Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
186 lines (140 loc) · 4.62 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

186 lines (140 loc) · 4.62 KB

DEPRECATED

This gem hasn't been meaningfully maintained since 2017-2018. The released gem will remain public, but future development is unlikely beyond bumps to dependency versions.


Build Status

Protip

Relatively painless protocol buffers in Ruby.

Basic Usage

Protip lets you get and set common well-known types in your protobuf messages using high-level Ruby objects.

Given a protobuf message:

message MyMessage {
  google.protobuf.StringValue string = 1;
  google.protobuf.Timestamp timestamp = 2;
}

Manipulate it like:

m = Protip.decorate(MyMessage.new)
m.string = 'bar'
m.string # => 'bar'
m.timestamp = Time.now

m.message # => updated MyMessage object

Using standard protobuf, you'd have to do something like:

m = MyMessage.new
m.string = Google::Protobuf::StringValue.new(value: 'foo')
m.string.value #=> 'foo'

time = Time.now
message.timestamp = Google::Protobuf::Timestamp.new(
  seconds: time.to_i,
  nanos: (time.usec * 1000)
)

Supported messages

Protip has built-in support for the following well-known types:

  • google.protobuf.DoubleValue
  • google.protobuf.FloatValue
  • google.protobuf.Int64Value
  • google.protobuf.UInt64Value
  • google.protobuf.Int32Value
  • google.protobuf.UInt32Value
  • google.protobuf.BoolValue
  • google.protobuf.StringValue
  • google.protobuf.BytesValue
  • google.protobuf.Timestamp

As well as some additional types for enums and repeated-or-nil fields:

  • protip.messages.EnumValue (for nullable enum fields)
  • protip.messages.RepeatedEnum
  • protip.messages.RepeatedDouble
  • protip.messages.RepeatedFloat
  • protip.messages.RepeatedInt64
  • protip.messages.RepeatedUInt64
  • protip.messages.RepeatedInt32
  • protip.messages.RepeatedUInt32
  • protip.messages.RepeatedBool
  • protip.messages.RepeatedString
  • protip.messages.RepeatedBytes

To reference these messages in your .proto files, pass the definitions/ directory to protoc (accessible via File.join(Gem.loaded_specs['protip'].full_gem_path, 'definitions') in Ruby) during compilation and use any of:

import "google/protobuf/wrappers.proto";
import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto";
import "protip/messages.proto";

Enum types

protip.messages.EnumValue and protip.messages.RepeatedEnum both require a custom option to convert between enum symbols and the integral value used by the message. You can use these types like:

message Foo {
  enum Bar { BAZ = 0; }
  protip.messages.EnumValue bar = 1 [(protip_enum) = "Foo.Bar"];
}

And then, in Ruby:

m = Foo.new
m.bar = :BAZ
m.bar # => :BAZ

Pending resolution of a protobuf issue, enum support also requires that you use the protip:compile task provided in protip/tasks/compile.rake when compiling your .proto files.

Architecture

Protip.decorate returns a Protip::Decorator object, which delegates getter/setter calls to its underlying message.

Getters/setters for message fields are filtered through a Protip::Transformer instance, which defines to_object and to_message to convert between Ruby objects and representative protobuf messages.

By default, Protip.default_transformer is used for conversion. You can add your own message transformations using:

Protip.default_transformer['MyMessage'] = MyTransformer.new

ActiveModel resources

Protip includes support for persistable resources backed by protobuf messages. The API here should be considered experimental.

Define a protobuf message to represent the fields on your resource:

// my_resource_message.proto

message MyResourceMessage {
  optional int64 id = 1;
  optional string name = 2;
}

Then define your resource and use it like an ActiveModel::Model:

class MyResource
  include Protip::Resource
  resource actions: [:create, :update, :show, :index],
    message: MyResourceMessage
end

resource = MyResource.new(name: 'foo')
if resource.save
  puts "Saved with ID: #{resource.id}"
else
  puts resource.errors.full_messages.join("\n")
end

Development

To build message classes, you'll need to install the latest version of protoc.

To use the rbi_out option for sorbet interface file generation you'll need: https://github.com/coinbase/protoc-gen-rbi

Build message classes: rake compile

Run tests: rake test