Change the protoc flags such that when one of our test .proto files
imports another, the filename is consistently specified relative to the
module root.
Change-Id: I690282795cef23347c8794c1c6357e4fe9560d8a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/217762
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <joetsai@google.com>
The MessageInfo cache, once set, must not be cleared, otherwise
there exists a *messageState value where the MessageInfo value is nil.
Fix the generation of the Reset method to avoid clearing this value.
Change-Id: Ic84ca8b2640a43e967c36993da1ccd3f2b7096c4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/201478
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Generate the current index into depIdxs for easier human debugging.
Change-Id: Ida42aa95137b2044a4dc267c31cebec5023bdfb1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/190278
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
In order for protoc-gen-go to output the current version,
it needs to know what version it is currently running as.
However, we cannot rely on the git tags since the tags are not
made until *after* the commit has been submitted.
Instead, we manually encode the version into the code and
make sure that git tags match up with the version in the code.
The version.go file in runtime/protoimpl contains instructions
for how to make a release. Essentially:
* Every non-release commit has a version string with "devel" in it.
* Every release commit must not have "devel" in it and must be unique.
* The "release process" involves submitting two CLs.
The first CL creates a version string without "devel",
which is the commit that a git tag will actually reference.
The second CL follows immediately and re-introduces "devel"
into the version string.
The following example shows a possible sequence of VersionStrings
for git commits in time-ascending order:
v1.19.0-devel (this CL)
v1.19.0-devel
v1.19.0-devel
v1.19.0-devel
v1.20.0-rc.1 <- tagged
v1.20.0-rc.1.devel
v1.20.0-rc.1.devel
v1.20.0-rc.1.devel
v1.20.0-rc.2 <- tagged
v1.20.0-rc.2.devel
v1.20.0 <- tagged (future public release)
v1.20.0-devel
v1.20.0-devel
v1.20.0-devel
v1.20.0-devel
v1.20.1 <- tagged
v1.20.1-devel
v1.20.1-devel
v1.21.0 <- tagged
v1.21.0-devel
Note that we start today with v1.19.0-devel, which means that our initial
release will be v1.20.0. This number was intentionally chosen since
1) the number 20 has some correlation to the fact that we keep calling
the new implementation the "v2" implementation, and
2) the set of tagged versions for github.com/golang/protobuf
and google.golang.org/protobuf are unlikely to ever overlap.
This way, the version of protoc-gen-go is never ambiguous which module
it was built from.
Now that we have version information, we add support for generating .pb.go
files with the version information recorded. However, we do not emit
these for .pb.go files in our own repository since they are always guaranteed
to be at the right version (enforced by integration_test.go).
Updates golang/protobuf#524
Change-Id: I25495a45042c2aa39a39cb7e7738ae8e831a9d26
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/186117
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
The following improvements were made:
* All standalone comments above the "syntax" marker are preserved
similar to Java and some other generators.
* All standalone comments above the "package" marker are preserved
to be consistent with our former behavior.
* Leading comments are now generated for enums and extension fields.
* Single-line trailing comments are now generated for
enum values, message fields, and extension fields.
* The leading comments for each field that is part of a oneof are now
generated with the wrapper types rather than being shoved into the
comment for the oneof itself in an unreadable way.
* The deprecation marker is always generated as being above the declaration
rather than sometimes being an inlined comment.
* The deprecation marker is now properly generated for weak field setters.
Updates golang/protobuf#666
Change-Id: I7fd832dd4f86d15bfff70d7c22c6ba4934c05fcf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/189238
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
These were originally kept separate to assist Google-internal patches,
but it turns out that Google-internal patches do not use the
genMessageInternalFields function.
Change-Id: Idfa962b943d3bede9982b5b0875ba90c86c6d181
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/188979
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
The v2 implementation strictly enforces that there are no conflicts at
all in the protobuf namespace unlike the prior v1 implementation.
This change is almost certainly going to cause loud failures for users
that were unknowingly tolerating registration conflicts.
We modify internal/filedesc to be able to record the Go package path
that the file descriptor is declared within. This information is used
by reflect/protoregistry to print both the previous Go package that
registered some declaration, and current Go package that is attempting
to register some declaration.
Change-Id: Ib5eb21c1c98495afc51aa08bd4404bd9d64b5b57
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/186177
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
If the message for a weak field is linked in,
we treat it as if it were identical to a normal known field.
However, if the weak field is not linked in,
we treat it as if the field were not known.
Change-Id: I576d911deec98e13211304024a6353734d055465
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/185457
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
This implements generation of and reflection support for weak fields.
Weak fields are a proto1 feature where the "weak" option can be specified
on a singular message field. A weak reference results in generated code
that does not directly link in the dependency containing the weak message.
Weak field support is not added to any of the serialization logic.
Change-Id: I08ccfa72bc80b2ffb6af527a1677a0a81dcf33fb
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/185399
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>