Contrary to the WARNING, this package should be stable.
However, it still should not be imported by the end-user.
Change-Id: I05b4b9ebb1e0d28ab626f8c51fbe827b5acf237e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/178545
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Instead of accepting a concrete protoregistry.Types type,
accept an interface that provides the necessary functionality
to perform the serialization.
The advantages of this approach:
* There is no need for complex logic to allow a Parent or custom
Resolver on the protoregistry.Types type.
* Users can pass their own custom resolver implementations directly
to the serialization functions.
* This is a more principled approach to plumbing custom resolvers
than the previous approach of overloading behavior on the concrete
Types type.
The disadvantages of this approach:
* A pointer to a concrete type is 8B, while an interface is 16B.
However, the expansion of the {Marshal,Unmarshal}Options structs
should be a concern solved separately from how to plumb custom resolvers.
* The resolver interfaces as defined today may be insufficient to
provide functionality needed in the future if protobuf expands its
feature set. For example, let's suppose the Any message permits
directly representing a enum by name. This would require the ability
to lookup an enum by name. To support that hypothetical need,
we can document that the serializers type-assert the provided Resolver
to a EnumTypeResolver and use that if possible. There is some loss
of type safety with this approach, but provides a clear path forward.
Change-Id: I81ca80e59335d36be6b43d57ec8e17abfdfa3bad
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/177044
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Temporarily remove go.mod, since we can't generate an accurate one until
the corresponding v1 change is submitted.
Change-Id: I1e1ad97f2b455e33f61ffaeb8676289795e47e72
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/177000
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Added methods:
Enum.Descriptor
Message.Descriptor
EnumType.Descriptor
MessageType.Descriptor
ExtensionType.Descriptor
Message.New
All functionality is switched over to use those methods instead of
implicitly relying on the fact that {Enum,Message}Type implicitly
implement the associated descriptor interface.
This CL does not yet remove {Enum,Message}.Type or prevent
{Enum,Message,Extension}Type from implementating a descriptor.
That is a subsequent CL.
The Message.New method is also added to replace functionality
that will be lost when the Type methods are removed.
Change-Id: I7fefde1673bbd40bfdac489aca05cec9a6c98eb1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/174918
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
CL/172399 switches the v1 code to eagerly unmarshal extensions.
This CL does the equivalent for v2.
For the test, we simply switch from protoV1.Equal to protoV2.Equal,
since the v2 equal does not magically unmarshal raw extensions.
Change-Id: I6f64455b0a75bbc9a9a82108558641a29bd2b982
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/175838
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Using an option instead of a separate method has several useful properties:
It makes it explicit whether the fast-path AppendMarshal is expected to use
cached sizes or not.
It properly plumbs the decision to use cached sizes through the call stack.
Consider the case where message A includes B includes C: If A and C support
cached sizes but B does not, we would like to use the size cache in all
messages which support it. Placing this decision in the options allows this
to work properly with no additional effort.
Placing this option in MarshalOptions permits users to request use of
existing cached sizes. This is a two-edged sword: There are places where
this ability can permit substantial efficiencies, but this is also an
exceedingly sharp-edged API. I believe that on balance the benefits
outweigh the risks, especially since the prerequisites for using
cached sizes are intuitively obvious. (You must have called Size, and
you must not have changed the message.)
This CL adds a Size method to MarshalOptions, rather than adding a SizeOptions
type. Future additions to MarshalOptions may affect the size of the encoded
output (e.g., an option to skip encoding unknown fields) and using the same
options for both Marshal and Size makes it easier to use a consistent
configuration for each.
Change-Id: I6adbb55b717dd03d39f067e1d0b7381945000976
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/171119
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Remove the Reflection field from MarshalOptions and UnmarshalOptions.
Disable the fast path and use the reflection-based implementation when
the 'protoreflect' build tag is set.
Change-Id: Ic674e3af67501de27fb03ec2712fbed40eae7fef
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/170896
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Move all checks for required fields into a proto.IsInitialized function.
Initial testing makes me confident that we can provide a fast-path
implementation of IsInitialized which will perform more than
acceptably. (In the degenerate-but-common case where a message
transitively contains no required fields, this check can be nearly
zero cost.)
Unifying checks into a single function provides consistent behavior
between the wire, text, and json codecs.
Performing the check after decoding eliminates the wire decoder bug
where a split message is incorrectly seen as missing required fields.
Performing the check after decoding also provides consistent and
arguably more correct behavior when the target message was partially
prepopulated.
Change-Id: I9478b7bebb263af00c0d9f66a1f26e31ff553522
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/170787
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
Allow message implementations to provide optimized versions of standard
operations. Generated messages now include a ProtoReflectMethods method,
returning a protoiface.Methods struct containing pointers to assorted
optional functions.
The Methods struct also includes a Flags field indicating support for
optional features such as deterministic marshaling.
Implementation of the fast paths (and tests) will come in later CLs.
Change-Id: Idd1beed0ecf43ec5e5e7b8da2ee1e08d3ce32213
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/170340
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
As a goal, v2 should not depend on v1. As another step towards that end,
we move all the types that used to be in the v1 protoapi package over to v2.
For now, we place MessageV1, ExtensionRangeV1, and ExtensionDescV1
in runtime/protoiface since these are types that generated messages will
probably have to reference forever. An alternative location could be
reflect/protoreflect, but it seems unfortunate to have to dirty the
namespace of that package with these types.
We move ExtensionFieldV1, ExtensionFieldsV1, and ExtensionFieldsOf
to internal/impl, since these are related to the implementation of a
generated message.
Since moving these types from v1 to v2 implies that the v1 protoapi
package is useless, we update all usages of v1 protoapi in the v2
repository to point to the relevant v2 type or functionality.
CL/168538 is the corresponding change to alter v1.
There will be a temporary build failure as it is not possible
to submit CL/168519 and CL/168538 atomically.
Change-Id: Ide4025c1b6af5b7f0696f4b65b988b4d10a50f0b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/168519
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>