Javascript + C++ BSON parser ============================ This BSON parser is primarily meant to be used with the `mongodb` node.js driver. However, wonderful tools such as `onejs` can package up a BSON parser that will work in the browser. The current build is located in the `browser_build/bson.js` file. A simple example of how to use BSON in the browser: ```html ``` A simple example of how to use BSON in `node.js`: ```javascript var bson = require("bson"); var BSON = bson.BSONPure.BSON; var Long = bson.BSONPure.Long; var doc = {long: Long.fromNumber(100)} // Serialize a document var data = BSON.serialize(doc, false, true, false); console.log("data:", data); // Deserialize the resulting Buffer var doc_2 = BSON.deserialize(data); console.log("doc_2:", doc_2); ``` The API consists of two simple methods to serialize/deserialize objects to/from BSON format: * BSON.serialize(object, checkKeys, asBuffer, serializeFunctions) * @param {Object} object the Javascript object to serialize. * @param {Boolean} checkKeys the serializer will check if keys are valid. * @param {Boolean} asBuffer return the serialized object as a Buffer object **(ignore)**. * @param {Boolean} serializeFunctions serialize the javascript functions **(default:false)** * @return {TypedArray/Array} returns a TypedArray or Array depending on what your browser supports * BSON.deserialize(buffer, options, isArray) * Options * **evalFunctions** {Boolean, default:false}, evaluate functions in the BSON document scoped to the object deserialized. * **cacheFunctions** {Boolean, default:false}, cache evaluated functions for reuse. * **cacheFunctionsCrc32** {Boolean, default:false}, use a crc32 code for caching, otherwise use the string of the function. * @param {TypedArray/Array} a TypedArray/Array containing the BSON data * @param {Object} [options] additional options used for the deserialization. * @param {Boolean} [isArray] ignore used for recursive parsing. * @return {Object} returns the deserialized Javascript Object.