When the protobuf libraries have been compiled as shared libraries the users of the library need to add `-DPROTOBUF_USE_DLLS` to their build line. Otherwise some symbols are missing.
Fixes#12699
FWIW, I am not sure this is an ideal fix. It may be better to fix the headers such that no macros change the ABI.
Closes#12700
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/pull/12700 from coryan:fix-define-protobuf-use-dlls-in-pkg-config-file 13c792eebd
PiperOrigin-RevId: 530116678
When the protobuf libraries have been compiled as shared libraries the users of the library need to add `-DPROTOBUF_USE_DLLS` to their build line. Otherwise some symbols are missing.
Fixes#12699
FWIW, I am not sure this is an ideal fix. It may be better to fix the headers such that no macros change the ABI.
Closes#12700
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/pull/12700 from coryan:fix-define-protobuf-use-dlls-in-pkg-config-file 13c792eebd
PiperOrigin-RevId: 530116678
These more closely follow the standard practices of our users, where dependencies are pre-installed instead of using our provided sub-modules. This will prevent issues such as #12201 from reoccuring.
Additionally, this cl bumps our Abseil dependency to the latest release, and fixes a GTest issue that went previously unnoticed.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 529490402
These more closely follow the standard practices of our users, where dependencies are pre-installed instead of using our provided sub-modules. This will prevent issues such as #12201 from reoccuring.
Additionally, this cl bumps our Abseil dependency to the latest release, and fixes a GTest issue that went previously unnoticed.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 529490402
Allows the use of an external `jsoncpp` library to be used. Replicates the model used by `abseil-cpp` as a "package" or "module" to the `protobuf_JSONCPP_PROVIDER` option.
Resolves: #11827Closes#12577
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/pull/12577 from omenos:omenos/cmake-jsoncpp 073edd69b4
PiperOrigin-RevId: 528492610
This should fix#12374, #12375, and #12450. The `protobuf_PROTOC_EXEC` variable
is not defined, and I think `protobuf::protoc` is what we should be using
instead.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 525591320
For now, this only covers linux on the two architectures we have testing support for. However, it serves as a good sanity check and can be expanded in the future.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 514449399
For now, this only covers linux on the two architectures we have testing support for. However, it serves as a good sanity check and can be expanded in the future.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 514449399
This migrates from reusable workflows to composite GHA actions. This has the following advantages:
1) We can split them into smaller, easier to reason about chunks
2) We can reuse them more freely between each other and workflows
3) They don't complicate the job names
4) In theory they'll be easier to test in isolation. While composite actions can't be unit-tested, we can easily break them up into nodejs or docker actions that can be.
As a proof of concept, some of our non-Bazel tests are migrated to GHA as well (CMake + Composer)
Closes#11718
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/pull/11718 from protocolbuffers:gha-actions 5403307bc00616e94816aa460813939d8f37a1bd
PiperOrigin-RevId: 506375417
This deletes our old branches of internal Abseil code in favor of their newly open-sourced library. Notably, this removes the ability to turn CHECK crashes into exceptions.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 504460562
This will make the CMake workflow easier, where users won't need to either install utf8_range or initialize our submodules. Since this is a relatively small library that's owned by us, we can just bundle it with protobuf as a subtree
Closes#11608
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/pull/11608 from mkruskal-google:utf8_range_dep 57d5d91b68
PiperOrigin-RevId: 503314822
This CL changes the upb compiler to no longer depend on C++ protobuf libraries. upb now uses its own reflection libraries to implement its code generator.
# Key Benefits
1. upb can now use its own reflection libraries throughout the compiler. This makes upb more consistent and principled, and gives us more chances to dogfood our own C++ reflection API. This highlighted several parts of the C++ reflection API that were incomplete.
2. This CL removes code duplication that previously existed in the compiler. The upb reflection library has code to build MiniDescriptors and MiniTables out of descriptors, but prior to this CL the upb compiler could not use it. The upb compiler had a separate copy of this logic, and the compiler's copy of this logic was especially tricky and hard to maintain. This CL removes the separate copy of that logic.
3. This CL (mostly) removes upb's dependency on the C++ protobuf library. We still depend on `protoc` (the binary), but the runtime and compiler no longer link against C++'s libraries. This opens up the possibility of speeding up some builds significantly if we can use a prebuilt `protoc` binary.
# Bootstrap Stages
To bootstrap, we check in a copy of our generated code for `descriptor.proto` and `plugin.proto`. This allows the compiler to depend on the generated code for these two protos without creating a circular dependency. This code is checked in to the `stage0` directory.
The bootstrapping process is divided into a few stages. All `cc_library()`, `upb_proto_library()`, and `cc_binary()` targets that would otherwise be circular participate in this staging process. That currently includes:
* `//third_party/upb:descriptor_upb_proto`
* `//third_party/upb:plugin_upb_proto`
* `//third_party/upb:reflection`
* `//third_party/upb:reflection_internal`
* `//third_party/upbc:common`
* `//third_party/upbc:file_layout`
* `//third_party/upbc:plugin`
* `//third_party/upbc:protoc-gen-upb`
For each of these targets, we produce a rule for each stage (the logic for this is nicely encapsulated in Blaze/Bazel macros like `bootstrap_cc_library()` and `bootstrap_upb_proto_library()`, so the `BUILD` file remains readable). For example:
* `//third_party/upb:descriptor_upb_proto_stage0`
* `//third_party/upb:descriptor_upb_proto_stage1`
* `//third_party/upb:descriptor_upb_proto`
The stages are:
1. `stage0`: This uses the checked-in version of the generated code. The stage0 compiler is correct and outputs the same code as all other compilers, but it is unnecessarily slow because its protos were compiled in bootstrap mode. The stage0 compiler is used to generate protos for stage1.
2. `stage1`: The stage1 compiler is correct and fast, and therefore we use it in almost all cases (eg. `upb_proto_library()`). However its own protos were not generated using `upb_proto_library()`, so its `cc_library()` targets cannot be safely mixed with `upb_proto_library()`, as this would lead to duplicate symbols.
3. final (no stage): The final compiler is identical to the `stage1` compiler. The only difference is that its protos were built with `upb_proto_library()`. This doesn't matter very much for the compiler binary, but for the `cc_library()` targets like `//third_party/upb:reflection`, only the final targets can be safely linked in by other applications.
# "Bootstrap Mode" Protos
The checked-in generated code is generated in a special "bootstrap" mode that is a bit different than normal generated code. Bootstrap mode avoids depending on the internal representation of MiniTables or the messages, at the cost of slower runtime performance.
Bootstrap mode only interacts with MiniTables and messages using public APIs such as `upb_MiniTable_Build()`, `upb_Message_GetInt32()`, etc. This is very important as it allows us to change the internal representation without needing to regenerate our bootstrap protos. This will make it far easier to write CLs that change the internal representation, because it avoids the awkward dance of trying to regenerate the bootstrap protos when the compiler itself is broken due to bootstrap protos being out of date.
The bootstrap generated code does have two downsides:
1. The accessors are less efficient, because they look up MiniTable fields by number instead of hard-coding the MiniTableField into the generated code.
2. It requires runtime initialization of the MiniTables, which costs CPU cycles at startup, and also allocates memory which is never freed. Per google3 rules this is not really a leak, since this memory is still reachable via static variables, but it is undesirable in many contexts. We could fix this part by introducing the equivalent of `google::protobuf::ShutdownProtobufLibrary()`).
These downsides are fine for the bootstrapping process, but they are reason enough not to enable bootstrap mode in general for all protos.
# Bootstrapping Always Uses OSS Protos
To enable smooth syncing between Google3 and OSS, we always use an OSS version of the checked in generated code for `stage0`, even in google3.
This requires that the google3 code can be switched to reference the OSS proto names using a preprocessor define. We introduce the `UPB_DESC(xyz)` macro for this, which will expand into either `proto2_xyz` or `google_protobuf_xyz`. Any libraries used in `stage0` must use `UPB_DESC(xyz)` rather than refer to the symbol names directly.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 501458451
This leaves the decision of which C++ version to use up to our users. We still have a static_assert in port_def.inc that will prevent pre-C++14 usage.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 501351066
This simplifies the code generation by making output agnostic to whether fasttables will be used or not.
This grows the generated code in the common case, but when fasttables are not being used the preprocessor will strip away the unused tables.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 499340805
Addresses https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/issues/10936.
This requires updating to the newest version of rules_python to use the new py_wheel API that includes a parameter for extra distinfo files
PiperOrigin-RevId: 493060514