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>
Weak fields are an obsolete proto1 feature. They have been superseded
by extensions. However, some vestigial support for weak fields does
remain, mostly as Google-internal patches. (They aren't exciting;
extensions really do everything weak fields do in a cleaner and
more portable fashion.)
At the moment, the only visible impact of marking a field [weak=true]
is to exclude it from "internal/fileinit".FileBuilder.DependencyIndexes.
We want to preserve that behavior just in case we ever do add full weak
field support here.
Extend fileinit to look up message descriptors for weak fields in the
global registry. If the descriptor cannot be found, use a placeholder
instead.
Remove special-case handling of weak fields in the impl package. The
code generator doesn't do anything special for them, so they can be
treated as any other field.
Change-Id: Ifa2ee3d30d63680a0eeb59c66ebc9521f38fd660
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/175997
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Add support for basic equality comparison of messages.
Messages are equal if they have the same type and marshal to the
same bytes with deterministic serialization, with some exceptions:
- Messages with different registered extensions are unequal.
- NaN is not equal to itself.
Unlike the v1 Equal, a nil message is equal to an empty message of
the same type.
Change-Id: Ibabdadd8c767b801051b8241aeae1ba077e58121
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/174277
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Using a named fields gives us the flexibility to change the underlying
representation of special fields without needing to regenerate user code.
We add a named type for ExtensionFields, UnknownFields, and SizeCache.
Change-Id: I107cf82899850ea76665310ce79def60f0f7ab97
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/172402
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Lower-casing the FileDescriptor variable provides for shorter and
more readable global variable names. This has a very minor benefit
that the read-only data section of a binary is slightly smaller
since function names do end up in the final binary.
Change-Id: I077364905e5c9adea69873b3ea580fddc68b9eb8
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/172119
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
Go1.12 on GoLLVM with LLVM 9.0.0 has a bug where the simpler but
equivalent expression results in memory corruption.
Revert to the more complex expression to avoid breaking GoLLVM and
it is not worth waiting for a GoLLVM fix.
Change-Id: I8b42965ca9bd333deb8693021e7b22f966e13521
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/171463
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Seperate out the generation of the oneof wrapper types from the
code block that is about getter methods.
Change-Id: Ief44ef953d0b5ad8c998a8542c830ca70468a3bf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/171029
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@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>
Minor changes:
* Use x as the receiver since "e" and "m" are meaningless in the presence
of user-defined enum and message names.
* Consistently keep enum methods together, rather awkwardly split apart
by the value maps.
Change-Id: I68e5666efb56ac7a4d062fb223b9f826dc72aba9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/170357
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
This reduces the init-time cost slightly since the GZIP'd
raw descriptor is constructed lazily on demand.
Change-Id: I482c6a2201b8786e425d7dee5612fdfd60ab1500
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/169917
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
This removes yet another set of dependencies of v2 on v1.
The only remaining dependency are in the _test.go files,
primarily for proto.Equal.
Changes made:
* cmd/protoc-gen-go no longer generates any functionality that depends
on the v1 package, and instead only depends on v2.
* internal/fileinit.FileBuilder.MessageOutputTypes is switched from
protoreflect.MessageType to protoimpl.MessageType since the
implementation must be fully inialized before registration occurs.
* The test for internal/legacy/file_test.go is switched to a legacy_test
package to avoid a cyclic dependency.
This requires Load{Enum,Message,File}Desc to be exported.
Change-Id: I43e2fe64cff4eea204258ce11e791aca5eb6e569
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/169298
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.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>
The v1 registration leaks the message types out to the proto package.
When doing that, it must ensure that the reflection data structures
for those types are properly initialized first. We achieve that by
doing v1 registration at the end of the reflection init function.
Change-Id: If6df18df59d05bad50ff39c2eff6beb19e7466cc
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/168348
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
The EnumName, UnmarshalJSONEnum, and CompressGZIP helpers currently live
in v1 protoapi, which would cause all generated messages to depend on v1.
In an effort to break the dependency of v2 on v1, we move these helper
functions to v2 (and re-written to take advantage of protobuf reflection).
These helpers are unfortunate, but we cannot eliminate the functionality
that they implement since they are exposed in the publicly generated API.
Since EnumName does not rely on the enum maps, it removes another dependency
on those variables. Eventually, we can get to the point where these variables
(though declared) are not linked into the binary if the user does not use them.
Also, we rely on the v1 proto package for registration instead of v1 protoapi.
This may re-introduce a cyclic dependency on descriptor proto again in the
future, but the better approach is to just start registering with v2.
Change-Id: Id755585a7a1df14e4a6a2dfa650df221a3c153fb
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/167921
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Unfortunately a good amount of code uses pointer comparisons on the
v1 ExtensionDesc to determine exactly which extension field is set,
rather than checking whether the extension descriptor semantically
describes the field that they are interested in.
To preserve this behavior in v1, we need a 1:1 mapping between
a v2 ExtensionType and a specific v1 ExtensionDesc.
Change-Id: I852b3cefb4585bd656e48e5adad6cc28795d02df
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/167759
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Running "go build ./..." does not descend into testdata directories.
However, the testdata in this repository is source code that is
intended to build properly. We could rename the directory, but that does
not test whether the generated packages can initialize properly.
Thus, we generate a trivial test that simply blank imports all packages.
Doing this reveals that some of the generated files have incorrect imports,
leading to registration conflicts.
To avoid introducing a dependency on gRPC from our go.mod file, we put
the testdata directories in their own module. Also, we avoid running
internal/testprotos through the grpc plugin because the servie and method
definitions in that directory are more for testing proto file initialization
rather than testing grpc generation.
Change-Id: Iaa6a06449787a085200e31bc7606e3ac904d3180
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/164917
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Ensure that the init funcs for files within a Go package run in the
dependency order of the source .proto files. That is, if a.proto and b.proto
are part of the same Go package, and a.proto imports b.proto, then b.pb.go's
init funcs must run before a.pb.go's.
Change-Id: I0e86ff22e5c4cab9df7a73fe4805390fadd34b0d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/protobuf/+/166419
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
Using arrays in the generated reflection information adds unnecessary
eq and hash functions being added to the package. Change to slices
to reduce bloat.
Change-Id: I1a4f6d59021644d93dd6c24679b9233141e89a75
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/164640
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Create a single binary for handling generation of protos.
This replaces previous logic spread throughout the repo in:
* regenerate.bash
* cmd/protoc-gen-go/golden_test.go
* cmd/protoc-gen-go-grpc/golden_test.go
* (indirectly) internal/protogen/goldentest
One of the problems with the former approaches is that they relied on
a version of protoc that was specific to a developer's workstation.
This meant that the result of generation was not hermetic.
To address this, we rely on the hard-coded version of protobuf specified
in the test.bash script.
A summary of changes in this CL are:
* The internal_gengo.GenerateFile and internal_gengogrpc.GenerateFile
functions are unified to have consistent signatures. It seems that the
former accepted a *protogen.GeneratedFile to support v1 where gRPC code
was generated into the same file as the base .pb.go file. However, the
same functionality can be achieved by having the function return
the generated file object.
* The test.bash script patches the protobuf toolchain to have properly
specified go_package options in each proto source file.
* The test.bash script accepts a "-regenerate" argument.
* Add generation for the well-known types. Contrary to how these were
laid out in the v1 repo, all the well-known types are placed in the
same Go package.
* Add generation for the conformance proto.
* Remove regenerate.bash
* Remove internal/protogen
* Remove cmd/protoc-gen-go/golden_test.go
* Remove cmd/protoc-gen-go-grpc/golden_test.go
* Add cmd/protoc-gen-go/annotation_test.go
Change-Id: I4a1a97ae6f66e2fabcf4e4d292c95ab2a2db0248
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/164477
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Use the full path (including the extension) for the generation of
the per-file variable name. Several reasons for this:
* The current logic is buggy in the case where pathType == pathTypeImport
since the prefix variable will be mangled with the Go import path.
* The extension is technically part of the path.
Thus, "path/to/foo.proto" and "path/to/foo.protodevel" are two
distinctly different imports.
* Style-wise, it subjectively looks better. Rather than being a mixture
of camelCase and snake_case, it is all snake_case for the common case:
before: ProtoFile_google_protobuf_any
after: File_google_protobuf_any_proto
* Since the extension is almost always ".proto", this results in a
suffix of "_proto", which provides an additional layer of protection
against possible name conflicts. The previous approach could possibly
have a conflict between "Foo.proto" and a message named ProtoFile
with a sub-message called Foo.
Also, use the per-file variable name for the raw descriptor variables
instead of the hashed version.
Change-Id: Ic91e326b7593e5985cee6ececc60539c27fe32fe
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/164379
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Calling a helper function directly should reduce binary bloat slightly.
Change-Id: I6068dc4cd00c8d90d2e6e6d99633b81388bc8781
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/164679
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
For a file "foo/bar.proto", put the FileDescriptor in "ProtoFile_foo_bar"
rather than "Bar_fileDescriptor".
Avoid name clashes when a package contains "a/foo.proto" and "b/foo.proto".
Don't camelcase the filename: These vars weren't fully camelcased to begin
with, and leaving the filename relatively unchanged is clearer and more
predictable.
Move "ProtoFile" from the end of the var name to the start, so that vars
will sort better in packages with multiple descriptors.
These changes do add a chance of name collision when the input filename
begins with an uppercase letter: Foo.proto becomes "ProtoFile_Foo", which
could be the result of camelcasing "proto_file.foo". The readability
benefits seem worth it.
Change-Id: If27d3a0d7b5bf3535aa1607a8579eb057c74d2dc
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/163199
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
Test the fileinit and protodesc packages by verifying that passing a
FileDescriptorProto through a round trip of these packages leaves it
unchanged.
Change-Id: I6bfb894d95f1736f9908adee1ab63e9653b3f1be
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/159762
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
This CL takes a significantly different approach to generating support
for protobuf reflection. The previous approach involved generating a
large number of Go literals to represent the reflection information.
While that approach was correct, it resulted in too much binary bloat.
The approach taken here initializes the reflection information from
the raw descriptor proto, which is a relatively dense representation
of the protobuf reflection information. In order to keep initialization
cost low, several measures were taken:
* At program init, the bare minimum is parsed in order to initialize
naming information for enums, messages, extensions, and services declared
in the file. This is done because those top-level declarations are often
relevant for registration.
* Only upon first are most of the other data structures for protobuf
reflection actually initialized.
* Instead of using proto.Unmarshal, a hand-written unmarshaler is used.
This allows us to avoid a dependendency on the descriptor proto and also
because the API for the descriptor proto is fundamentally non-performant
since it requires an allocation for every primitive field.
At a high-level, the new implementation lives in internal/fileinit.
Several changes were made to other parts of the repository:
* cmd/protoc-gen-go:
* Stop compressing the raw descriptors. While compression does reduce
the size of the descriptors by approximately 2x, it is a pre-mature
optimization since the descriptors themselves are around 1% of the total
binary bloat that is due to generated protobufs.
* Seeding protobuf reflection from the raw descriptor significantly
simplifies the generator implementation since it is no longer responsible
for constructing a tree of Go literals to represent the same information.
* We remove the generation of the shadow types and instead call
protoimpl.MessageType.MessageOf. Unfortunately, this incurs an allocation
for every call to ProtoReflect since we need to allocate a tuple that wraps
a pointer to the message value, and a pointer to message type.
* internal/impl:
* We add a MessageType.GoType field and make it required that it is
set prior to first use. This is done so that we can avoid calling
MessageType.init except for when it is actually needed. The allows code
to call (*FooMessage)(nil).ProtoReflect().Type() without fearing that the
init code will run, possibly triggering a recursive deadlock (where the
init code depends on getting the Type of some dependency which may be
declared within the same file).
* internal/cmd/generate-types:
* The code to generate reflect/prototype/protofile_list_gen.go was copied
and altered to generated internal/fileinit.desc_list_gen.go.
At a high-level this CL adds significant technical complexity.
However, this is offset by several possible future changes:
* The prototype package can be drastically simplified. We can probably
reimplement internal/legacy to use internal/fileinit instead, allowing us
to drop another dependency on the prototype package. As a result, we can
probably delete most of the constructor types in that package.
* With the prototype package significantly pruned, and the fact that generated
code no longer depend on depends on that package, we can consider merging
what's left of prototype into protodesc.
Change-Id: I6090f023f2e1b6afaf62bd3ae883566242e30715
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/158539
Reviewed-by: Herbie Ong <herbie@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
A "_ProtoFile" suffix can potentially conflict with a sub-message named
"ProtoFile" nested within a message that matches the camel-cased
form of the basename of the .proto source file.
Avoid unlikely conflicts and rename this to use a "_protoFile" suffix,
which can never conflict except with an enum value that is also named
"protoFile" (which is a violation of the style guide).
Change-Id: Ie9d22f9f741a63021b8f76906b20c6c2f599885b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/157218
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Most usages of New actually prefer to interact with the reflective view
rather than the native Go type. Thus, change New to return that instead.
This parallels reflect.New, which returns the reflective view
(i.e., reflect.Value) instead of native type (i.e., interface{}).
We make the equivalent change to KnownFields.NewMessage, List.NewMessage,
and Map.NewMessage for consistency.
Since this is a subtle change where the type system will not always
catch the changed type, this change was made by both changing the type
and renaming the function to NewXXX and manually looking at every usage
of the the function to ensure that the usage correctly operates
on either the native Go type or the reflective view of the type.
After the entire codebase was cleaned up, a rename was performed to convert
NewXXX back to New.
Change-Id: I153fef627b4bf0a427e4039ce0aaec52e20c7950
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/157077
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Drop the protoreflect.ProtoEnum type (containing a single method
returning a protoreflect.Enum) and make generated enum types
directly implement protoreflect.Enum instead.
Messages have a two-level type split (ProtoMessage and Message) to
minimize conflicts between reflection methods and field names. Enums
need no such split, since enums do not have fields and therefore have
no source of conflicts.
Change-Id: I2b6222e9404253e6bfef2217859e1b760ffcd29b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/156902
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Damien Neil <dneil@google.com>
Change the go_package option to match the actual import path of this package.
Change-Id: Ie8630878ce75e34ca76d97c6e2922254cf964801
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/156344
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>
Add proto.Unmarshal.
Test cases all produce identical results to the v1 unmarshaller.
Change-Id: I42259266018a14e88a650c5d83a043cb17a3a15d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/153918
Reviewed-by: Joe Tsai <thebrokentoaster@gmail.com>