This involved fixing a few important bugs in the
Ruby implementation -- mostly cases of mixing
upb field types and descriptor types (upb field
types do not distinguish between int/sint/fixed/sfixed
like descriptor types do).
Also added protobuf-specific exceptions so parse
errors can be caught specifically.
Change-Id: Ib49d3db976900b2c6f3455c8b88af52cfb86e036
- We do still generate the message types, as otherwise reflection breaks, even though it doesn't actually use those types.
- JSON handling hasn't been implemented yet
We don't use it in the runtime or generated code anywhere now, so the extra small performance boost isn't as critical, and it has some undesirable consequences.
The tests have needed to change as iterator block enumerators don't throw when we might expect them to.
Install google/protobuf/stubs/status.h, and google/protobuf/stubs/stringpiece.h -- these are required in order to include google/protobuf/util/type_resolver.h.
Install google/protobuf/stubs/bytestream.h -- this is required in order to include google/protobuf/util/json_util.h.
This involves:
- Specifying a namespace in each proto (including ones we'd previously missed)
- Updating the generation script
- Changing codegen to implement IReflectedMessage.Fields explicitly (a good thing anyway)
- Changing reflection tests to take account of the explicit interface implementation
Non-generated code in this commit; generated code to follow
Change the C# namespace in descriptor.proto to Google.Protobuf.Reflection.
This then means changing where the generated code lives, which means updating the project file...
It also involves regenerating the C++ - which has updated the well-known types as well,
for no terribly obvious reason...
This was enabled by the recent open-sourcing of JSON
support and MessageDifferencer.
MessageDifferencer allows the conformance suite to expand
because it allows us to write tests for payloads that parse
successfully. To verify the testee's output payload, we
need to parse it back into a message and compare the message
instances. Comparing output bytes vs. a golden message is
*not* valid, because protobufs do not have a canonical
encoding (especially in the presence of maps, which have
no prescribed serialization order).
We only add one small JSON test for now, but with the
framework in place we now have the foundation to dramatically
expand the coverage of the conformance test suite.
Also added the ability for the testee to skip tests that
exercise features that are unimplemented. This allows
Java (which currently has no JSON support) to skip tests
involving JSON.
Change-Id: I697b4363da432b61ae3b638b4287c4cda1af4deb
While we are C99 in general, the Ruby build system
for building C extensions enables several flags that
throw warnings for C89/C90 variable ordering rules.
To avoid spewing a million warnings (or trying to
specifically override these warnings with command-line
flags, which would be tricky and possibly fragile)
we conform to Ruby's world of C89/C90.
Change-Id: I0e03e62d95068dfdfde112df0fb16a248a2f32a0