The new fields fixed_features and overridable_features can be simply merged to recover the old aggregate defaults. By splitting them though, plugins and runtimes get some extra information about lifetimes for enforcement.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 625527117
The only public target here is the edition defaults helper macro, which can be used by external runtimes and plugins. None of this code is C++-specific though, and should be organized higher up. Appropriate aliases are also placed at the top level for public targets
PiperOrigin-RevId: 625392504
This updates all our text parsers and serializers to better handle tag-delimited fields under editions. Under proto2, groups were the only tag-delimited fields possible, and the group name (i.e. the message type) was guaranteed to be unique. Text-format and various generators used this instead of the synthetic field name (lower-cased group name) to represent these fields.
Under editions, we've removed group syntax and allowed any message field to be tag-delimited. This breaks those cases when adding new tag-delimited fields where the message type might not be unique or correspond to the field name. Code generators have already been fixed to treat "group-like" fields using the old behavior, and treat new fields like any other sub-message.
This change addresses the text-format issue. Text parsers will accept *either* the type or field name for "group-like" fields, and only the field name for every other message field. Text serializers will continue to emit the message name for "group-like" fields, but also use the field name for everything else.
This creates some awkward capitalization behavior for fields that happen to *look* like proto2 groups, but it won't lead to any conflicts or invalid encodings. A feature will likely be added to edition 2024 to allow for migration off this legacy behavior.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 622260327
This is needed to make protobuf/bazel package minimal for other proto rules.
Keep 4 public bzl files in upb/bazel. They end up under protobuf/bazel, and they are legitimately used by other repositories.
Move upb_proto_library_internal/* under bazel/private. Those are utilities used in the rules. Moving them one level deeper makes protobuf/bazel package clean for other rules.
Move build_defs.bzl and amalgamation under /upb/bazel. Those are utilities used in the build.
Move lua.BUILD and python* uner /python/dist. Those are used in the WORKSPACE dependency setup.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 621442236
This PR implements lookup of service descriptor and method descriptor objects in Ruby as described in issue https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/issues/14891.
It contains three implementations - one for the CRuby extension API, one for JRuby, and one for FFI.
With this patch,
* `DescriptorPool#lookup('fully.qualified.service.name')` works and returns a `Google::Protobuf::ServiceDescriptor` object
* You can call `#options` on that to get the service options
* You can call `#methods` on that to get the services' methods as `Google::Protobuf::MethodDescriptor` objects,
* You can call `MethodDescriptor#options` to get method options
* You can also get the streaming flags & input/output types of the method with `#input_type`, `#output_type`, `#client_streaming`, and `#server_streaming`.
In order to make the FFI implementation work, I had to mark some more methods in the UPB header as exported - I guess that's something which will have to be done on the UPB side, like this 01fed1cc1b
CC @dazuma & @haberman from the original issue, and @JasonLunn (since you work on protobuf it seems - small world!)
I apologies for the large volume of copy-pasta'd code from the existing descriptor class implementations into the new ones - I felt this was probably better than designing new abstractions to reduce it off the bat though; this feels like it "fits in" with the existing implementation.
Closes#15817
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/pull/15817 from KJTsanaktsidis:ktsanaktsidis/add_service_method_descriptors 54d7218431
PiperOrigin-RevId: 618221016
Three of these runtimes are based on upb, and the fourth is based on the Java runtime. Both of these already have editions support, so this was mostly just a matter of:
- Advertising support to allow editions codegen
- Stripping features from the runtime options
- Hooking up conformance tests
- Adding some lightweight editions tests
There are also a few minor orthogonal fixes included here:
- Ruby's upb hack for treating all enums as open enums needed tweaking
- The `enable_editions` flag is no longer needed in our internal proto rules
PiperOrigin-RevId: 616256211