* Add failing tests for issues with wrapped values where the value is the default
* Add test for wrapped values without a value set
* Bugfix for wrapper types with default values.
The previous optimizations for wrapper types had a bug that prevented
wrappers from registering as "present" if the "value" field was not
present on the wire.
In practice the "value" field will not be serialized when it is zero,
according to proto3 semantics, but due to the optimization this
prevented it from creating a new object to represent the presence of the
field.
The fix is to ensure that if the wrapper message is present on the wire,
we always initialize its value to zero.
Co-authored-by: Joshua Haberman <jhaberman@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dan Quan <dan@quan.io>
* Add failing tests for issues with wrapped values where the value is the default
* Add test for wrapped values without a value set
* Bugfix for wrapper types with default values.
The previous optimizations for wrapper types had a bug that prevented
wrappers from registering as "present" if the "value" field was not
present on the wire.
In practice the "value" field will not be serialized when it is zero,
according to proto3 semantics, but due to the optimization this
prevented it from creating a new object to represent the presence of the
field.
The fix is to ensure that if the wrapper message is present on the wire,
we always initialize its value to zero.
Co-authored-by: Dan Quan <dan@quan.io>
The only case that doesn't work is decoding a wrapper type from JSON
at the top level. This doesn't make sense and probably no users do it
I changed it to throw.
`OneOfDescriptor_each` is registered as a Ruby method which takes zero
parameters, which means it should take one argument.
When Ruby invokes `OneOfDescriptor_each`, it calls it with one parameter
only, which is one less than what `OneOfDescriptor_each` takes before
this commit. Calling a function with the wrong number of argument is
technically undefined behavior.
See also: §6.5.2.2, N1256
We were creating a map decoding frame when starting the *map*,
but clearing the GC slot when finishing each *map entry*. This
means that the decoding frame could be collected in the meantime.
* Rolled forward again with "Updated upb from defcleanup branch..."
Revert "Revert "Updated upb from defcleanup branch and modified Ruby to use it (#5539)" (#5848)"
This reverts commit 1568deab40.
* A few more merge fixes.
* Updated for defcleanup2 branch.
* Fixed upb to define upb_decode().
* Fixed names of nested messages.
* Revert submodule.
* Set -std=gnu90 and fixed warnings/errors.
Some of our Kokoro tests seem to run with this level of warnings,
and the source strives to be gnu90 compatible. Enforcing it for
every build removes the possibility of some errors showing up in
Kokoro/Travis tests only.
* Fixed remaining warnings with gnu90 mode.
I tried to match warning flags with what Ruby appears to do
in our Kokoro tests.
* Initialize values registered by rb_gc_register_address().
* Fixed subtle GC bug.
We need to initialize this marked value before creating the instance.
* Truly fix the GC bug.
* Updated upb for mktime() fix.
* Removed XOPEN_SOURCE as we are not using strptime().
* Removed fixed tests from the conformance failure list for Ruby.
* Fixed memory error related to oneof def names.
* Picked up new upb changes re: JSON printing.
* Uncomment concurrent decoding test.
Prior to this CL, creating an empty message object would create
two empty string objects for every declared field. First we
created a unique string object for the field's default. Then
we created yet another string object when we assigned the
default value into the message: we called #encode to ensure
that the string would have the correct encoding and be frozen.
I optimized these unnecessary objects away with two fixes:
1. Memoize the empty string so that we don't create a new empty
string for every field's default.
2. If we are assigning a string to a message object, avoid creating
a new string if the assigned string has the correct encoding and
is already frozen.
value_field_typeclass should be a enum module, not EnumDescriptor
object.
Also expanding tests for enum valued maps.
Fixes#4580
Signed-off-by: Sorah Fukumori <her@sorah.jp>
In general, I think it will help us to debug issues if we have less C
code and more Ruby code. This method can be implemented in pure Ruby,
so this commit converts it to pure Ruby.
* add implicit time conversion
* add duration
* add init test
* more tests
* add type check and alternative c type check
* add rational and bigdecimal
* use rb_obj_is_kind_of
* use native time check
* chain implicit conversions
* remove unused variable
* Replace strptime with custom implementation
* Fix ruby strptime
* Fix test
* Fix ruby conformance test
* Use mktime
* Remove EmptyFieldMask from failed conformance test list
* Add conformance test for nested listvalue
* Fix upb for parsing repeated Value/ListValue
* Add failed repeated ListValue conformance test into php failure list