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.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jisi Liu edc5994525 Merge pull request #15 from google/pom_version_fix 10 years ago
benchmarks Add benchmarks for writing to a FileOutputStream. Patch from Evan Jones. 15 years ago
editors Fix issue/333. skip any escaped characters in quotes. 13 years ago
examples merge tags/2.6.0 into trunk 10 years ago
java Bump version for maven-bundle-plugin 10 years ago
m4 Fix corner case in acx_pthread.m4 to work with -nostdlib, patch from Kacper Kowalik. 14 years ago
more_tests Add makefile for extended tests to be run before release. 15 years ago
python merge 2.6.0 to trunk 10 years ago
src remove a const qualifier in a method's return type 10 years ago
vsprojects add one file for VC 2013 10 years ago
CHANGES.txt merge tags/2.6.0 into trunk 10 years ago
CONTRIBUTORS.txt Update contributors. 14 years ago
INSTALL.txt Initial checkin. 17 years ago
LICENSE Rename COPYING.txt to LICENSE for opensource compliance and update links 10 years ago
Makefile.am Rename README.txt to README.md 10 years ago
README.md Fix the formating of bold text. 10 years ago
autogen.sh Update external gtest to 1.5.0. 14 years ago
configure.ac merge tags/2.6.0 into trunk 10 years ago
generate_descriptor_proto.sh Massive roll-up of changes. See CHANGES.txt. 15 years ago
post_process_dist.sh Submit script used to post-process dist files. 16 years ago
protobuf-lite.pc.in Allow dependents to use pkg-config to figure out what flags to pass to link against protobuf. 16 years ago
protobuf.pc.in -lz in protobuf.pc belongs in Libs.private, not Libs 13 years ago

README.md

Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format

Copyright 2008 Google Inc.

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

C++ Installation - Unix

If you get the source from github, you need to generate the configure script first:

$ ./autogen.sh

This will download gtest source (which is used for C++ Protocol Buffer unit-tests) to the current directory and run automake, autoconf, etc. to generate the configure script and various template makefiles.

You can skip this step if you are using a release package (which already contains gtest and the configure script).

To build and install the C++ Protocol Buffer runtime and the Protocol Buffer compiler (protoc) execute the following:

$ ./configure
$ make
$ make check
$ make install

If "make check" fails, you can still install, but it is likely that some features of this library will not work correctly on your system. Proceed at your own risk.

"make install" may require superuser privileges.

For advanced usage information on configure and make, see INSTALL.txt.

Hint on install location

By default, the package will be installed to /usr/local. However, on many platforms, /usr/local/lib is not part of LD_LIBRARY_PATH. You can add it, but it may be easier to just install to /usr instead. To do this, invoke configure as follows:

./configure --prefix=/usr

If you already built the package with a different prefix, make sure to run "make clean" before building again.

Compiling dependent packages

To compile a package that uses Protocol Buffers, you need to pass various flags to your compiler and linker. As of version 2.2.0, Protocol Buffers integrates with pkg-config to manage this. If you have pkg-config installed, then you can invoke it to get a list of flags like so:

pkg-config --cflags protobuf         # print compiler flags
pkg-config --libs protobuf           # print linker flags
pkg-config --cflags --libs protobuf  # print both

For example:

c++ my_program.cc my_proto.pb.cc `pkg-config --cflags --libs protobuf`

Note that packages written prior to the 2.2.0 release of Protocol Buffers may not yet integrate with pkg-config to get flags, and may not pass the correct set of flags to correctly link against libprotobuf. If the package in question uses autoconf, you can often fix the problem by invoking its configure script like:

configure CXXFLAGS="$(pkg-config --cflags protobuf)" \
          LIBS="$(pkg-config --libs protobuf)"

This will force it to use the correct flags.

If you are writing an autoconf-based package that uses Protocol Buffers, you should probably use the PKG_CHECK_MODULES macro in your configure script like:

PKG_CHECK_MODULES([protobuf], [protobuf])

See the pkg-config man page for more info.

If you only want protobuf-lite, substitute "protobuf-lite" in place of "protobuf" in these examples.

Note for cross-compiling

The makefiles normally invoke the protoc executable that they just built in order to build tests. When cross-compiling, the protoc executable may not be executable on the host machine. In this case, you must build a copy of protoc for the host machine first, then use the --with-protoc option to tell configure to use it instead. For example:

./configure --with-protoc=protoc

This will use the installed protoc (found in your $PATH) instead of trying to execute the one built during the build process. You can also use an executable that hasn't been installed. For example, if you built the protobuf package for your host machine in ../host, you might do:

./configure --with-protoc=../host/src/protoc

Either way, you must make sure that the protoc executable you use has the same version as the protobuf source code you are trying to use it with.

Note for Solaris users

Solaris 10 x86 has a bug that will make linking fail, complaining about libstdc++.la being invalid. We have included a work-around in this package. To use the work-around, run configure as follows:

./configure LDFLAGS=-L$PWD/src/solaris

See src/solaris/libstdc++.la for more info on this bug.

Note for HP C++ Tru64 users

To compile invoke configure as follows:

./configure CXXFLAGS="-O -std ansi -ieee -D__USE_STD_IOSTREAM"

Also, you will need to use gmake instead of make.

C++ Installation - Windows

If you are using Microsoft Visual C++, see vsprojects/readme.txt.

If you are using Cygwin or MinGW, follow the Unix installation instructions, above.

Binary Compatibility Warning

Due to the nature of C++, it is unlikely that any two versions of the Protocol Buffers C++ runtime libraries will have compatible ABIs. That is, if you linked an executable against an older version of libprotobuf, it is unlikely to work with a newer version without re-compiling. This problem, when it occurs, will normally be detected immediately on startup of your app. Still, you may want to consider using static linkage. You can configure this package to install static libraries only using:

./configure --disable-shared

Java and Python Installation

The Java and Python runtime libraries for Protocol Buffers are located in the java and python directories. See the README file in each directory for more information on how to compile and install them. Note that both of them require you to first install the Protocol Buffer compiler (protoc), which is part of the C++ package.

Usage

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

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