Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format (grpc依赖) https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
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upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
/*
** TODO(haberman): it's unclear whether a lot of the consistency checks should
** UPB_ASSERT() or return false.
*/
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
#include "upb/handlers.h"
#include "upb/structdefs.int.h"
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
#include <string.h>
#include "upb/sink.h"
static void *upb_calloc(size_t size) {
void *mem = upb_gmalloc(size);
if (mem) {
memset(mem, 0, size);
}
return mem;
}
/* Defined for the sole purpose of having a unique pointer value for
* UPB_NO_CLOSURE. */
char _upb_noclosure;
static void freehandlers(upb_refcounted *r) {
upb_handlers *h = (upb_handlers*)r;
upb_inttable_iter i;
upb_inttable_begin(&i, &h->cleanup_);
for(; !upb_inttable_done(&i); upb_inttable_next(&i)) {
void *val = (void*)upb_inttable_iter_key(&i);
upb_value func_val = upb_inttable_iter_value(&i);
upb_handlerfree *func = upb_value_getfptr(func_val);
func(val);
}
upb_inttable_uninit(&h->cleanup_);
upb_msgdef_unref(h->msg, h);
upb_gfree(h->sub);
upb_gfree(h);
}
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
static void visithandlers(const upb_refcounted *r, upb_refcounted_visit *visit,
void *closure) {
const upb_handlers *h = (const upb_handlers*)r;
upb_msg_field_iter i;
for(upb_msg_field_begin(&i, h->msg);
!upb_msg_field_done(&i);
upb_msg_field_next(&i)) {
upb_fielddef *f = upb_msg_iter_field(&i);
const upb_handlers *sub;
if (!upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f)) continue;
sub = upb_handlers_getsubhandlers(h, f);
if (sub) visit(r, upb_handlers_upcast(sub), closure);
}
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
}
static const struct upb_refcounted_vtbl vtbl = {visithandlers, freehandlers};
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
typedef struct {
upb_inttable tab; /* maps upb_msgdef* -> upb_handlers*. */
upb_handlers_callback *callback;
const void *closure;
} dfs_state;
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
/* TODO(haberman): discard upb_handlers* objects that do not actually have any
* handlers set and cannot reach any upb_handlers* object that does. This is
* slightly tricky to do correctly. */
static upb_handlers *newformsg(const upb_msgdef *m, const void *owner,
dfs_state *s) {
upb_msg_field_iter i;
upb_handlers *h = upb_handlers_new(m, owner);
if (!h) return NULL;
if (!upb_inttable_insertptr(&s->tab, m, upb_value_ptr(h))) goto oom;
s->callback(s->closure, h);
/* For each submessage field, get or create a handlers object and set it as
* the subhandlers. */
for(upb_msg_field_begin(&i, m);
!upb_msg_field_done(&i);
upb_msg_field_next(&i)) {
upb_fielddef *f = upb_msg_iter_field(&i);
const upb_msgdef *subdef;
upb_value subm_ent;
if (!upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f)) continue;
subdef = upb_downcast_msgdef(upb_fielddef_subdef(f));
if (upb_inttable_lookupptr(&s->tab, subdef, &subm_ent)) {
upb_handlers_setsubhandlers(h, f, upb_value_getptr(subm_ent));
} else {
upb_handlers *sub_mh = newformsg(subdef, &sub_mh, s);
if (!sub_mh) goto oom;
upb_handlers_setsubhandlers(h, f, sub_mh);
upb_handlers_unref(sub_mh, &sub_mh);
}
}
return h;
oom:
upb_handlers_unref(h, owner);
return NULL;
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
}
/* Given a selector for a STARTSUBMSG handler, resolves to a pointer to the
* subhandlers for this submessage field. */
#define SUBH(h, selector) (h->sub[selector])
/* The selector for a submessage field is the field index. */
#define SUBH_F(h, f) SUBH(h, f->index_)
static int32_t trygetsel(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f,
upb_handlertype_t type) {
upb_selector_t sel;
UPB_ASSERT(!upb_handlers_isfrozen(h));
if (upb_handlers_msgdef(h) != upb_fielddef_containingtype(f)) {
upb_status_seterrf(
&h->status_, "type mismatch: field %s does not belong to message %s",
upb_fielddef_name(f), upb_msgdef_fullname(upb_handlers_msgdef(h)));
return -1;
}
if (!upb_handlers_getselector(f, type, &sel)) {
upb_status_seterrf(
&h->status_,
"type mismatch: cannot register handler type %d for field %s",
type, upb_fielddef_name(f));
return -1;
}
return sel;
}
static upb_selector_t handlers_getsel(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f,
upb_handlertype_t type) {
int32_t sel = trygetsel(h, f, type);
UPB_ASSERT(sel >= 0);
return sel;
}
static const void **returntype(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f,
upb_handlertype_t type) {
return &h->table[handlers_getsel(h, f, type)].attr.return_closure_type_;
}
static bool doset(upb_handlers *h, int32_t sel, const upb_fielddef *f,
upb_handlertype_t type, upb_func *func,
upb_handlerattr *attr) {
upb_handlerattr set_attr = UPB_HANDLERATTR_INITIALIZER;
const void *closure_type;
const void **context_closure_type;
UPB_ASSERT(!upb_handlers_isfrozen(h));
if (sel < 0) {
upb_status_seterrmsg(&h->status_,
"incorrect handler type for this field.");
return false;
}
if (h->table[sel].func) {
upb_status_seterrmsg(&h->status_,
"cannot change handler once it has been set.");
return false;
}
if (attr) {
set_attr = *attr;
}
/* Check that the given closure type matches the closure type that has been
* established for this context (if any). */
closure_type = upb_handlerattr_closuretype(&set_attr);
if (type == UPB_HANDLER_STRING) {
context_closure_type = returntype(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSTR);
} else if (f && upb_fielddef_isseq(f) &&
type != UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ &&
type != UPB_HANDLER_ENDSEQ) {
context_closure_type = returntype(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ);
} else {
context_closure_type = &h->top_closure_type;
}
if (closure_type && *context_closure_type &&
closure_type != *context_closure_type) {
/* TODO(haberman): better message for debugging. */
if (f) {
upb_status_seterrf(&h->status_,
"closure type does not match for field %s",
upb_fielddef_name(f));
} else {
upb_status_seterrmsg(
&h->status_, "closure type does not match for message-level handler");
}
return false;
}
if (closure_type)
*context_closure_type = closure_type;
/* If this is a STARTSEQ or STARTSTR handler, check that the returned pointer
* matches any pre-existing expectations about what type is expected. */
if (type == UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ || type == UPB_HANDLER_STARTSTR) {
const void *return_type = upb_handlerattr_returnclosuretype(&set_attr);
const void *table_return_type =
upb_handlerattr_returnclosuretype(&h->table[sel].attr);
if (return_type && table_return_type && return_type != table_return_type) {
upb_status_seterrmsg(&h->status_, "closure return type does not match");
return false;
}
if (table_return_type && !return_type)
upb_handlerattr_setreturnclosuretype(&set_attr, table_return_type);
}
h->table[sel].func = (upb_func*)func;
h->table[sel].attr = set_attr;
return true;
}
/* Returns the effective closure type for this handler (which will propagate
* from outer frames if this frame has no START* handler). Not implemented for
* UPB_HANDLER_STRING at the moment since this is not needed. Returns NULL is
* the effective closure type is unspecified (either no handler was registered
* to specify it or the handler that was registered did not specify the closure
* type). */
const void *effective_closure_type(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f,
upb_handlertype_t type) {
const void *ret;
upb_selector_t sel;
UPB_ASSERT(type != UPB_HANDLER_STRING);
ret = h->top_closure_type;
if (upb_fielddef_isseq(f) &&
type != UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ &&
type != UPB_HANDLER_ENDSEQ &&
h->table[sel = handlers_getsel(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ)].func) {
ret = upb_handlerattr_returnclosuretype(&h->table[sel].attr);
}
if (type == UPB_HANDLER_STRING &&
h->table[sel = handlers_getsel(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSTR)].func) {
ret = upb_handlerattr_returnclosuretype(&h->table[sel].attr);
}
/* The effective type of the submessage; not used yet.
* if (type == SUBMESSAGE &&
* h->table[sel = handlers_getsel(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSUBMSG)].func) {
* ret = upb_handlerattr_returnclosuretype(&h->table[sel].attr);
* } */
return ret;
}
/* Checks whether the START* handler specified by f & type is missing even
* though it is required to convert the established type of an outer frame
* ("closure_type") into the established type of an inner frame (represented in
* the return closure type of this handler's attr. */
bool checkstart(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f, upb_handlertype_t type,
upb_status *status) {
const void *closure_type;
const upb_handlerattr *attr;
const void *return_closure_type;
upb_selector_t sel = handlers_getsel(h, f, type);
if (h->table[sel].func) return true;
closure_type = effective_closure_type(h, f, type);
attr = &h->table[sel].attr;
return_closure_type = upb_handlerattr_returnclosuretype(attr);
if (closure_type && return_closure_type &&
closure_type != return_closure_type) {
upb_status_seterrf(status,
"expected start handler to return sub type for field %f",
upb_fielddef_name(f));
return false;
}
return true;
}
/* Public interface ***********************************************************/
upb_handlers *upb_handlers_new(const upb_msgdef *md, const void *owner) {
int extra;
upb_handlers *h;
UPB_ASSERT(upb_msgdef_isfrozen(md));
extra = sizeof(upb_handlers_tabent) * (md->selector_count - 1);
h = upb_calloc(sizeof(*h) + extra);
if (!h) return NULL;
h->msg = md;
upb_msgdef_ref(h->msg, h);
upb_status_clear(&h->status_);
if (md->submsg_field_count > 0) {
h->sub = upb_calloc(md->submsg_field_count * sizeof(*h->sub));
if (!h->sub) goto oom;
} else {
h->sub = 0;
}
if (!upb_refcounted_init(upb_handlers_upcast_mutable(h), &vtbl, owner))
goto oom;
if (!upb_inttable_init(&h->cleanup_, UPB_CTYPE_FPTR)) goto oom;
/* calloc() above initialized all handlers to NULL. */
return h;
oom:
freehandlers(upb_handlers_upcast_mutable(h));
return NULL;
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
}
const upb_handlers *upb_handlers_newfrozen(const upb_msgdef *m,
const void *owner,
upb_handlers_callback *callback,
const void *closure) {
dfs_state state;
upb_handlers *ret;
bool ok;
upb_refcounted *r;
state.callback = callback;
state.closure = closure;
if (!upb_inttable_init(&state.tab, UPB_CTYPE_PTR)) return NULL;
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
ret = newformsg(m, owner, &state);
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
upb_inttable_uninit(&state.tab);
if (!ret) return NULL;
r = upb_handlers_upcast_mutable(ret);
ok = upb_refcounted_freeze(&r, 1, NULL, UPB_MAX_HANDLER_DEPTH);
UPB_ASSERT(ok);
return ret;
}
const upb_status *upb_handlers_status(upb_handlers *h) {
UPB_ASSERT(!upb_handlers_isfrozen(h));
return &h->status_;
}
void upb_handlers_clearerr(upb_handlers *h) {
UPB_ASSERT(!upb_handlers_isfrozen(h));
upb_status_clear(&h->status_);
}
#define SETTER(name, handlerctype, handlertype) \
bool upb_handlers_set ## name(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f, \
handlerctype func, upb_handlerattr *attr) { \
int32_t sel = trygetsel(h, f, handlertype); \
return doset(h, sel, f, handlertype, (upb_func*)func, attr); \
}
SETTER(int32, upb_int32_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_INT32)
SETTER(int64, upb_int64_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_INT64)
SETTER(uint32, upb_uint32_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_UINT32)
SETTER(uint64, upb_uint64_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_UINT64)
SETTER(float, upb_float_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_FLOAT)
SETTER(double, upb_double_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_DOUBLE)
SETTER(bool, upb_bool_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_BOOL)
SETTER(startstr, upb_startstr_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSTR)
SETTER(string, upb_string_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_STRING)
SETTER(endstr, upb_endfield_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_ENDSTR)
SETTER(startseq, upb_startfield_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ)
SETTER(startsubmsg, upb_startfield_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSUBMSG)
SETTER(endsubmsg, upb_endfield_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_ENDSUBMSG)
SETTER(endseq, upb_endfield_handlerfunc*, UPB_HANDLER_ENDSEQ)
#undef SETTER
bool upb_handlers_setunknown(upb_handlers *h, upb_unknown_handlerfunc *func,
upb_handlerattr *attr) {
return doset(h, UPB_UNKNOWN_SELECTOR, NULL, UPB_HANDLER_INT32,
(upb_func *)func, attr);
}
bool upb_handlers_setstartmsg(upb_handlers *h, upb_startmsg_handlerfunc *func,
upb_handlerattr *attr) {
return doset(h, UPB_STARTMSG_SELECTOR, NULL, UPB_HANDLER_INT32,
(upb_func *)func, attr);
}
bool upb_handlers_setendmsg(upb_handlers *h, upb_endmsg_handlerfunc *func,
upb_handlerattr *attr) {
UPB_ASSERT(!upb_handlers_isfrozen(h));
return doset(h, UPB_ENDMSG_SELECTOR, NULL, UPB_HANDLER_INT32,
(upb_func *)func, attr);
}
bool upb_handlers_setsubhandlers(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f,
const upb_handlers *sub) {
UPB_ASSERT(sub);
UPB_ASSERT(!upb_handlers_isfrozen(h));
UPB_ASSERT(upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f));
if (SUBH_F(h, f)) return false; /* Can't reset. */
if (upb_msgdef_upcast(upb_handlers_msgdef(sub)) != upb_fielddef_subdef(f)) {
return false;
}
SUBH_F(h, f) = sub;
upb_ref2(sub, h);
return true;
}
const upb_handlers *upb_handlers_getsubhandlers(const upb_handlers *h,
const upb_fielddef *f) {
UPB_ASSERT(upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f));
return SUBH_F(h, f);
}
bool upb_handlers_getattr(const upb_handlers *h, upb_selector_t sel,
upb_handlerattr *attr) {
if (!upb_handlers_gethandler(h, sel))
return false;
*attr = h->table[sel].attr;
return true;
}
const upb_handlers *upb_handlers_getsubhandlers_sel(const upb_handlers *h,
upb_selector_t sel) {
/* STARTSUBMSG selector in sel is the field's selector base. */
return SUBH(h, sel - UPB_STATIC_SELECTOR_COUNT);
}
const upb_msgdef *upb_handlers_msgdef(const upb_handlers *h) { return h->msg; }
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
bool upb_handlers_addcleanup(upb_handlers *h, void *p, upb_handlerfree *func) {
bool ok;
if (upb_inttable_lookupptr(&h->cleanup_, p, NULL)) {
return false;
}
ok = upb_inttable_insertptr(&h->cleanup_, p, upb_value_fptr(func));
UPB_ASSERT(ok);
return true;
}
/* "Static" methods ***********************************************************/
bool upb_handlers_freeze(upb_handlers *const*handlers, int n, upb_status *s) {
/* TODO: verify we have a transitive closure. */
int i;
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
upb_msg_field_iter j;
upb_handlers *h = handlers[i];
if (!upb_ok(&h->status_)) {
upb_status_seterrf(s, "handlers for message %s had error status: %s",
upb_msgdef_fullname(upb_handlers_msgdef(h)),
upb_status_errmsg(&h->status_));
return false;
}
/* Check that there are no closure mismatches due to missing Start* handlers
* or subhandlers with different type-level types. */
for(upb_msg_field_begin(&j, h->msg);
!upb_msg_field_done(&j);
upb_msg_field_next(&j)) {
const upb_fielddef *f = upb_msg_iter_field(&j);
if (upb_fielddef_isseq(f)) {
if (!checkstart(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ, s))
return false;
}
if (upb_fielddef_isstring(f)) {
if (!checkstart(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSTR, s))
return false;
}
if (upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f)) {
bool hashandler = false;
if (upb_handlers_gethandler(
h, handlers_getsel(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSUBMSG)) ||
upb_handlers_gethandler(
h, handlers_getsel(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_ENDSUBMSG))) {
hashandler = true;
}
if (upb_fielddef_isseq(f) &&
(upb_handlers_gethandler(
h, handlers_getsel(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ)) ||
upb_handlers_gethandler(
h, handlers_getsel(h, f, UPB_HANDLER_ENDSEQ)))) {
hashandler = true;
}
if (hashandler && !upb_handlers_getsubhandlers(h, f)) {
/* For now we add an empty subhandlers in this case. It makes the
* decoder code generator simpler, because it only has to handle two
* cases (submessage has handlers or not) as opposed to three
* (submessage has handlers in enclosing message but no subhandlers).
*
* This makes parsing less efficient in the case that we want to
* notice a submessage but skip its contents (like if we're testing
* for submessage presence or counting the number of repeated
* submessages). In this case we will end up parsing the submessage
* field by field and throwing away the results for each, instead of
* skipping the whole delimited thing at once. If this is an issue we
* can revisit it, but do remember that this only arises when you have
* handlers (startseq/startsubmsg/endsubmsg/endseq) set for the
* submessage but no subhandlers. The uses cases for this are
* limited. */
upb_handlers *sub = upb_handlers_new(upb_fielddef_msgsubdef(f), &sub);
upb_handlers_setsubhandlers(h, f, sub);
upb_handlers_unref(sub, &sub);
}
/* TODO(haberman): check type of submessage.
* This is slightly tricky; also consider whether we should check that
* they match at setsubhandlers time. */
}
}
}
if (!upb_refcounted_freeze((upb_refcounted*const*)handlers, n, s,
UPB_MAX_HANDLER_DEPTH)) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
upb_handlertype_t upb_handlers_getprimitivehandlertype(const upb_fielddef *f) {
switch (upb_fielddef_type(f)) {
case UPB_TYPE_INT32:
case UPB_TYPE_ENUM: return UPB_HANDLER_INT32;
case UPB_TYPE_INT64: return UPB_HANDLER_INT64;
case UPB_TYPE_UINT32: return UPB_HANDLER_UINT32;
case UPB_TYPE_UINT64: return UPB_HANDLER_UINT64;
case UPB_TYPE_FLOAT: return UPB_HANDLER_FLOAT;
case UPB_TYPE_DOUBLE: return UPB_HANDLER_DOUBLE;
case UPB_TYPE_BOOL: return UPB_HANDLER_BOOL;
default: UPB_ASSERT(false); return -1; /* Invalid input. */
}
}
bool upb_handlers_getselector(const upb_fielddef *f, upb_handlertype_t type,
upb_selector_t *s) {
switch (type) {
case UPB_HANDLER_INT32:
case UPB_HANDLER_INT64:
case UPB_HANDLER_UINT32:
case UPB_HANDLER_UINT64:
case UPB_HANDLER_FLOAT:
case UPB_HANDLER_DOUBLE:
case UPB_HANDLER_BOOL:
if (!upb_fielddef_isprimitive(f) ||
upb_handlers_getprimitivehandlertype(f) != type)
return false;
*s = f->selector_base;
break;
case UPB_HANDLER_STRING:
if (upb_fielddef_isstring(f)) {
*s = f->selector_base;
} else if (upb_fielddef_lazy(f)) {
*s = f->selector_base + 3;
} else {
return false;
}
break;
case UPB_HANDLER_STARTSTR:
if (upb_fielddef_isstring(f) || upb_fielddef_lazy(f)) {
*s = f->selector_base + 1;
} else {
return false;
}
break;
case UPB_HANDLER_ENDSTR:
if (upb_fielddef_isstring(f) || upb_fielddef_lazy(f)) {
*s = f->selector_base + 2;
} else {
return false;
}
break;
case UPB_HANDLER_STARTSEQ:
if (!upb_fielddef_isseq(f)) return false;
*s = f->selector_base - 2;
break;
case UPB_HANDLER_ENDSEQ:
if (!upb_fielddef_isseq(f)) return false;
*s = f->selector_base - 1;
break;
case UPB_HANDLER_STARTSUBMSG:
if (!upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f)) return false;
/* Selectors for STARTSUBMSG are at the beginning of the table so that the
* selector can also be used as an index into the "sub" array of
* subhandlers. The indexes for the two into these two tables are the
* same, except that in the handler table the static selectors come first. */
*s = f->index_ + UPB_STATIC_SELECTOR_COUNT;
break;
case UPB_HANDLER_ENDSUBMSG:
if (!upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f)) return false;
*s = f->selector_base;
break;
}
UPB_ASSERT((size_t)*s < upb_fielddef_containingtype(f)->selector_count);
return true;
upb_stream: all callbacks registered ahead-of-time. This is a significant change to the upb_stream protocol, and should hopefully be the last significant change. All callbacks are now registered ahead-of-time instead of having delegated callbacks registered at runtime, which makes it much easier to aggressively optimize ahead-of-time (like with a JIT). Other impacts of this change: - You no longer need to have loaded descriptor.proto as a upb_def to load other descriptors! This means the special-case code we used for bootstrapping is no longer necessary, and we no longer need to link the descriptor for descriptor.proto into upb. - A client can now register any upb_value as what will be delivered to their value callback, not just a upb_fielddef*. This should allow for other clients to get more bang out of the streaming decoder. This change unfortunately causes a bit of a performance regression -- I think largely due to highly suboptimal code that GCC generates when structs are returned by value. See: http://blog.reverberate.org/2011/03/19/when-a-compilers-slow-code-actually-bites-you/ On the other hand, once we have a JIT this should no longer matter. Performance numbers: plain.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 374 -> 396 (5.88) plain.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 616 -> 449 (-27.11) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 268 -> 269 (0.37) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 215 -> 204 (-5.12) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 307 -> 281 (-8.47) plain.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 272 (-8.42) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage1.upb_table: 423 -> 410 (-3.07) omitfp.parsestream_googlemessage2.upb_table: 679 -> 483 (-28.87) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byref: 287 -> 282 (-1.74) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage1.upb_table_byval: 226 -> 219 (-3.10) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byref: 315 -> 298 (-5.40) omitfp.parsetostruct_googlemessage2.upb_table_byval: 297 -> 287 (-3.37)
14 years ago
}
uint32_t upb_handlers_selectorbaseoffset(const upb_fielddef *f) {
return upb_fielddef_isseq(f) ? 2 : 0;
}
uint32_t upb_handlers_selectorcount(const upb_fielddef *f) {
uint32_t ret = 1;
if (upb_fielddef_isseq(f)) ret += 2; /* STARTSEQ/ENDSEQ */
if (upb_fielddef_isstring(f)) ret += 2; /* [STRING]/STARTSTR/ENDSTR */
if (upb_fielddef_issubmsg(f)) {
/* ENDSUBMSG (STARTSUBMSG is at table beginning) */
ret += 0;
if (upb_fielddef_lazy(f)) {
/* STARTSTR/ENDSTR/STRING (for lazy) */
ret += 3;
}
}
return ret;
}
/* upb_handlerattr ************************************************************/
void upb_handlerattr_init(upb_handlerattr *attr) {
upb_handlerattr from = UPB_HANDLERATTR_INITIALIZER;
memcpy(attr, &from, sizeof(*attr));
}
void upb_handlerattr_uninit(upb_handlerattr *attr) {
UPB_UNUSED(attr);
}
bool upb_handlerattr_sethandlerdata(upb_handlerattr *attr, const void *hd) {
attr->handler_data_ = hd;
return true;
}
bool upb_handlerattr_setclosuretype(upb_handlerattr *attr, const void *type) {
attr->closure_type_ = type;
return true;
}
const void *upb_handlerattr_closuretype(const upb_handlerattr *attr) {
return attr->closure_type_;
}
bool upb_handlerattr_setreturnclosuretype(upb_handlerattr *attr,
const void *type) {
attr->return_closure_type_ = type;
return true;
}
const void *upb_handlerattr_returnclosuretype(const upb_handlerattr *attr) {
return attr->return_closure_type_;
}
bool upb_handlerattr_setalwaysok(upb_handlerattr *attr, bool alwaysok) {
attr->alwaysok_ = alwaysok;
return true;
}
bool upb_handlerattr_alwaysok(const upb_handlerattr *attr) {
return attr->alwaysok_;
}
/* upb_bufhandle **************************************************************/
size_t upb_bufhandle_objofs(const upb_bufhandle *h) {
return h->objofs_;
}
/* upb_byteshandler ***********************************************************/
void upb_byteshandler_init(upb_byteshandler* h) {
memset(h, 0, sizeof(*h));
}
/* For when we support handlerfree callbacks. */
void upb_byteshandler_uninit(upb_byteshandler* h) {
UPB_UNUSED(h);
}
bool upb_byteshandler_setstartstr(upb_byteshandler *h,
upb_startstr_handlerfunc *func, void *d) {
h->table[UPB_STARTSTR_SELECTOR].func = (upb_func*)func;
h->table[UPB_STARTSTR_SELECTOR].attr.handler_data_ = d;
return true;
}
bool upb_byteshandler_setstring(upb_byteshandler *h,
upb_string_handlerfunc *func, void *d) {
h->table[UPB_STRING_SELECTOR].func = (upb_func*)func;
h->table[UPB_STRING_SELECTOR].attr.handler_data_ = d;
return true;
}
bool upb_byteshandler_setendstr(upb_byteshandler *h,
upb_endfield_handlerfunc *func, void *d) {
h->table[UPB_ENDSTR_SELECTOR].func = (upb_func*)func;
h->table[UPB_ENDSTR_SELECTOR].attr.handler_data_ = d;
return true;
}
/** Handlers for upb_msg ******************************************************/
typedef struct {
size_t offset;
int32_t hasbit;
} upb_msg_handlerdata;
/* Fallback implementation if the handler is not specialized by the producer. */
#define MSG_WRITER(type, ctype) \
bool upb_msg_set ## type (void *c, const void *hd, ctype val) { \
uint8_t *m = c; \
const upb_msg_handlerdata *d = hd; \
if (d->hasbit > 0) \
*(uint8_t*)&m[d->hasbit / 8] |= 1 << (d->hasbit % 8); \
*(ctype*)&m[d->offset] = val; \
return true; \
} \
MSG_WRITER(double, double)
MSG_WRITER(float, float)
MSG_WRITER(int32, int32_t)
MSG_WRITER(int64, int64_t)
MSG_WRITER(uint32, uint32_t)
MSG_WRITER(uint64, uint64_t)
MSG_WRITER(bool, bool)
bool upb_msg_setscalarhandler(upb_handlers *h, const upb_fielddef *f,
size_t offset, int32_t hasbit) {
upb_handlerattr attr = UPB_HANDLERATTR_INITIALIZER;
bool ok;
upb_msg_handlerdata *d = upb_gmalloc(sizeof(*d));
if (!d) return false;
d->offset = offset;
d->hasbit = hasbit;
upb_handlerattr_sethandlerdata(&attr, d);
upb_handlerattr_setalwaysok(&attr, true);
upb_handlers_addcleanup(h, d, upb_gfree);
#define TYPE(u, l) \
case UPB_TYPE_##u: \
ok = upb_handlers_set##l(h, f, upb_msg_set##l, &attr); break;
ok = false;
switch (upb_fielddef_type(f)) {
TYPE(INT64, int64);
TYPE(INT32, int32);
TYPE(ENUM, int32);
TYPE(UINT64, uint64);
TYPE(UINT32, uint32);
TYPE(DOUBLE, double);
TYPE(FLOAT, float);
TYPE(BOOL, bool);
default: UPB_ASSERT(false); break;
}
#undef TYPE
upb_handlerattr_uninit(&attr);
return ok;
}
bool upb_msg_getscalarhandlerdata(const upb_handlers *h,
upb_selector_t s,
upb_fieldtype_t *type,
size_t *offset,
int32_t *hasbit) {
const upb_msg_handlerdata *d;
upb_func *f = upb_handlers_gethandler(h, s);
if ((upb_int64_handlerfunc*)f == upb_msg_setint64) {
*type = UPB_TYPE_INT64;
} else if ((upb_int32_handlerfunc*)f == upb_msg_setint32) {
*type = UPB_TYPE_INT32;
} else if ((upb_uint64_handlerfunc*)f == upb_msg_setuint64) {
*type = UPB_TYPE_UINT64;
} else if ((upb_uint32_handlerfunc*)f == upb_msg_setuint32) {
*type = UPB_TYPE_UINT32;
} else if ((upb_double_handlerfunc*)f == upb_msg_setdouble) {
*type = UPB_TYPE_DOUBLE;
} else if ((upb_float_handlerfunc*)f == upb_msg_setfloat) {
*type = UPB_TYPE_FLOAT;
} else if ((upb_bool_handlerfunc*)f == upb_msg_setbool) {
*type = UPB_TYPE_BOOL;
} else {
return false;
}
d = upb_handlers_gethandlerdata(h, s);
*offset = d->offset;
*hasbit = d->hasbit;
return true;
}