Duktape.cr provides Crystal bindings to the Duktape javascript engine.
Duktape.cr is best installed using Shards.
Add this to your shard.yml
:
name: example # your project's name
version: 1.0.0 # your project's version
dependencies:
duktape:
github: jessedoyle/duktape.cr
version: ~> 1.0.0
then execute:
shards install
Shards will automatically make the native library. You can make the library manually by calling make libduktape
.
You must first create a Duktape context:
require "duktape"
sbx = Duktape::Sandbox.new
sbx.eval! <<-JS
var birthYear = 1990;
function calcAge(birthYear){
var current = new Date();
var year = current.getFullYear();
return year - birthYear;
}
print("You are " + calcAge(birthYear) + " years old.");
JS
An overwhelming majority of the Duktape API has been implemented. You can call the API functions directly on a Duktape::Sandbox
or Duktape::Context
instance:
sbx = Duktape::Sandbox.new
sbx.push_global_object # [ global ]
sbx.push_string "Math" # [ global "Math" ]
sbx.get_prop -2 # [ global Math ]
sbx.push_string "PI" # [ global Math "PI" ]
sbx.get_prop -2 # [ global Math PI ]
pi = sbx.get_number -1
puts "PI: #{pi}" # => PI: 3.14159
sbx.pop_3
All of the evaluation API methods have a corresponding bang-method (!
). The bang method calls will raise when a javascript error occurs, the non-bang methods will not raise on invalid javascript.
For example:
sbx = Duktape::Context.new
sbx.eval <<-JS
var a =
JS
will not raise any errors, but will return a non-zero error code.
The following code:
sbx = Duktape::Context.new
sbx.eval! <<-JS
__invalid();
JS
will raise Duktape::SyntaxError
.
You should only execute untrusted javascript code from within a Duktape::Sandbox
instance. A sandbox isolates code from insecure operations such as Duktape's internal require
mechanism and the Duktape
global javascript object.
Creating a Duktape::Context
gives code access to internal Duktape properties:
ctx = Duktape::Context.new
ctx.eval! <<-JS
print(Duktape.version);
JS
Duktape::Sandbox
instances may optionally take an execution timeout limit in milliseconds. This provides protection against infinite loops when executing untrusted code.
A Duktape::RangeError
exception is raised when the following code executes for longer than specified:
sbx = Duktape::Sandbox.new 500 # 500ms execution time limit
sbx.eval! "while (true) {}" # => RangeError
An alternative interface for evaluating JS code is available via the Duktape::Runtime
class. This class provides a streamlined evaluation API (similar to ExecJS) that allows easier access to javascript values without the need to call many low-level Duktape API functions.
The entire Runtime
API is as follows:
call(property, *args)
- Call the property or function with the given arguments and return the result.call([properties], *args)
- Call the property that is nested within an array of string property names.eval(source)
- Evaluate the javascript source and return the last value.exec(source)
- Evaluate the javascript source and always returnnil
.
Duktape::Runtime
instances can also be provided an initialization block when created.
Here's an example:
require "duktape/runtime"
# A Runtime (optionally) accepts an initialization block
rt = Duktape::Runtime.new do |sbx|
sbx.eval! <<-JS
function test(a, b, c) { return a + b + c; }
JS
end
rt.call("test", 3, 4, 5) # => 12.0 (same as test(3, 4, 5);)
rt.call(["Math", "PI"]) # => 3.14159
rt.eval("1 + 1") # => 2.0
rt.exec("1 + 1") # => nil
Note that duktape/runtime
is not loaded by the base duktape
require, and may be used standalone if necessary (ie. replace your require "duktape"
calls with require "duktape/runtime"
if you want this functionality).
Note: This functionality is considered experimental and syntax/functionality may change dramatically between releases.
It is possible to call Crystal code from your javascript:
sbx = Duktape::Sandbox.new
# Push a global function named "add_together"
# that accepts two arguments.
sbx.push_global_proc("add_together", 2) do |ptr|
env = Duktape::Sandbox.new ptr
# Get the two arguments
# from the stack
a = env.require_number 0
b = env.require_number 1
env.push_number a + b # Push the return value to the stack
env.call_success # call_success -> stack top is value returned
end
sbx.eval! "print(add_together(2, 3));" # => 5
The proc
object that is pushed to the Duktape stack accepts a pointer to a Context
instance. We must wrap this pointer by calling env = Duktape::Sandbox.new ptr
. The proc
must also return an Int32
status code - env.call_failure
and env.call_success
will provide the proper integer values.
Note: Because it is currently not possible to pass closures to C bindings in Crystal, one must be careful that any variables used in the proc
must not be referenced or initialized outside the scope of the proc
. This is why variable names such as env
are used.
The following exceptions may be thrown at runtime and may be rescued normally:
Duktape::Error
Duktape::EvalError
Duktape::RangeError
Duktape::ReferenceError
Duktape::SyntaxError
Duktape::TypeError
Duktape::URIError
These exceptions all inherit from Duktape::Error
, so it may be used as a catch-all for runtime errors.
The following exceptions represent errors internal to the Duktape engine and are generally not recoverable when thrown from a context:
Duktape::InternalError
Duktape::HeapError
These exceptions all inherit from Duktape::InternalError
.
I'll accept any pull requests that are well tested for bugs/features with Duktape.cr.
You should fork the main repo, create a feature branch, write tests and submit a pull request.
Duktape.cr is licensed under the MIT License. Please see LICENSE
for details.