- Minor formatting changes to make thing happy.
- Block clang-format from the PDDM macro definitions to avoid it wrapping
things.
- Don't add clang-format directives to the expansion, easier to handling
it outside of there.
Overdue followup to https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/pull/7173
Since all the files are at the same level as the runtime headers, there is no
need for things to be framework based imports, they should all just work like
the other headers do.
- Directly generate the bundled header imports into the preamble section when
generating for a bundled proto.
- Update the preamble generation to skip the CPP wrapper when generating for a
bundled proto file.
- Regenerate the WKTs.
- Update GPBProtocolBuffer.h/GPBWellKnownTypes.h to also skip the CPP wrapping.
GPB_USE_PROTOBUF_FRAMEWORK_IMPORTS in the podspec and non bundled files still
has to exist because that comes into play for those files to find the runtime
headers.
There are have been a few issues around people using case sensitive file systems
what Xcode/clang does when looking at the paths. In attempts to solve one set of
warnings, new warnings/errors happened in different setup. So, to hopefully put
these problem away for got, move the WKTs to be at the same level as the other
headers.
- Revert "Override CocoaPods module to lowercase (#6464)"
This reverts commit 479ba8226b.
- Move WKTs to the objectivec directory and make the old headers shim back to
the new locations.
- Update objectivec/generate_well_known_types.sh to check them one at a time
and to deal with the new locations for them.
Fixes#6803
- Add generator constant for the default framework name.
- Add generator api for making the CPP symbol from the name.
- Add generator api to see if it is a bundled proto file.
- Output a CPP conditional and two imports for the core library headers.
- Add helper for generating the #import for file headers to deal with the
framework imports.
- Add a reference from the unittests to a WKT to use that to inspect how
imports generate.
- Update the podspec to define the CPP symbol and require pods 1.0 (or later).
Fixes https://github.com/google/protobuf/issues/1457
- Add more to the ObjC dir readme.
- Merge the ExtensionField and ExtensionDescriptor to reduce overhead.
- Fix an initialization race.
- Clean up the Xcode schemes.
- Remove the class/enum filter.
- Remove some forced inline that were bloating things without proof of performance wins.
- Rename some internal types to avoid conflicts with the well know types protos.
- Drop the use of ApplyFunctions to the compiler/optimizer can do what it wants.
- Better document some possible future improvements.
- Add missing support for parsing repeated primitive fields in packed or unpacked forms.
- Improve -hash.
- Add *Count for repeated and map<> fields to avoid auto create when checking for them being set.
General
* License changed from Apache 2.0 to New BSD.
* It is now possible to define custom "options", which are basically
annotations which may be placed on definitions in a .proto file.
For example, you might define a field option called "foo" like so:
import "google/protobuf/descriptor.proto"
extend google.protobuf.FieldOptions {
optional string foo = 12345;
}
Then you annotate a field using the "foo" option:
message MyMessage {
optional int32 some_field = 1 [(foo) = "bar"]
}
The value of this option is then visible via the message's
Descriptor:
const FieldDescriptor* field =
MyMessage::descriptor()->FindFieldByName("some_field");
assert(field->options().GetExtension(foo) == "bar");
This feature has been implemented and tested in C++ and Java.
Other languages may or may not need to do extra work to support
custom options, depending on how they construct descriptors.
C++
* Fixed some GCC warnings that only occur when using -pedantic.
* Improved static initialization code, making ordering more
predictable among other things.
* TextFormat will no longer accept messages which contain multiple
instances of a singular field. Previously, the latter instance
would overwrite the former.
* Now works on systems that don't have hash_map.
Python
* Strings now use the "unicode" type rather than the "str" type.
String fields may still be assigned ASCII "str" values; they will
automatically be converted.
* Adding a property to an object representing a repeated field now
raises an exception. For example:
# No longer works (and never should have).
message.some_repeated_field.foo = 1