Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format (grpc依赖) https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mike Kruskal 7bc3ed8835 Migrating downstream error collectors to use the new string_view overrides. 2 years ago
..
docs Copybara import of the project: 2 years ago
google Migrating downstream error collectors to use the new string_view overrides. 2 years ago
protobuf_distutils Sync from Piper @425656941 3 years ago
.repo-metadata.json Sync from Piper @457757259 2 years ago
BUILD.bazel Add files to python sources that we will need for the upb source distribution 2 years ago
MANIFEST.in Add LICENSE to released python packages (#8913) 3 years ago
README.md Remove all autotools usage (#10132) 2 years ago
internal.bzl Bump upb version and refactor python compatibility. 2 years ago
python_version.py Sync from Piper @467099277 2 years ago
release.sh Update python/release.sh to handle delay between twine upload and pip install (#10324) 2 years ago
setup.cfg Auxillary -> Auxiliary 5 years ago
setup.py Copybara import of the project: 2 years ago
tox.ini Remove all autotools usage (#10132) 2 years ago

README.md

Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format

Copyright 2008 Google Inc.

This directory contains the Python Protocol Buffers runtime library.

Normally, this directory comes as part of the protobuf package, available from:

https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/

The complete package includes the C++ source code, which includes the Protocol Compiler (protoc). If you downloaded this package from PyPI or some other Python-specific source, you may have received only the Python part of the code. In this case, you will need to obtain the Protocol Compiler from some other source before you can use this package.

Development Warning

The pure python performance is slow. For better performance please use python c++ implementation.

Installation

  1. Make sure you have Python 3.7 or newer. If in doubt, run:

    $ python -V
    
  2. Make sure you have Bazel 0.5.4 or later (or CMake 3.5 or later).

  3. If you do not have setuptools installed, note that it will be downloaded and installed automatically as soon as you run setup.py. If you would rather install it manually, you may do so by following the instructions on this page.

  4. Build the C++ code, or install a binary distribution of protoc. If you install a binary distribution, make sure that it is the same version as this package. If in doubt, run:

    $ protoc --version
    
  5. Build and run the tests:

    $ python setup.py build
    $ python setup.py test
    

    To build, test, and use the C++ implementation, you must first compile libprotobuf.so using either Bazel or CMake:

    On OS X:

    If you are running a Homebrew-provided Python, you must make sure another version of protobuf is not already installed, as Homebrew's Python will search /usr/local/lib for libprotobuf.so before it searches the compiled binaries.

    You can either unlink Homebrew's protobuf or install the libprotobuf you built earlier:

    $ brew unlink protobuf
    

    or

    $ (cd .. && cmake . && make install)
    

    On other *nix:

    You must make libprotobuf.so dynamically available. You can either install libprotobuf you built earlier, or set LD_LIBRARY_PATH:

    $ (cd .. && cmake . && make -j20 install)
    

    or

    $ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=../bazel-bin
    

    To build the C++ implementation run:

    $ python setup.py build --cpp_implementation
    

    Then run the tests like so:

    $ python setup.py test --cpp_implementation
    

    If some tests fail, this library may not work correctly on your system. Continue at your own risk.

    Please note that there is a known problem with some versions of Python on Cygwin which causes the tests to fail after printing the error: sem_init: Resource temporarily unavailable. This appears to be a bug either in Cygwin or in Python.

    We do not know if or when it might be fixed. We also do not know how likely it is that this bug will affect users in practice.

  6. Install:

    $ python setup.py install
    

    or:

    $ (cd .. && make install)
    $ python setup.py install --cpp_implementation
    

    This step may require superuser privileges. NOTE: To use C++ implementation, you need to export an environment variable before running your program. See the "C++ Implementation" section below for more details.

Usage

The complete documentation for Protocol Buffers is available via the web at:

https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/

C++ Implementation

The C++ implementation for Python messages is built as a Python extension to improve the overall protobuf Python performance.

To use the C++ implementation, you need to install the C++ protobuf runtime library, please see instructions in the parent directory.