Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format (grpc依赖)
https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
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243 lines
8.4 KiB
243 lines
8.4 KiB
11 years ago
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#ifndef UPB_DECODER_INT_H_
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#define UPB_DECODER_INT_H_
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include "upb/def.h"
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#include "upb/handlers.h"
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#include "upb/sink.h"
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#include "upb/pb/decoder.h"
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// Opcode definitions. The canonical meaning of each opcode is its
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// implementation in the interpreter (the JIT is written to match this).
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//
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// All instructions have the opcode in the low byte.
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// Instruction format for most instructions is:
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//
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// +-------------------+--------+
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// | arg (24) | op (8) |
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// +-------------------+--------+
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//
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// Exceptions are indicated below. A few opcodes are multi-word.
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typedef enum {
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// Opcodes 1-8, 13, 15-18 parse their respective descriptor types.
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// Arg for all of these is the upb selector for this field.
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#define T(type) OP_PARSE_ ## type = UPB_DESCRIPTOR_TYPE_ ## type
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T(DOUBLE), T(FLOAT), T(INT64), T(UINT64), T(INT32), T(FIXED64), T(FIXED32),
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T(BOOL), T(UINT32), T(SFIXED32), T(SFIXED64), T(SINT32), T(SINT64),
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#undef T
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OP_STARTMSG = 9, // No arg.
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OP_ENDMSG = 10, // No arg.
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OP_STARTSEQ = 11,
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OP_ENDSEQ = 12,
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OP_STARTSUBMSG = 14,
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OP_ENDSUBMSG = 19,
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OP_STARTSTR = 20,
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OP_STRING = 21,
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OP_ENDSTR = 22,
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OP_PUSHTAGDELIM = 23, // No arg.
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OP_PUSHLENDELIM = 24, // No arg.
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OP_POP = 25, // No arg.
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OP_SETDELIM = 26, // No arg.
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OP_SETGROUPNUM = 27,
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OP_SETBIGGROUPNUM = 28, // two words: | unused (24) | opc || groupnum (32) |
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// The arg for these opcodes is a local label reference.
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OP_CHECKDELIM = 29,
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OP_CALL = 30,
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OP_BRANCH = 31,
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// Different opcodes depending on how many bytes expected.
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OP_TAG1 = 32, // | expected tag (16) | jump target (8) | opc (8) |
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OP_TAG2 = 33, // | expected tag (16) | jump target (8) | opc (8) |
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OP_TAGN = 34, // three words:
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// | unused (16) | jump target(8) | opc (8) |
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// | expected tag 1 (32) |
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// | expected tag 2 (32) |
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OP_SETDISPATCH = 35, // N words:
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// | unused (24) | opc |
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// | upb_inttable* (32 or 64) |
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OP_HALT = 36, // No arg.
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} opcode;
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#define OP_MAX OP_HALT
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UPB_INLINE opcode getop(uint32_t instr) { return instr & 0xff; }
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const upb_frametype upb_pbdecoder_frametype;
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// Decoder entry points; used as handlers.
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void *upb_pbdecoder_start(void *closure, const void *handler_data,
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size_t size_hint);
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size_t upb_pbdecoder_decode(void *closure, const void *hd, const char *buf,
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size_t size);
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bool upb_pbdecoder_end(void *closure, const void *handler_data);
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// Decoder-internal functions that the JIT calls to handle fallback paths.
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void *upb_pbdecoder_resume(upb_pbdecoder *d, void *p, const char *buf,
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size_t size);
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size_t upb_pbdecoder_suspend(upb_pbdecoder *d);
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int32_t upb_pbdecoder_skipunknown(upb_pbdecoder *d, uint32_t fieldnum,
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uint8_t wire_type);
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int32_t upb_pbdecoder_checktag_slow(upb_pbdecoder *d, uint64_t expected);
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int32_t upb_pbdecoder_decode_varint_slow(upb_pbdecoder *d, uint64_t *u64);
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int32_t upb_pbdecoder_decode_f32(upb_pbdecoder *d, uint32_t *u32);
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int32_t upb_pbdecoder_decode_f64(upb_pbdecoder *d, uint64_t *u64);
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void upb_pbdecoder_seterr(upb_pbdecoder *d, const char *msg);
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// Error messages that are shared between the bytecode and JIT decoders.
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extern const char *kPbDecoderStackOverflow;
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typedef struct _upb_pbdecoderplan upb_pbdecoderplan;
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// Access to decoderplan members needed by the decoder.
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bool upb_pbdecoderplan_hasjitcode(const upb_pbdecoderplan *p);
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uint32_t *upb_pbdecoderplan_codebase(const upb_pbdecoderplan *p);
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const char *upb_pbdecoder_getopname(unsigned int op);
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upb_string_handler *upb_pbdecoderplan_jitcode(const upb_pbdecoderplan *p);
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// JIT entry point.
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void upb_pbdecoder_jit(upb_pbdecoderplan *plan);
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void upb_pbdecoder_freejit(upb_pbdecoderplan *plan);
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// A special label that means "do field dispatch for this message and branch to
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// wherever that takes you."
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#define LABEL_DISPATCH 0
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#define DECODE_OK -1
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#define DECODE_MISMATCH -2 // Used only from checktag_slow().
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#define DECODE_ENDGROUP -2 // Used only from checkunknown().
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typedef struct {
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// The absolute stream offset of the end-of-frame delimiter.
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// Non-delimited frames (groups and non-packed repeated fields) reuse the
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// delimiter of their parent, even though the frame may not end there.
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//
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// NOTE: the JIT stores a slightly different value here for non-top frames.
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// It stores the value relative to the end of the enclosed message. But the
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// innermost frame is still stored the same way, which is important for
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// ensuring that calls from the JIT into C work correctly.
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uint64_t end_ofs;
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uint32_t *base;
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uint32_t groupnum;
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union {
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upb_inttable *dispatch; // Not used by the JIT.
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void *closure; // Only used by the JIT.
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} u;
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} upb_pbdecoder_frame;
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struct upb_pbdecoder {
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// Where we push parsed data (not owned).
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upb_sink *sink;
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size_t call_len;
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uint32_t *pc, *last;
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// Current input buffer and its stream offset.
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const char *buf, *ptr, *end, *checkpoint;
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// End of the delimited region, relative to ptr, or NULL if not in this buf.
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const char *delim_end;
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// End of the delimited region, relative to ptr, or end if not in this buf.
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const char *data_end;
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// Overall stream offset of "buf."
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uint64_t bufstart_ofs;
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// How many bytes past the end of the user buffer we want to skip.
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size_t skip;
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// Buffer for residual bytes not parsed from the previous buffer.
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// The maximum number of residual bytes we require is 12; a five-byte
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// unknown tag plus an eight-byte value, less one because the value
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// is only a partial value.
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char residual[12];
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char *residual_end;
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// Stores the user buffer passed to our decode function.
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const char *buf_param;
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size_t size_param;
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#ifdef UPB_USE_JIT_X64
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// Used momentarily by the generated code to store a value while a user
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// function is called.
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uint32_t tmp_len;
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const void *saved_rsp;
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#endif
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upb_status *status;
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// Our internal stack.
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upb_pbdecoder_frame *top, *limit;
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upb_pbdecoder_frame stack[UPB_DECODER_MAX_NESTING];
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uint32_t *callstack[UPB_DECODER_MAX_NESTING * 2];
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};
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// Data pertaining to a single decoding method/function.
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// Each method contains code to parse a single message type.
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// If may or may not be bound to a destination handlers object.
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typedef struct {
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// While compiling, the base is relative in "ofs", after compiling it is
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// absolute in "ptr".
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union {
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uint32_t ofs; // PC offset of method.
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const void *ptr; // Pointer to bytecode or machine code for this method.
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} base;
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// Whether this method is native code or bytecode.
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bool native_code;
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// The message type that this method is parsing.
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const upb_msgdef *msg;
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// The destination handlers this method is bound to, or NULL if this method
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// can be bound to a destination handlers instance at runtime.
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//
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// If non-NULL, we own a ref.
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const upb_handlers *dest_handlers;
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// The dispatch table layout is:
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// [field number] -> [ 48-bit offset ][ 8-bit wt2 ][ 8-bit wt1 ]
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//
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// If wt1 matches, jump to the 48-bit offset. If wt2 matches, lookup
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// (UPB_MAX_FIELDNUMBER + fieldnum) and jump there.
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//
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// We need two wire types because of packed/non-packed compatibility. A
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// primitive repeated field can use either wire type and be valid. While we
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// could key the table on fieldnum+wiretype, the table would be 8x sparser.
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//
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// Storing two wire types in the primary value allows us to quickly rule out
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// the second wire type without needing to do a separate lookup (this case is
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// less common than an unknown field).
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upb_inttable dispatch;
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} upb_pbdecodermethod;
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struct _upb_pbdecoderplan {
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// Pointer to bytecode.
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uint32_t *code, *code_end;
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// Maps upb_msgdef*/upb_handlers* -> upb_pbdecodermethod
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upb_inttable methods;
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// The method that starts parsing when we first call into the plan.
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// Ideally we will remove the idea that any of the methods in the plan
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// are special like this, so that any method can be the top-level one.
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upb_pbdecodermethod *topmethod;
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#ifdef UPB_USE_JIT_X64
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// JIT-generated machine code (else NULL).
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upb_string_handler *jit_code;
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size_t jit_size;
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char *debug_info;
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void *dl;
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#endif
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};
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#endif // UPB_DECODER_INT_H_
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