tool to unserialize data taken from PHP. It can parse "serialize()" output, or even serialized sessions data.
npm install php-unserializejs-php-unserialize
==================

JavaScript tool to unserialize data taken from PHP. It can parse "serialize()" output, or even serialized sessions data.
Credits
-------
* The PHP unserializer is taken from kvz's phpjs project.
* The session unserializer's idea is taken from dumpling, which is highly limited by its lack of a real unserializer, and has lot of crash cases.
Installation
------------
Install from npm :
``sh`
npm install php-unserialize
The use it the usual way :
`javascript
var PHPUnserialize = require('php-unserialize');
console.log(PHPUnserialize.unserialize('a:0:{}')); // {}
`
Download tarball from github and then unarchive this where you want, then you can simply include it in your page :
`html`
Compatibility issues
This library has been tested server-side only. For example it uses [].reduce, so it may not work on some browsers. Do not hesitate to make pull requests to fix it for you favorite browsers :)
* Note that array() will be converted to {} and not []. That can be discussed as array() in PHP has various significations. A choice had to be done, but it may change in the future (cf. next point).array('a', 'b')
* A less obvious conversion is which will be converted to {"0": "a", "1": "b"}. Quite annoying, and it will be fixed if necessary (this means I won't work on this issue unless you really need it, but I agree this is not normal behavior).
Usage
-----
The module exposes two methods:
Unserialize output taken from PHP's serialize() method.
It currently does not suport objects.
Unserialize PHP serialized session. PHP uses a weird custom format to serialize session data, something like "$key1$serializedData1|$key2$serializedData2|…`", this methods will parse this and unserialize chunks so you can have a simple anonymous objects.