware through bluetooth, USB, and TCP for Android, and cloud and embedded apps can connect through web sockets, Java Beans, and other custom transports. Once the library establishes a connection between the smart device and head-unit through the preferred method of transport, the two components are able to communicate using the SDL defined protocol. The app integrating this library project is then able to expose its functionality to the head-unit through text, media, and other interactive elements.

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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2010 The Android Open Source Project
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */

package org.json;


// Note: this class was written without inspecting the non-free org.json sourcecode.

/**
 * Parses a JSON (RFC 4627)
 * encoded string into the corresponding object. Most clients of
 * this class will use only need the {@link #JSONTokener(String) constructor}
 * and {@link #nextValue} method. Example usage: 
 * String json = "{"
 *         + "  \"query\": \"Pizza\", "
 *         + "  \"locations\": [ 94043, 90210 ] "
 *         + "}";
 *
 * JSONObject object = (JSONObject) new JSONTokener(json).nextValue();
 * String query = object.getString("query");
 * JSONArray locations = object.getJSONArray("locations");
* *

For best interoperability and performance use JSON that complies with * RFC 4627, such as that generated by {@link JSONStringer}. For legacy reasons * this parser is lenient, so a successful parse does not indicate that the * input string was valid JSON. All of the following syntax errors will be * ignored: *

    *
  • End of line comments starting with {@code //} or {@code #} and ending * with a newline character. *
  • C-style comments starting with {@code /*} and ending with * {@code *}{@code /}. Such comments may not be nested. *
  • Strings that are unquoted or {@code 'single quoted'}. *
  • Hexadecimal integers prefixed with {@code 0x} or {@code 0X}. *
  • Octal integers prefixed with {@code 0}. *
  • Array elements separated by {@code ;}. *
  • Unnecessary array separators. These are interpreted as if null was the * omitted value. *
  • Key-value pairs separated by {@code =} or {@code =>}. *
  • Key-value pairs separated by {@code ;}. *
* *

Each tokener may be used to parse a single JSON string. Instances of this * class are not thread safe. Although this class is nonfinal, it was not * designed for inheritance and should not be subclassed. In particular, * self-use by overrideable methods is not specified. See Effective Java * Item 17, "Design and Document or inheritance or else prohibit it" for further * information. */ public class JSONTokener { /** * The input JSON. */ private final String in; /** * The index of the next character to be returned by {@link #next}. When * the input is exhausted, this equals the input's length. */ private int pos; /** * @param in JSON encoded string. Null is not permitted and will yield a * tokener that throws {@code NullPointerExceptions} when methods are * called. */ public JSONTokener(String in) { // consume an optional byte order mark (BOM) if it exists if (in != null && in.startsWith("\ufeff")) { in = in.substring(1); } this.in = in; } /** * Returns the next value from the input. * * @return a {@link JSONObject}, {@link JSONArray}, String, Boolean, * Integer, Long, Double or {@link JSONObject#NULL}. * @throws JSONException if the input is malformed. */ public Object nextValue() throws JSONException { int c = nextCleanInternal(); switch (c) { case -1: throw syntaxError("End of input"); case '{': return readObject(); case '[': return readArray(); case '\'': case '"': return nextString((char) c); default: pos--; return readLiteral(); } } private int nextCleanInternal() throws JSONException { while (pos < in.length()) { int c = in.charAt(pos++); switch (c) { case '\t': case ' ': case '\n': case '\r': continue; case '/': if (pos == in.length()) { return c; } char peek = in.charAt(pos); switch (peek) { case '*': // skip a /* c-style comment */ pos++; int commentEnd = in.indexOf("*/", pos); if (commentEnd == -1) { throw syntaxError("Unterminated comment"); } pos = commentEnd + 2; continue; case '/': // skip a // end-of-line comment pos++; skipToEndOfLine(); continue; default: return c; } case '#': /* * Skip a # hash end-of-line comment. The JSON RFC doesn't * specify this behavior, but it's required to parse * existing documents. See http://b/2571423. */ skipToEndOfLine(); continue; default: return c; } } return -1; } /** * Advances the position until after the next newline character. If the line * is terminated by "\r\n", the '\n' must be consumed as whitespace by the * caller. */ private void skipToEndOfLine() { for (; pos < in.length(); pos++) { char c = in.charAt(pos); if (c == '\r' || c == '\n') { pos++; break; } } } /** * Returns the string up to but not including {@code quote}, unescaping any * character escape sequences encountered along the way. The opening quote * should have already been read. This consumes the closing quote, but does * not include it in the returned string. * * @param quote either ' or ". */ public String nextString(char quote) throws JSONException { /* * For strings that are free of escape sequences, we can just extract * the result as a substring of the input. But if we encounter an escape * sequence, we need to use a StringBuilder to compose the result. */ StringBuilder builder = null; /* the index of the first character not yet appended to the builder. */ int start = pos; while (pos < in.length()) { int c = in.charAt(pos++); if (c == quote) { if (builder == null) { // a new string avoids leaking memory return new String(in.substring(start, pos - 1)); } else { builder.append(in, start, pos - 1); return builder.toString(); } } if (c == '\\') { if (pos == in.length()) { throw syntaxError("Unterminated escape sequence"); } if (builder == null) { builder = new StringBuilder(); } builder.append(in, start, pos - 1); builder.append(readEscapeCharacter()); start = pos; } } throw syntaxError("Unterminated string"); } /** * Unescapes the character identified by the character or characters that * immediately follow a backslash. The backslash '\' should have already * been read. This supports both unicode escapes "u000A" and two-character * escapes "\n". */ private char readEscapeCharacter() throws JSONException { char escaped = in.charAt(pos++); switch (escaped) { case 'u': if (pos + 4 > in.length()) { throw syntaxError("Unterminated escape sequence"); } String hex = in.substring(pos, pos + 4); pos += 4; try { return (char) Integer.parseInt(hex, 16); } catch (NumberFormatException nfe) { throw syntaxError("Invalid escape sequence: " + hex); } case 't': return '\t'; case 'b': return '\b'; case 'n': return '\n'; case 'r': return '\r'; case 'f': return '\f'; case '\'': case '"': case '\\': default: return escaped; } } /** * Reads a null, boolean, numeric or unquoted string literal value. Numeric * values will be returned as an Integer, Long, or Double, in that order of * preference. */ private Object readLiteral() throws JSONException { String literal = nextToInternal("{}[]/\\:,=;# \t\f"); if (literal.length() == 0) { throw syntaxError("Expected literal value"); } else if ("null".equalsIgnoreCase(literal)) { return JSONObject.NULL; } else if ("true".equalsIgnoreCase(literal)) { return Boolean.TRUE; } else if ("false".equalsIgnoreCase(literal)) { return Boolean.FALSE; } /* try to parse as an integral type... */ if (literal.indexOf('.') == -1) { int base = 10; String number = literal; if (number.startsWith("0x") || number.startsWith("0X")) { number = number.substring(2); base = 16; } else if (number.startsWith("0") && number.length() > 1) { number = number.substring(1); base = 8; } try { long longValue = Long.parseLong(number, base); if (longValue <= Integer.MAX_VALUE && longValue >= Integer.MIN_VALUE) { return (int) longValue; } else { return longValue; } } catch (NumberFormatException e) { /* * This only happens for integral numbers greater than * Long.MAX_VALUE, numbers in exponential form (5e-10) and * unquoted strings. Fall through to try floating point. */ } } /* ...next try to parse as a floating point... */ try { return Double.valueOf(literal); } catch (NumberFormatException ignored) { } /* ... finally give up. We have an unquoted string */ return new String(literal); // a new string avoids leaking memory } /** * Returns the string up to but not including any of the given characters or * a newline character. This does not consume the excluded character. */ private String nextToInternal(String excluded) { int start = pos; for (; pos < in.length(); pos++) { char c = in.charAt(pos); if (c == '\r' || c == '\n' || excluded.indexOf(c) != -1) { return in.substring(start, pos); } } return in.substring(start); } /** * Reads a sequence of key/value pairs and the trailing closing brace '}' of * an object. The opening brace '{' should have already been read. */ private JSONObject readObject() throws JSONException { JSONObject result = new JSONObject(); /* Peek to see if this is the empty object. */ int first = nextCleanInternal(); if (first == '}') { return result; } else if (first != -1) { pos--; } while (true) { Object name = nextValue(); if (!(name instanceof String)) { if (name == null) { throw syntaxError("Names cannot be null"); } else { throw syntaxError("Names must be strings, but " + name + " is of type " + name.getClass().getName()); } } /* * Expect the name/value separator to be either a colon ':', an * equals sign '=', or an arrow "=>". The last two are bogus but we * include them because that's what the original implementation did. */ int separator = nextCleanInternal(); if (separator != ':' && separator != '=') { throw syntaxError("Expected ':' after " + name); } if (pos < in.length() && in.charAt(pos) == '>') { pos++; } result.put((String) name, nextValue()); switch (nextCleanInternal()) { case '}': return result; case ';': case ',': continue; default: throw syntaxError("Unterminated object"); } } } /** * Reads a sequence of values and the trailing closing brace ']' of an * array. The opening brace '[' should have already been read. Note that * "[]" yields an empty array, but "[,]" returns a two-element array * equivalent to "[null,null]". */ private JSONArray readArray() throws JSONException { JSONArray result = new JSONArray(); /* to cover input that ends with ",]". */ boolean hasTrailingSeparator = false; while (true) { switch (nextCleanInternal()) { case -1: throw syntaxError("Unterminated array"); case ']': if (hasTrailingSeparator) { result.put(null); } return result; case ',': case ';': /* A separator without a value first means "null". */ result.put(null); hasTrailingSeparator = true; continue; default: pos--; } result.put(nextValue()); switch (nextCleanInternal()) { case ']': return result; case ',': case ';': hasTrailingSeparator = true; continue; default: throw syntaxError("Unterminated array"); } } } /** * Returns an exception containing the given message plus the current * position and the entire input string. */ public JSONException syntaxError(String message) { return new JSONException(message + this); } /** * Returns the current position and the entire input string. */ @Override public String toString() { // consistent with the original implementation return " at character " + pos + " of " + in; } /* * Legacy APIs. * * None of the methods below are on the critical path of parsing JSON * documents. They exist only because they were exposed by the original * implementation and may be used by some clients. */ /** * Returns true until the input has been exhausted. */ public boolean more() { return pos < in.length(); } /** * Returns the next available character, or the null character '\0' if all * input has been exhausted. The return value of this method is ambiguous * for JSON strings that contain the character '\0'. */ public char next() { return pos < in.length() ? in.charAt(pos++) : '\0'; } /** * Returns the next available character if it equals {@code c}. Otherwise an * exception is thrown. */ public char next(char c) throws JSONException { char result = next(); if (result != c) { throw syntaxError("Expected " + c + " but was " + result); } return result; } /** * Returns the next character that is not whitespace and does not belong to * a comment. If the input is exhausted before such a character can be * found, the null character '\0' is returned. The return value of this * method is ambiguous for JSON strings that contain the character '\0'. */ public char nextClean() throws JSONException { int nextCleanInt = nextCleanInternal(); return nextCleanInt == -1 ? '\0' : (char) nextCleanInt; } /** * Returns the next {@code length} characters of the input. * *

The returned string shares its backing character array with this * tokener's input string. If a reference to the returned string may be held * indefinitely, you should use {@code new String(result)} to copy it first * to avoid memory leaks. * * @throws JSONException if the remaining input is not long enough to * satisfy this request. */ public String next(int length) throws JSONException { if (pos + length > in.length()) { throw syntaxError(length + " is out of bounds"); } String result = in.substring(pos, pos + length); pos += length; return result; } /** * Returns the {@link String#trim trimmed} string holding the characters up * to but not including the first of: *

    *
  • any character in {@code excluded} *
  • a newline character '\n' *
  • a carriage return '\r' *
* *

The returned string shares its backing character array with this * tokener's input string. If a reference to the returned string may be held * indefinitely, you should use {@code new String(result)} to copy it first * to avoid memory leaks. * * @return a possibly-empty string */ public String nextTo(String excluded) { if (excluded == null) { throw new NullPointerException("excluded == null"); } return nextToInternal(excluded).trim(); } /** * Equivalent to {@code nextTo(String.valueOf(excluded))}. */ public String nextTo(char excluded) { return nextToInternal(String.valueOf(excluded)).trim(); } /** * Advances past all input up to and including the next occurrence of * {@code thru}. If the remaining input doesn't contain {@code thru}, the * input is exhausted. */ public void skipPast(String thru) { int thruStart = in.indexOf(thru, pos); pos = thruStart == -1 ? in.length() : (thruStart + thru.length()); } /** * Advances past all input up to but not including the next occurrence of * {@code to}. If the remaining input doesn't contain {@code to}, the input * is unchanged. */ public char skipTo(char to) { int index = in.indexOf(to, pos); if (index != -1) { pos = index; return to; } else { return '\0'; } } /** * Unreads the most recent character of input. If no input characters have * been read, the input is unchanged. */ public void back() { if (--pos == -1) { pos = 0; } } /** * Returns the integer [0..15] value for the given hex character, or -1 * for non-hex input. * * @param hex a character in the ranges [0-9], [A-F] or [a-f]. Any other * character will yield a -1 result. */ public static int dehexchar(char hex) { if (hex >= '0' && hex <= '9') { return hex - '0'; } else if (hex >= 'A' && hex <= 'F') { return hex - 'A' + 10; } else if (hex >= 'a' && hex <= 'f') { return hex - 'a' + 10; } else { return -1; } } }





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