Now the Build tool needs to define -DHAVE_ZLIB and -DHAVE-PTHREAD rather
than providing a config.h
- Make pbconfig.h a manually written file to handle hash conditions
according to platform related macros.
- Remove #include "config.h" from source code.
- Changed the configure.ac and Makefile.am to pass down the macros.
- Change cmake to pass down the the macros.
Change-Id: I537249d5df8fdeba189706aec436d1ab1104a4dc
Escape characters don't count for string literal size, no need to pre-generate escape string.
Added unit test to touch enormous cpp generated descriptor.
Updated makefile to include enormous_descriptor.proto
Fixed language compatibility error.
- 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.
* Rosy hack doesn't apply (that test should be removed
for the open-source release).
* Added our own copy of parameterized.py (the open-source
version of Google Apputils doesn't contain it).
* The C++ Descriptor object didn't implement extension_ranges.
* Had to implement a hack around returning EncodeError, to
work around the module-loading behavior of the test runner.
- A golden-file test that ensures protoc produces known-valid output.
- A Ruby test that loads that golden file and ensures it actually works
with the extension.
This split strategy allows us to test end-to-end without needing to
integrate the Ruby gem build system and the protoc build system. This is
desirable because we do not want a gem build/install to depend on
building protoc, and we do not want building protoc to depend on
building and testing the gem.
This adds a Ruby extension in ruby/ that is based on the 'upb' library
(now included as a submodule), and adds support for Ruby code generation
to the protoc compiler.