GitHub - ijl/orjson: Fast, correct Python JSON library supporting dataclasses, datetimes, and numpy (original) (raw)
orjson
orjson is a fast, correct JSON library for Python. Itbenchmarks as the fastest Python library for JSON and is more correct than the standard json library or other third-party libraries. It serializesdataclass,datetime,numpy, andUUID instances natively.
orjson.dumps() is something like 10x as fast as json
, serializes common types and subtypes, has a default
parameter for the caller to specify how to serialize arbitrary types, and has a number of flags controlling output.
orjson.loads()is something like 2x as fast as json
, and is strictly compliant with UTF-8 and RFC 8259 ("The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format").
Reading from and writing to files, line-delimited JSON files, and so on is not provided by the library.
orjson supports CPython 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13, and 3.14.
It distributes amd64/x86_64/x64, i686/x86, aarch64/arm64/armv8, arm7, ppc64le/POWER8, and s390x wheels for Linux, amd64 and aarch64 wheels for macOS, and amd64, i686, and aarch64 wheels for Windows.
orjson does not and will not support PyPy, embedded Python builds for Android/iOS, or PEP 554 subinterpreters.
orjson may support PEP 703 free-threading when it is stable.
Releases follow semantic versioning and serializing a new object type without an opt-in flag is considered a breaking change.
orjson is licensed under both the Apache 2.0 and MIT licenses. The repository and issue tracker isgithub.com/ijl/orjson, and patches may be submitted there. There is aCHANGELOGavailable in the repository.
Usage
Install
To install a wheel from PyPI, install the orjson
package.
In requirements.in
or requirements.txt
format, specify:
In pyproject.toml
format, specify:
To build a wheel, see packaging.
Quickstart
This is an example of serializing, with options specified, and deserializing:
import orjson, datetime, numpy data = { "type": "job", "created_at": datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1), "status": "🆗", "payload": numpy.array([[1, 2], [3, 4]]), } orjson.dumps(data, option=orjson.OPT_NAIVE_UTC | orjson.OPT_SERIALIZE_NUMPY) b'{"type":"job","created_at":"1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00","status":"\xf0\x9f\x86\x97","payload":[[1,2],[3,4]]}' orjson.loads(_) {'type': 'job', 'created_at': '1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00', 'status': '🆗', 'payload': [[1, 2], [3, 4]]}
Migrating
orjson version 3 serializes more types than version 2. Subclasses of str
,int
, dict
, and list
are now serialized. This is faster and more similar to the standard library. It can be disabled withorjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_SUBCLASS
.dataclasses.dataclass
instances are now serialized by default and cannot be customized in adefault
function unless option=orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATACLASS
is specified. uuid.UUID
instances are serialized by default. For any type that is now serialized, implementations in a default
function and options enabling them can be removed but do not need to be. There was no change in deserialization.
To migrate from the standard library, the largest difference is thatorjson.dumps
returns bytes
and json.dumps
returns a str
.
Users with dict
objects using non-str
keys should specify option=orjson.OPT_NON_STR_KEYS
.
sort_keys
is replaced by option=orjson.OPT_SORT_KEYS
.
indent
is replaced by option=orjson.OPT_INDENT_2
and other levels of indentation are not supported.
ensure_ascii
is probably not relevant today and UTF-8 characters cannot be escaped to ASCII.
Serialize
def dumps( __obj: Any, default: Optional[Callable[[Any], Any]] = ..., option: Optional[int] = ..., ) -> bytes: ...
dumps()
serializes Python objects to JSON.
It natively serializesstr
, dict
, list
, tuple
, int
, float
, bool
, None
,dataclasses.dataclass
, typing.TypedDict
, datetime.datetime
,datetime.date
, datetime.time
, uuid.UUID
, numpy.ndarray
, andorjson.Fragment
instances. It supports arbitrary types through default
. It serializes subclasses of str
, int
, dict
, list
,dataclasses.dataclass
, and enum.Enum
. It does not serialize subclasses of tuple
to avoid serializing namedtuple
objects as arrays. To avoid serializing subclasses, specify the option orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_SUBCLASS
.
The output is a bytes
object containing UTF-8.
The global interpreter lock (GIL) is held for the duration of the call.
It raises JSONEncodeError
on an unsupported type. This exception message describes the invalid object with the error messageType is not JSON serializable: ...
. To fix this, specifydefault.
It raises JSONEncodeError
on a str
that contains invalid UTF-8.
It raises JSONEncodeError
on an integer that exceeds 64 bits by default or, with OPT_STRICT_INTEGER
, 53 bits.
It raises JSONEncodeError
if a dict
has a key of a type other than str
, unless OPT_NON_STR_KEYS
is specified.
It raises JSONEncodeError
if the output of default
recurses to handling bydefault
more than 254 levels deep.
It raises JSONEncodeError
on circular references.
It raises JSONEncodeError
if a tzinfo
on a datetime object is unsupported.
JSONEncodeError
is a subclass of TypeError
. This is for compatibility with the standard library.
If the failure was caused by an exception in default
thenJSONEncodeError
chains the original exception as __cause__
.
default
To serialize a subclass or arbitrary types, specify default
as a callable that returns a supported type. default
may be a function, lambda, or callable class instance. To specify that a type was not handled by default
, raise an exception such as TypeError
.
import orjson, decimal
def default(obj): if isinstance(obj, decimal.Decimal): return str(obj) raise TypeError
orjson.dumps(decimal.Decimal("0.0842389659712649442845")) JSONEncodeError: Type is not JSON serializable: decimal.Decimal orjson.dumps(decimal.Decimal("0.0842389659712649442845"), default=default) b'"0.0842389659712649442845"' orjson.dumps({1, 2}, default=default) orjson.JSONEncodeError: Type is not JSON serializable: set
The default
callable may return an object that itself must be handled by default
up to 254 times before an exception is raised.
It is important that default
raise an exception if a type cannot be handled. Python otherwise implicitly returns None
, which appears to the caller like a legitimate value and is serialized:
import orjson, json
def default(obj): if isinstance(obj, decimal.Decimal): return str(obj)
orjson.dumps({"set":{1, 2}}, default=default) b'{"set":null}' json.dumps({"set":{1, 2}}, default=default) '{"set":null}'
option
To modify how data is serialized, specify option
. Each option
is an integer constant in orjson
. To specify multiple options, mask them together, e.g.,option=orjson.OPT_STRICT_INTEGER | orjson.OPT_NAIVE_UTC
.
OPT_APPEND_NEWLINE
Append \n
to the output. This is a convenience and optimization for the pattern of dumps(...) + "\n"
. bytes
objects are immutable and this pattern copies the original contents.
import orjson orjson.dumps([]) b"[]" orjson.dumps([], option=orjson.OPT_APPEND_NEWLINE) b"[]\n"
OPT_INDENT_2
Pretty-print output with an indent of two spaces. This is equivalent toindent=2
in the standard library. Pretty printing is slower and the output larger. orjson is the fastest compared library at pretty printing and has much less of a slowdown to pretty print than the standard library does. This option is compatible with all other options.
import orjson orjson.dumps({"a": "b", "c": {"d": True}, "e": [1, 2]}) b'{"a":"b","c":{"d":true},"e":[1,2]}' orjson.dumps( {"a": "b", "c": {"d": True}, "e": [1, 2]}, option=orjson.OPT_INDENT_2 ) b'{\n "a": "b",\n "c": {\n "d": true\n },\n "e": [\n 1,\n 2\n ]\n}'
If displayed, the indentation and linebreaks appear like this:
{ "a": "b", "c": { "d": true }, "e": [ 1, 2 ] }
This measures serializing the github.json fixture as compact (52KiB) or pretty (64KiB):
Library | compact (ms) | pretty (ms) | vs. orjson |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.01 | 0.02 | 1 |
json | 0.13 | 0.54 | 34 |
This measures serializing the citm_catalog.json fixture, more of a worst case due to the amount of nesting and newlines, as compact (489KiB) or pretty (1.1MiB):
Library | compact (ms) | pretty (ms) | vs. orjson |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.25 | 0.45 | 1 |
json | 3.01 | 24.42 | 54.4 |
This can be reproduced using the pyindent
script.
OPT_NAIVE_UTC
Serialize datetime.datetime
objects without a tzinfo
as UTC. This has no effect on datetime.datetime
objects that have tzinfo
set.
import orjson, datetime orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0), ) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00"' orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0), option=orjson.OPT_NAIVE_UTC, ) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00"'
OPT_NON_STR_KEYS
Serialize dict
keys of type other than str
. This allows dict
keys to be one of str
, int
, float
, bool
, None
, datetime.datetime
,datetime.date
, datetime.time
, enum.Enum
, and uuid.UUID
. For comparison, the standard library serializes str
, int
, float
, bool
or None
by default. orjson benchmarks as being faster at serializing non-str
keys than other libraries. This option is slower for str
keys than the default.
import orjson, datetime, uuid orjson.dumps( {uuid.UUID("7202d115-7ff3-4c81-a7c1-2a1f067b1ece"): [1, 2, 3]}, option=orjson.OPT_NON_STR_KEYS, ) b'{"7202d115-7ff3-4c81-a7c1-2a1f067b1ece":[1,2,3]}' orjson.dumps( {datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0): [1, 2, 3]}, option=orjson.OPT_NON_STR_KEYS | orjson.OPT_NAIVE_UTC, ) b'{"1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00":[1,2,3]}'
These types are generally serialized how they would be as values, e.g., datetime.datetime
is still an RFC 3339 string and respects options affecting it. The exception is that int
serialization does not respect OPT_STRICT_INTEGER
.
This option has the risk of creating duplicate keys. This is because non-str
objects may serialize to the same str
as an existing key, e.g.,{"1": true, 1: false}
. The last key to be inserted to the dict
will be serialized last and a JSON deserializer will presumably take the last occurrence of a key (in the above, false
). The first value will be lost.
This option is compatible with orjson.OPT_SORT_KEYS
. If sorting is used, note the sort is unstable and will be unpredictable for duplicate keys.
import orjson, datetime orjson.dumps( {"other": 1, datetime.date(1970, 1, 5): 2, datetime.date(1970, 1, 3): 3}, option=orjson.OPT_NON_STR_KEYS | orjson.OPT_SORT_KEYS ) b'{"1970-01-03":3,"1970-01-05":2,"other":1}'
This measures serializing 589KiB of JSON comprising a list
of 100 dict
in which each dict
has both 365 randomly-sorted int
keys representing epoch timestamps as well as one str
key and the value for each key is a single integer. In "str keys", the keys were converted to str
before serialization, and orjson still specifes option=orjson.OPT_NON_STR_KEYS
(which is always somewhat slower).
Library | str keys (ms) | int keys (ms) | int keys sorted (ms) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.5 | 0.93 | 2.08 |
json | 2.72 | 3.59 |
json is blank because it raises TypeError
on attempting to sort before converting all keys to str
. This can be reproduced using the pynonstr
script.
OPT_OMIT_MICROSECONDS
Do not serialize the microsecond
field on datetime.datetime
anddatetime.time
instances.
import orjson, datetime orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1), ) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00.000001"' orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1), option=orjson.OPT_OMIT_MICROSECONDS, ) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00"'
OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATACLASS
Passthrough dataclasses.dataclass
instances to default
. This allows customizing their output but is much slower.
import orjson, dataclasses
@dataclasses.dataclass class User: id: str name: str password: str
def default(obj): if isinstance(obj, User): return {"id": obj.id, "name": obj.name} raise TypeError
orjson.dumps(User("3b1", "asd", "zxc")) b'{"id":"3b1","name":"asd","password":"zxc"}' orjson.dumps(User("3b1", "asd", "zxc"), option=orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATACLASS) TypeError: Type is not JSON serializable: User orjson.dumps( User("3b1", "asd", "zxc"), option=orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATACLASS, default=default, ) b'{"id":"3b1","name":"asd"}'
OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATETIME
Passthrough datetime.datetime
, datetime.date
, and datetime.time
instances to default
. This allows serializing datetimes to a custom format, e.g., HTTP dates:
import orjson, datetime
def default(obj): if isinstance(obj, datetime.datetime): return obj.strftime("%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S GMT") raise TypeError
orjson.dumps({"created_at": datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1)}) b'{"created_at":"1970-01-01T00:00:00"}' orjson.dumps({"created_at": datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1)}, option=orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATETIME) TypeError: Type is not JSON serializable: datetime.datetime orjson.dumps( {"created_at": datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1)}, option=orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATETIME, default=default, ) b'{"created_at":"Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT"}'
This does not affect datetimes in dict
keys if using OPT_NON_STR_KEYS.
OPT_PASSTHROUGH_SUBCLASS
Passthrough subclasses of builtin types to default
.
import orjson
class Secret(str): pass
def default(obj): if isinstance(obj, Secret): return "******" raise TypeError
orjson.dumps(Secret("zxc")) b'"zxc"' orjson.dumps(Secret("zxc"), option=orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_SUBCLASS) TypeError: Type is not JSON serializable: Secret orjson.dumps(Secret("zxc"), option=orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_SUBCLASS, default=default) b'"******"'
This does not affect serializing subclasses as dict
keys if using OPT_NON_STR_KEYS.
OPT_SERIALIZE_DATACLASS
This is deprecated and has no effect in version 3. In version 2 this was required to serialize dataclasses.dataclass
instances. For more, seedataclass.
OPT_SERIALIZE_NUMPY
Serialize numpy.ndarray
instances. For more, seenumpy.
OPT_SERIALIZE_UUID
This is deprecated and has no effect in version 3. In version 2 this was required to serialize uuid.UUID
instances. For more, seeUUID.
OPT_SORT_KEYS
Serialize dict
keys in sorted order. The default is to serialize in an unspecified order. This is equivalent to sort_keys=True
in the standard library.
This can be used to ensure the order is deterministic for hashing or tests. It has a substantial performance penalty and is not recommended in general.
import orjson orjson.dumps({"b": 1, "c": 2, "a": 3}) b'{"b":1,"c":2,"a":3}' orjson.dumps({"b": 1, "c": 2, "a": 3}, option=orjson.OPT_SORT_KEYS) b'{"a":3,"b":1,"c":2}'
This measures serializing the twitter.json fixture unsorted and sorted:
Library | unsorted (ms) | sorted (ms) | vs. orjson |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.11 | 0.3 | 1 |
json | 1.36 | 1.93 | 6.4 |
The benchmark can be reproduced using the pysort
script.
The sorting is not collation/locale-aware:
import orjson orjson.dumps({"a": 1, "ä": 2, "A": 3}, option=orjson.OPT_SORT_KEYS) b'{"A":3,"a":1,"\xc3\xa4":2}'
This is the same sorting behavior as the standard library.
dataclass
also serialize as maps but this has no effect on them.
OPT_STRICT_INTEGER
Enforce 53-bit limit on integers. The limit is otherwise 64 bits, the same as the Python standard library. For more, see int.
OPT_UTC_Z
Serialize a UTC timezone on datetime.datetime
instances as Z
instead of +00:00
.
import orjson, datetime, zoneinfo orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("UTC")), ) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00"' orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("UTC")), option=orjson.OPT_UTC_Z ) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00Z"'
Fragment
orjson.Fragment
includes already-serialized JSON in a document. This is an efficient way to include JSON blobs from a cache, JSONB field, or separately serialized object without first deserializing to Python objects via loads()
.
import orjson orjson.dumps({"key": "zxc", "data": orjson.Fragment(b'{"a": "b", "c": 1}')}) b'{"key":"zxc","data":{"a": "b", "c": 1}}'
It does no reformatting: orjson.OPT_INDENT_2
will not affect a compact blob nor will a pretty-printed JSON blob be rewritten as compact.
The input must be bytes
or str
and given as a positional argument.
This raises orjson.JSONEncodeError
if a str
is given and the input is not valid UTF-8. It otherwise does no validation and it is possible to write invalid JSON. This does not escape characters. The implementation is tested to not crash if given invalid strings or invalid JSON.
Deserialize
def loads(__obj: Union[bytes, bytearray, memoryview, str]) -> Any: ...
loads()
deserializes JSON to Python objects. It deserializes to dict
,list
, int
, float
, str
, bool
, and None
objects.
bytes
, bytearray
, memoryview
, and str
input are accepted. If the input exists as a memoryview
, bytearray
, or bytes
object, it is recommended to pass these directly rather than creating an unnecessary str
object. That is,orjson.loads(b"{}")
instead of orjson.loads(b"{}".decode("utf-8"))
. This has lower memory usage and lower latency.
The input must be valid UTF-8.
orjson maintains a cache of map keys for the duration of the process. This causes a net reduction in memory usage by avoiding duplicate strings. The keys must be at most 64 bytes to be cached and 2048 entries are stored.
The global interpreter lock (GIL) is held for the duration of the call.
It raises JSONDecodeError
if given an invalid type or invalid JSON. This includes if the input contains NaN
, Infinity
, or -Infinity
, which the standard library allows, but is not valid JSON.
It raises JSONDecodeError
if a combination of array or object recurses 1024 levels deep.
JSONDecodeError
is a subclass of json.JSONDecodeError
and ValueError
. This is for compatibility with the standard library.
Types
dataclass
orjson serializes instances of dataclasses.dataclass
natively. It serializes instances 40-50x as fast as other libraries and avoids a severe slowdown seen in other libraries compared to serializing dict
.
It is supported to pass all variants of dataclasses, including dataclasses using __slots__
, frozen dataclasses, those with optional or default attributes, and subclasses. There is a performance benefit to not using __slots__
.
Library | dict (ms) | dataclass (ms) | vs. orjson |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.43 | 0.95 | 1 |
json | 5.81 | 38.32 | 40 |
This measures serializing 555KiB of JSON, orjson natively and other libraries using default
to serialize the output of dataclasses.asdict()
. This can be reproduced using the pydataclass
script.
Dataclasses are serialized as maps, with every attribute serialized and in the order given on class definition:
import dataclasses, orjson, typing
@dataclasses.dataclass class Member: id: int active: bool = dataclasses.field(default=False)
@dataclasses.dataclass class Object: id: int name: str members: typing.List[Member]
orjson.dumps(Object(1, "a", [Member(1, True), Member(2)])) b'{"id":1,"name":"a","members":[{"id":1,"active":true},{"id":2,"active":false}]}'
datetime
orjson serializes datetime.datetime
objects toRFC 3339 format, e.g., "1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00". This is a subset of ISO 8601 and is compatible with isoformat()
in the standard library.
import orjson, datetime, zoneinfo orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(2018, 12, 1, 2, 3, 4, 9, tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("Australia/Adelaide")) ) b'"2018-12-01T02:03:04.000009+10:30"' orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(2100, 9, 1, 21, 55, 2).replace(tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("UTC")) ) b'"2100-09-01T21:55:02+00:00"' orjson.dumps( datetime.datetime(2100, 9, 1, 21, 55, 2) ) b'"2100-09-01T21:55:02"'
datetime.datetime
supports instances with a tzinfo
that is None
,datetime.timezone.utc
, a timezone instance from the python3.9+ zoneinfo
module, or a timezone instance from the third-party pendulum
, pytz
, ordateutil
/arrow
libraries.
It is fastest to use the standard library's zoneinfo.ZoneInfo
for timezones.
datetime.time
objects must not have a tzinfo
.
import orjson, datetime orjson.dumps(datetime.time(12, 0, 15, 290)) b'"12:00:15.000290"'
datetime.date
objects will always serialize.
import orjson, datetime orjson.dumps(datetime.date(1900, 1, 2)) b'"1900-01-02"'
Errors with tzinfo
result in JSONEncodeError
being raised.
To disable serialization of datetime
objects specify the optionorjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATETIME
.
To use "Z" suffix instead of "+00:00" to indicate UTC ("Zulu") time, use the optionorjson.OPT_UTC_Z
.
To assume datetimes without timezone are UTC, use the option orjson.OPT_NAIVE_UTC
.
enum
orjson serializes enums natively. Options apply to their values.
import enum, datetime, orjson
class DatetimeEnum(enum.Enum): EPOCH = datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0)
orjson.dumps(DatetimeEnum.EPOCH) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00"' orjson.dumps(DatetimeEnum.EPOCH, option=orjson.OPT_NAIVE_UTC) b'"1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00"'
Enums with members that are not supported types can be serialized usingdefault
:
import enum, orjson
class Custom: def init(self, val): self.val = val
def default(obj): if isinstance(obj, Custom): return obj.val raise TypeError
class CustomEnum(enum.Enum): ONE = Custom(1)
orjson.dumps(CustomEnum.ONE, default=default) b'1'
float
orjson serializes and deserializes double precision floats with no loss of precision and consistent rounding.
orjson.dumps()
serializes Nan, Infinity, and -Infinity, which are not compliant JSON, as null
:
import orjson, json orjson.dumps([float("NaN"), float("Infinity"), float("-Infinity")]) b'[null,null,null]' json.dumps([float("NaN"), float("Infinity"), float("-Infinity")]) '[NaN, Infinity, -Infinity]'
int
orjson serializes and deserializes 64-bit integers by default. The range supported is a signed 64-bit integer's minimum (-9223372036854775807) to an unsigned 64-bit integer's maximum (18446744073709551615). This is widely compatible, but there are implementations that only support 53-bits for integers, e.g., web browsers. For those implementations, dumps()
can be configured to raise a JSONEncodeError
on values exceeding the 53-bit range.
import orjson orjson.dumps(9007199254740992) b'9007199254740992' orjson.dumps(9007199254740992, option=orjson.OPT_STRICT_INTEGER) JSONEncodeError: Integer exceeds 53-bit range orjson.dumps(-9007199254740992, option=orjson.OPT_STRICT_INTEGER) JSONEncodeError: Integer exceeds 53-bit range
numpy
orjson natively serializes numpy.ndarray
and individualnumpy.float64
, numpy.float32
, numpy.float16
(numpy.half
),numpy.int64
, numpy.int32
, numpy.int16
, numpy.int8
,numpy.uint64
, numpy.uint32
, numpy.uint16
, numpy.uint8
,numpy.uintp
, numpy.intp
, numpy.datetime64
, and numpy.bool
instances.
orjson is compatible with both numpy v1 and v2.
orjson is faster than all compared libraries at serializing numpy instances. Serializing numpy data requires specifyingoption=orjson.OPT_SERIALIZE_NUMPY
.
import orjson, numpy orjson.dumps( numpy.array([[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]), option=orjson.OPT_SERIALIZE_NUMPY, ) b'[[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]'
The array must be a contiguous C array (C_CONTIGUOUS
) and one of the supported datatypes.
Note a difference between serializing numpy.float32
using ndarray.tolist()
or orjson.dumps(..., option=orjson.OPT_SERIALIZE_NUMPY)
: tolist()
converts to a double
before serializing and orjson's native path does not. This can result in different rounding.
numpy.datetime64
instances are serialized as RFC 3339 strings and datetime options affect them.
import orjson, numpy orjson.dumps( numpy.datetime64("2021-01-01T00:00:00.172"), option=orjson.OPT_SERIALIZE_NUMPY, ) b'"2021-01-01T00:00:00.172000"' orjson.dumps( numpy.datetime64("2021-01-01T00:00:00.172"), option=( orjson.OPT_SERIALIZE_NUMPY | orjson.OPT_NAIVE_UTC | orjson.OPT_OMIT_MICROSECONDS ), ) b'"2021-01-01T00:00:00+00:00"'
If an array is not a contiguous C array, contains an unsupported datatype, or contains a numpy.datetime64
using an unsupported representation (e.g., picoseconds), orjson falls through to default
. In default
,obj.tolist()
can be specified.
If an array is not in the native endianness, e.g., an array of big-endian values on a little-endian system, orjson.JSONEncodeError
is raised.
If an array is malformed, orjson.JSONEncodeError
is raised.
This measures serializing 92MiB of JSON from an numpy.ndarray
with dimensions of (50000, 100)
and numpy.float64
values:
Library | Latency (ms) | RSS diff (MiB) | vs. orjson |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 105 | 105 | 1 |
json | 1,481 | 295 | 14.2 |
This measures serializing 100MiB of JSON from an numpy.ndarray
with dimensions of (100000, 100)
and numpy.int32
values:
Library | Latency (ms) | RSS diff (MiB) | vs. orjson |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 68 | 119 | 1 |
json | 684 | 501 | 10.1 |
This measures serializing 105MiB of JSON from an numpy.ndarray
with dimensions of (100000, 200)
and numpy.bool
values:
Library | Latency (ms) | RSS diff (MiB) | vs. orjson |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 50 | 125 | 1 |
json | 573 | 398 | 11.5 |
In these benchmarks, orjson serializes natively and json
serializesndarray.tolist()
via default
. The RSS column measures peak memory usage during serialization. This can be reproduced using the pynumpy
script.
orjson does not have an installation or compilation dependency on numpy. The implementation is independent, reading numpy.ndarray
usingPyArrayInterface
.
str
orjson is strict about UTF-8 conformance. This is stricter than the standard library's json module, which will serialize and deserialize UTF-16 surrogates, e.g., "\ud800", that are invalid UTF-8.
If orjson.dumps()
is given a str
that does not contain valid UTF-8,orjson.JSONEncodeError
is raised. If loads()
receives invalid UTF-8,orjson.JSONDecodeError
is raised.
import orjson, json orjson.dumps('\ud800') JSONEncodeError: str is not valid UTF-8: surrogates not allowed json.dumps('\ud800') '"\ud800"' orjson.loads('"\ud800"') JSONDecodeError: unexpected end of hex escape at line 1 column 8: line 1 column 1 (char 0) json.loads('"\ud800"') '\ud800'
To make a best effort at deserializing bad input, first decode bytes
using the replace
or lossy
argument for errors
:
import orjson orjson.loads(b'"\xed\xa0\x80"') JSONDecodeError: str is not valid UTF-8: surrogates not allowed orjson.loads(b'"\xed\xa0\x80"'.decode("utf-8", "replace")) '���'
uuid
orjson serializes uuid.UUID
instances toRFC 4122 format, e.g., "f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6".
import orjson, uuid orjson.dumps(uuid.uuid5(uuid.NAMESPACE_DNS, "python.org")) b'"886313e1-3b8a-5372-9b90-0c9aee199e5d"'
Testing
The library has comprehensive tests. There are tests against fixtures in theJSONTestSuite andnativejson-benchmarkrepositories. It is tested to not crash against theBig List of Naughty Strings. It is tested to not leak memory. It is tested to not crash against and not accept invalid UTF-8. There are integration tests exercising the library's use in web servers (gunicorn using multiprocess/forked workers) and when multithreaded. It also uses some tests from the ultrajson library.
orjson is the most correct of the compared libraries. This graph shows how each library handles a combined 342 JSON fixtures from theJSONTestSuite andnativejson-benchmark tests:
Library | Invalid JSON documents not rejected | Valid JSON documents not deserialized |
---|---|---|
orjson | 0 | 0 |
json | 17 | 0 |
This shows that all libraries deserialize valid JSON but only orjson correctly rejects the given invalid JSON fixtures. Errors are largely due to accepting invalid strings and numbers.
The graph above can be reproduced using the pycorrectness
script.
Performance
Serialization and deserialization performance of orjson is consistently better than the standard library's json
. The graphs below illustrate a few commonly used documents.
Latency
twitter.json serialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.1 | 8453 | 1 |
json | 1.3 | 765 | 11.1 |
twitter.json deserialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.5 | 1889 | 1 |
json | 2.2 | 453 | 4.2 |
github.json serialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.01 | 103693 | 1 |
json | 0.13 | 7648 | 13.6 |
github.json deserialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.04 | 23264 | 1 |
json | 0.1 | 10430 | 2.2 |
citm_catalog.json serialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 0.3 | 3975 | 1 |
json | 3 | 338 | 11.8 |
citm_catalog.json deserialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 1.3 | 781 | 1 |
json | 4 | 250 | 3.1 |
canada.json serialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 2.5 | 399 | 1 |
json | 29.8 | 33 | 11.9 |
canada.json deserialization
Library | Median latency (milliseconds) | Operations per second | Relative (latency) |
---|---|---|---|
orjson | 3 | 333 | 1 |
json | 18 | 55 | 6 |
Reproducing
The above was measured using Python 3.11.10 in a Fedora 42 container on an x86-64-v4 machine using theorjson-3.10.11-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl
artifact on PyPI. The latency results can be reproduced using the pybench
script.
Questions
Why can't I install it from PyPI?
Probably pip
needs to be upgraded to version 20.3 or later to support the latest manylinux_x_y or universal2 wheel formats.
"Cargo, the Rust package manager, is not installed or is not on PATH."
This happens when there are no binary wheels (like manylinux) for your platform on PyPI. You can install Rust throughrustup
or a package manager and then it will compile.
Will it deserialize to dataclasses, UUIDs, decimals, etc or support object_hook?
No. This requires a schema specifying what types are expected and how to handle errors etc. This is addressed by data validation libraries a level above this.
Will it serialize to str
?
No. bytes
is the correct type for a serialized blob.
Will it support NDJSON or JSONL?
No. orjsonl may be appropriate.
Will it support JSON5 or RJSON?
No, it supports RFC 8259.
Packaging
To package orjson requires at least Rust 1.82 and the maturin build tool. The recommended build command is:
maturin build --release --strip
It benefits from also having a C build environment to compile a faster deserialization backend. See this project's manylinux_2_28
builds for an example using clang and LTO.
The project's own CI tests against nightly-2025-04-15
and stable 1.82. It is prudent to pin the nightly version because that channel can introduce breaking changes. There is a significant performance benefit to using nightly.
orjson is tested for amd64, aarch64, and i686 on Linux and cross-compiles for arm7, ppc64le, and s390x. It is tested for either aarch64 or amd64 on macOS and cross-compiles for the other, depending on version. For Windows it is tested on amd64 and i686.
There are no runtime dependencies other than libc.
The source distribution on PyPI contains all dependencies' source and can be built without network access. The file can be downloaded fromhttps://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/source/o/orjson/orjson-${version}.tar.gz
.
orjson's tests are included in the source distribution on PyPI. The tests require only pytest
. There are optional packages such as pytz
and numpy
listed in test/requirements.txt
and used in ~10% of tests. Not having these dependencies causes the tests needing them to skip. Tests can be run with pytest -q test
.
License
orjson was written by ijl <ijl@mailbox.org>, copyright 2018 - 2025, available to you under either the Apache 2 license or MIT license at your choice.