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rust-dangerous

Rust library for safely and explicitly handling untrusted aka dangerous data
Documentation hosted on docs.rs.

toml dangerous = "0.9"

Goals

[1] Panics due to OOM are out-of-scope. Disable heap-allocations if this is a concern.
[2] Zero dependencies when both unicode and simd features are disabled.
[3] Zero heap-allocations when the full-backtrace feature is disabled.

This library's intentions are to provide a simple interface for explicitly parsing untrusted data safely. dangerous really shines with parsing binary or simple text data formats and protocols. It is not a deserialisation library like what serde provides, but you could write a parser with dangerous that could be used within a deserialiser.

Panics and unhandled/unacknowledged data are two footguns this library seeks to prevent. An optional, but solid, debugging interface with sane input formatting and helpful errors is included to weed out problems before, or after they arise in production.

Usage

```rust fn decodemessage<'i, E>(r: &mut BytesReader<'i, E>) -> Result, E> where E: Error<'i>, { r.context("message", |r| { // Expect version 1 r.context("version", |r| r.consume(0x01))?; // Read the body length let bodylen = r.context("body len", |r| r.readu8())?; // Take the body input let body = r.context("body", |r| { let bodyinput = r.take(bodylen as usize)?; // Decode the body input as a UTF-8 str bodyinput.todangerousstr() })?; // We did it! Ok(Message { body }) }) }

let input = dangerous::input(/* data */); let result: Result<_, Invalid> = input.readall(decodemessage); ```

Errors

Custom errors for protocols often do not provide much context around why and where a specific problem occurs within input. Passing down errors as simple as core::str::Utf8Error may be useful enough to debug while in development, however when just written into logs without the input/context, often amount to noise. At this stage you are almost better off with a simple input error.

This problem is amplified with any trivial recursive-descent parser as the context around a sub-slice is lost, rendering any error offsets useless when passed back up to the root. dangerous fixes this by capturing the context around and above the error.

Ever tried working backwards from something like this?

Wouldn't it be better if this was the alternative?

```

[01 05 68 65 ff 6c 6f] ^^
additional: error offset: 4, input length: 7 backtrace: 1. read all input 2. <context> (expected message) 3. <context> (expected body) 4. convert input into string (expected utf-8 code point) ```

Inspiration

This project was originally inspired by untrusted.