Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format (grpc依赖)
https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
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375 lines
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375 lines
15 KiB
Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format |
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[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/google/protobuf.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/google/protobuf) |
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Copyright 2008 Google Inc. |
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This directory contains the Java Protocol Buffers Nano runtime library. |
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Installation - With Maven |
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------------------------- |
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The Protocol Buffers build is managed using Maven. If you would |
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rather build without Maven, see below. |
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1) Install Apache Maven if you don't have it: |
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http://maven.apache.org/ |
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2) Build the C++ code, or obtain a binary distribution of protoc. If |
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you install a binary distribution, make sure that it is the same |
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version as this package. If in doubt, run: |
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$ protoc --version |
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You will need to place the protoc executable in ../src. (If you |
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built it yourself, it should already be there.) |
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3) Run the tests: |
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$ mvn test |
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If some tests fail, this library may not work correctly on your |
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system. Continue at your own risk. |
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4) Install the library into your Maven repository: |
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$ mvn install |
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5) If you do not use Maven to manage your own build, you can build a |
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.jar file to use: |
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$ mvn package |
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The .jar will be placed in the "target" directory. |
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Installation - Without Maven |
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---------------------------- |
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If you would rather not install Maven to build the library, you may |
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follow these instructions instead. Note that these instructions skip |
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running unit tests. |
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1) Build the C++ code, or obtain a binary distribution of protoc. If |
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you install a binary distribution, make sure that it is the same |
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version as this package. If in doubt, run: |
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$ protoc --version |
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If you built the C++ code without installing, the compiler binary |
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should be located in ../src. |
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2) Invoke protoc to build DescriptorProtos.java: |
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$ protoc --java_out=src/main/java -I../src \ |
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../src/google/protobuf/descriptor.proto |
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3) Compile the code in src/main/java using whatever means you prefer. |
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4) Install the classes wherever you prefer. |
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Nano version |
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------------ |
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JavaNano is a special code generator and runtime library designed specially for |
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resource-restricted systems, like Android. It is very resource-friendly in both |
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the amount of code and the runtime overhead. Here is an overview of JavaNano |
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features compared with the official Java protobuf: |
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- No descriptors or message builders. |
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- All messages are mutable; fields are public Java fields. |
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- For optional fields only, encapsulation behind setter/getter/hazzer/ |
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clearer functions is opt-in, which provide proper 'has' state support. |
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- For proto2, if not opted in, has state (field presence) is not available. |
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Serialization outputs all fields not equal to their defaults |
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(see important implications below). |
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The behavior is consistent with proto3 semantics. |
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- Required fields (proto2 only) are always serialized. |
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- Enum constants are integers; protection against invalid values only |
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when parsing from the wire. |
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- Enum constants can be generated into container interfaces bearing |
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the enum's name (so the referencing code is in Java style). |
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- CodedInputByteBufferNano can only take byte[] (not InputStream). |
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- Similarly CodedOutputByteBufferNano can only write to byte[]. |
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- Repeated fields are in arrays, not ArrayList or Vector. Null array |
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elements are allowed and silently ignored. |
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- Full support for serializing/deserializing repeated packed fields. |
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- Support extensions (in proto2). |
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- Unset messages/groups are null, not an immutable empty default |
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instance. |
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- toByteArray(...) and mergeFrom(...) are now static functions of |
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MessageNano. |
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- The 'bytes' type translates to the Java type byte[]. |
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The generated messages are not thread-safe for writes, but may be |
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used simultaneously from multiple threads in a read-only manner. |
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In other words, an appropriate synchronization mechanism (such as |
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a ReadWriteLock) must be used to ensure that a message, its |
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ancestors, and descendants are not accessed by any other threads |
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while the message is being modified. Field reads, getter methods |
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(but not getExtension(...)), toByteArray(...), writeTo(...), |
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getCachedSize(), and getSerializedSize() are all considered read-only |
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operations. |
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IMPORTANT: If you have fields with defaults and opt out of accessors |
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How fields with defaults are serialized has changed. Because we don't |
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keep "has" state, any field equal to its default is assumed to be not |
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set and therefore is not serialized. Consider the situation where we |
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change the default value of a field. Senders compiled against an older |
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version of the proto continue to match against the old default, and |
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don't send values to the receiver even though the receiver assumes the |
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new default value. Therefore, think carefully about the implications |
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of changing the default value. Alternatively, turn on accessors and |
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enjoy the benefit of the explicit has() checks. |
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IMPORTANT: If you have "bytes" fields with non-empty defaults |
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Because the byte buffer is now of mutable type byte[], the default |
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static final cannot be exposed through a public field. Each time a |
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message's constructor or clear() function is called, the default value |
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(kept in a private byte[]) is cloned. This causes a small memory |
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penalty. This is not a problem if the field has no default or is an |
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empty default. |
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Nano Generator options |
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---------------------- |
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``` |
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java_package -> <file-name>|<package-name> |
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java_outer_classname -> <file-name>|<package-name> |
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java_multiple_files -> true or false |
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java_nano_generate_has -> true or false [DEPRECATED] |
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optional_field_style -> default or accessors |
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enum_style -> c or java |
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ignore_services -> true or false |
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parcelable_messages -> true or false |
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``` |
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**java_package=\<file-name\>|\<package-name\>** (no default) |
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This allows overriding the 'java_package' option value |
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for the given file from the command line. Use multiple |
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java_package options to override the option for multiple |
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files. The final Java package for each file is the value |
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of this command line option if present, or the value of |
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the same option defined in the file if present, or the |
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proto package if present, or the default Java package. |
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**java_outer_classname=\<file-name\>|\<outer-classname\>** (no default) |
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This allows overriding the 'java_outer_classname' option |
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for the given file from the command line. Use multiple |
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java_outer_classname options to override the option for |
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multiple files. The final Java outer class name for each |
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file is the value of this command line option if present, |
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or the value of the same option defined in the file if |
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present, or the file name converted to CamelCase. This |
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outer class will nest all classes and integer constants |
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generated from file-scope messages and enums. |
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**java_multiple_files={true,false}** (no default) |
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This allows overriding the 'java_multiple_files' option |
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in all source files and their imported files from the |
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command line. The final value of this option for each |
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file is the value defined in this command line option, or |
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the value of the same option defined in the file if |
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present, or false. This specifies whether to generate |
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package-level classes for the file-scope messages in the |
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same Java package as the outer class (instead of nested |
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classes in the outer class). File-scope enum constants |
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are still generated as integer constants in the outer |
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class. This affects the fully qualified references in the |
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Java code. NOTE: because the command line option |
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overrides the value for all files and their imported |
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files, using this option inconsistently may result in |
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incorrect references to the imported messages and enum |
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constants. |
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**java_nano_generate_has={true,false}** (default: false) |
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DEPRECATED. Use optional_field_style=accessors. |
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If true, generates a public boolean variable has\<fieldname\> |
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accompanying each optional or required field (not present for |
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repeated fields, groups or messages). It is set to false initially |
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and upon clear(). If parseFrom(...) reads the field from the wire, |
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it is set to true. This is a way for clients to inspect the "has" |
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value upon parse. If it is set to true, writeTo(...) will ALWAYS |
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output that field (even if field value is equal to its |
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default). |
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IMPORTANT: This option costs an extra 4 bytes per primitive field in |
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the message. Think carefully about whether you really need this. In |
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many cases reading the default works and determining whether the |
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field was received over the wire is irrelevant. |
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**optional_field_style={default,accessors,reftypes}** (default: default) |
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Defines the style of the generated code for fields. |
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* default |
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In the default style, optional fields translate into public mutable |
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Java fields, and the serialization process is as discussed in the |
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"IMPORTANT" section above. |
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* accessors |
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When set to 'accessors', each optional field is encapsulated behind |
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4 accessors, namely get\<fieldname\>(), set\<fieldname\>(), has\<fieldname\>() |
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and clear\<fieldname\>() methods, with the standard semantics. The hazzer's |
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return value determines whether a field is serialized, so this style is |
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useful when you need to serialize a field with the default value, or check |
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if a field has been explicitly set to its default value from the wire. |
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In the 'accessors' style, required and nested message fields are still |
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translated to one public mutable Java field each, repeated fields are still |
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translated to arrays. No accessors are generated for them. |
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IMPORTANT: When using the 'accessors' style, ProGuard should always |
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be enabled with optimization (don't use -dontoptimize) and allowing |
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access modification (use -allowaccessmodification). This removes the |
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unused accessors and maybe inline the rest at the call sites, |
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reducing the final code size. |
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TODO(maxtroy): find ProGuard config that would work the best. |
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* reftypes |
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When set to 'reftypes', each proto field is generated as a public Java |
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field. For primitive types, these fields use the Java reference types |
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such as java.lang.Integer instead of primitive types such as int. |
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In the 'reftypes' style, fields are initialized to null (or empty |
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arrays for repeated fields), and their default values are not available. |
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They are serialized over the wire based on equality to null. |
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The 'reftypes' mode has some additional cost due to autoboxing and usage |
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of reference types. In practice, many boxed types are cached, and so don't |
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result in object creation. However, references do take slightly more memory |
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than primitives. |
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The 'reftypes' mode is useful when you want to be able to serialize fields |
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with default values, or check if a field has been explicitly set to the |
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default over the wire without paying the extra method cost of the |
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'accessors' mode. |
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Note that if you attempt to write null to a required field in the reftypes |
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mode, serialization of the proto will cause a NullPointerException. This is |
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an intentional indicator that you must set required fields. |
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NOTE |
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optional_field_style=accessors or reftypes cannot be used together with |
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java_nano_generate_has=true. If you need the 'has' flag for any |
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required field (you have no reason to), you can only use |
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java_nano_generate_has=true. |
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**enum_style={c,java}** (default: c) |
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Defines where to put the int constants generated from enum members. |
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* c |
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Use C-style, so the enum constants are available at the scope where |
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the enum is defined. A file-scope enum's members are referenced like |
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'FileOuterClass.ENUM_VALUE'; a message-scope enum's members are |
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referenced as 'Message.ENUM_VALUE'. The enum name is unavailable. |
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This complies with the Micro code generator's behavior. |
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* java |
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Use Java-style, so the enum constants are available under the enum |
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name and referenced like 'EnumName.ENUM_VALUE' (they are still int |
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constants). The enum name becomes the name of a public interface, at |
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the scope where the enum is defined. If the enum is file-scope and |
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the java_multiple_files option is on, the interface will be defined |
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in its own file. To reduce code size, this interface should not be |
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implemented and ProGuard shrinking should be used, so after the Java |
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compiler inlines all referenced enum constants into the call sites, |
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the interface remains unused and can be removed by ProGuard. |
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**ignore_services={true,false}** (default: false) |
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Skips services definitions. |
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Nano doesn't support services. By default, if a service is defined |
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it will generate a compilation error. If this flag is set to true, |
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services will be silently ignored, instead. |
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**parcelable_messages={true,false}** (default: false) |
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Android-specific option to generate Parcelable messages. |
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To use nano protobufs within the Android repo: |
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---------------------------------------------- |
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- Set 'LOCAL_PROTOC_OPTIMIZE_TYPE := nano' in your local .mk file. |
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When building a Java library or an app (package) target, the build |
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system will add the Java nano runtime library to the |
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LOCAL_STATIC_JAVA_LIBRARIES variable, so you don't need to. |
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- Set 'LOCAL_PROTO_JAVA_OUTPUT_PARAMS := ...' in your local .mk file |
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for any command-line options you need. Use commas to join multiple |
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options. In the nano flavor only, whitespace surrounding the option |
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names and values are ignored, so you can use backslash-newline or |
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'+=' to structure your make files nicely. |
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- The options will be applied to *all* proto files in LOCAL_SRC_FILES |
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when you build a Java library or package. In case different options |
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are needed for different proto files, build separate Java libraries |
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and reference them in your main target. Note: you should make sure |
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that, for each separate target, all proto files imported from any |
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proto file in LOCAL_SRC_FILES are included in LOCAL_SRC_FILES. This |
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is because the generator has to assume that the imported files are |
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built using the same options, and will generate code that reference |
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the fields and enums from the imported files using the same code |
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style. |
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- Hint: 'include $(CLEAR_VARS)' resets all LOCAL_ variables, including |
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the two above. |
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To use nano protobufs outside of Android repo: |
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---------------------------------------------- |
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- Link with the generated jar file |
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\<protobuf-root\>java/target/protobuf-java-2.3.0-nano.jar. |
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- Invoke with --javanano_out, e.g.: |
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``` |
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./protoc '--javanano_out=\ |
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java_package=src/proto/simple-data.proto|my_package,\ |
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java_outer_classname=src/proto/simple-data.proto|OuterName\ |
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:.' src/proto/simple-data.proto |
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``` |
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Contributing to nano: |
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--------------------- |
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Please add/edit tests in NanoTest.java. |
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Please run the following steps to test: |
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- cd external/protobuf |
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- ./configure |
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- Run "make -j12 check" and verify all tests pass. |
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- cd java |
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- Run "mvn test" and verify all tests pass. |
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- cd ../../.. |
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- . build/envsetup.sh |
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- lunch 1 |
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- "make -j12 aprotoc libprotobuf-java-2.3.0-nano aprotoc-test-nano-params NanoAndroidTest" and |
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check for build errors. |
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- Plug in an Android device or start an emulator. |
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- adb install -r out/target/product/generic/data/app/NanoAndroidTest.apk |
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- Run: |
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"adb shell am instrument -w com.google.protobuf.nano.test/android.test.InstrumentationTestRunner" |
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and verify all tests pass. |
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- repo sync -c -j256 |
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- "make -j12" and check for build errors |
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Usage |
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----- |
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The complete documentation for Protocol Buffers is available via the |
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web at: |
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https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
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