- All of the real work for printing the proto is actually done in
MessageNanoPrinter.
- Uses reflection to find proto-defined fields and prints those.
- Prints all fields, even defaults and nulls.
- Also added a simple test to make sure it handles all proto types well.
Tried not to make the test too brittle (but hey it's testing a toString()
so how flexible can it be)
Change-Id: I3e360ef8b0561041e010c1f3445ec45ecdcd2559
Like micro protobufs except:
- No setter/getter/hazzer functions.
- Has state is not available. Outputs all fields != their default.
- CodedInputStream can only take byte[] (not InputStream).
- Repeated fields are in arrays, not ArrayList or Vector.
- Unset messages/groups are null, not "defaultInstance()".
- Required fields are always serialized.
To use:
- Link libprotobuf-java-2.3.0-nano runtime.
- Use LOCAL_PROTOC_OPTIMIZE_TYPE := nano
Change-Id: I7429015b3c5f7f38b7be01eb2d4927f7a9999c80
Like micro protobufs except:
- No setter/getter/hazzer functions.
- Has state is not available. Outputs all fields != their default.
- CodedInputStream can only take byte[] (not InputStream).
- Repeated fields are in arrays, not ArrayList or Vector.
- Unset messages/groups are null, not "defaultInstance()".
- Required fields are always serialized.
To use:
- Link libprotobuf-java-2.3.0-nano runtime.
- Use LOCAL_PROTOC_OPTIMIZE_TYPE := nano
Change-Id: I7429015b3c5f7f38b7be01eb2d4927f7a9999c80
Removed use of StringUtf8Micro and instead use an extra byte array
instance variable directly in the class. This allows the list returned
for repeated strings to be a String instead of a StringUtf8Micro
making the class compatible with existing code.
Removed PerfTimer.java which isn't used.
Change-Id: Ie6acfb40f98f59a48c1a795d86f715078f9611f5
This is the contents of protobuf-2.2.0a.tar.bz2 from
http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/downloads/list and
is the base code for the javamicro code generator.
Change-Id: Ie9a0440a824d615086445b6636944484b3155afa
be properly set. writeTo() may be invoked without a call to
getSerializedSize(), so the generated serialization methods would
write a length of 0 for non-empty packed fields. Just call
getSerializedSize() at the beginning of writeTo(): although this
means that we may compute the byte size needlessly when there
are no packed fields, in practice, getSerializedSize() will
already have been called - all of the writeTo() wrappers in
AbstractMessageLite invoke it.
Tested: new unittest case in WireFormatTest.java now passes