marshal
â Internal Python object serialization¶
This module contains functions that can read and write Python values in a binary format. The format is specific to Python, but independent of machine architecture issues (e.g., you can write a Python value to a file on a PC, transport the file to a Mac, and read it back there). Details of the format are undocumented on purpose; it may change between Python versions (although it rarely does). [1]
This is not a general âpersistenceâ module. For general persistence and transfer of Python objects through RPC calls, see the modules pickle
and shelve
. The marshal
module exists mainly to support reading and writing the âpseudo-compiledâ code for Python modules of .pyc
files. Therefore, the Python maintainers reserve the right to modify the marshal format in backward incompatible ways should the need arise. The format of code objects is not compatible between Python versions, even if the version of the format is the same. De-serializing a code object in the incorrect Python version has undefined behavior. If youâre serializing and de-serializing Python objects, use the pickle
module instead â the performance is comparable, version independence is guaranteed, and pickle supports a substantially wider range of objects than marshal.
Warning
The marshal
module is not intended to be secure against erroneous or maliciously constructed data. Never unmarshal data received from an untrusted or unauthenticated source.
There are functions that read/write files as well as functions operating on bytes-like objects.
Not all Python object types are supported; in general, only objects whose value is independent from a particular invocation of Python can be written and read by this module. The following types are supported:
Strings (str
) and bytes
. Bytes-like objects like bytearray
are marshalled as bytes
.
Containers: tuple
, list
, set
, frozenset
, and (since version
5), slice
. It should be understood that these are supported only if the values contained therein are themselves supported. Recursive containers are supported since version
3.
The singletons None
, Ellipsis
and StopIteration
.
code
objects, if allow_code is true. See note above about version dependence.
Changed in version 3.4:
Added format version 3, which supports marshalling recursive lists, sets and dictionaries.
Added format version 4, which supports efficient representations of short strings.
Changed in version 3.14: Added format version 5, which allows marshalling slices.
The module defines these functions:
Write the value on the open file. The value must be a supported type. The file must be a writeable binary file.
If the value has (or contains an object that has) an unsupported type, a ValueError
exception is raised â but garbage data will also be written to the file. The object will not be properly read back by load()
. Code objects are only supported if allow_code is true.
The version argument indicates the data format that dump
should use (see below).
Raises an auditing event marshal.dumps
with arguments value
, version
.
Changed in version 3.13: Added the allow_code parameter.
Read one value from the open file and return it. If no valid value is read (e.g. because the data has a different Python versionâs incompatible marshal format), raise EOFError
, ValueError
or TypeError
. Code objects are only supported if allow_code is true. The file must be a readable binary file.
Raises an auditing event marshal.load
with no arguments.
Note
If an object containing an unsupported type was marshalled with dump()
, load()
will substitute None
for the unmarshallable type.
Changed in version 3.10: This call used to raise a code.__new__
audit event for each code object. Now it raises a single marshal.load
event for the entire load operation.
Changed in version 3.13: Added the allow_code parameter.
Return the bytes object that would be written to a file by dump(value, file)
. The value must be a supported type. Raise a ValueError
exception if value has (or contains an object that has) an unsupported type. Code objects are only supported if allow_code is true.
The version argument indicates the data format that dumps
should use (see below).
Raises an auditing event marshal.dumps
with arguments value
, version
.
Changed in version 3.13: Added the allow_code parameter.
Convert the bytes-like object to a value. If no valid value is found, raise EOFError
, ValueError
or TypeError
. Code objects are only supported if allow_code is true. Extra bytes in the input are ignored.
Raises an auditing event marshal.loads
with argument bytes
.
Changed in version 3.10: This call used to raise a code.__new__
audit event for each code object. Now it raises a single marshal.loads
event for the entire load operation.
Changed in version 3.13: Added the allow_code parameter.
In addition, the following constants are defined:
Indicates the format that the module uses. Version 0 is the historical first version; subsequent versions add new features. Generally, a new version becomes the default when it is introduced.
Version
Available since
New features
1
Python 2.4
Sharing interned strings
2
Python 2.5
Binary representation of floats
3
Python 3.4
Support for object instancing and recursion
4
Python 3.4
Efficient representation of short strings
5
Python 3.14
Support for slice
objects
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