Compiles proto files via prost and generates service stubs and proto definitions for use with tonic.
Required dependencies
[dependencies]
tonic = "<tonic-version>"
prost = "<prost-version>"
[build-dependencies]
tonic-build = "<tonic-version>"
In build.rs
:
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
tonic_build::compile_protos("proto/service.proto")?;
Ok(())
}
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
tonic_build::configure()
.build_server(false)
.compile_protos(
&["proto/helloworld/helloworld.proto"],
&["proto/helloworld"],
)?;
Ok(())
}
A good way to use Google API is probably using git submodules.
So suppose in our proto
folder we do:
git submodule add https://github.com/googleapis/googleapis
git submodule update --remote
And a bunch of Google proto files in structure will be like this:
├── googleapis
│ └── google
│ ├── api
│ │ ├── annotations.proto
│ │ ├── client.proto
│ │ ├── field_behavior.proto
│ │ ├── http.proto
│ │ └── resource.proto
│ └── pubsub
│ └── v1
│ ├── pubsub.proto
│ └── schema.proto
Then we can generate Rust code via this setup in our build.rs
fn main() {
tonic_build::configure()
.build_server(false)
//.out_dir("src/google") // you can change the generated code's location
.compile_protos(
&["proto/googleapis/google/pubsub/v1/pubsub.proto"],
&["proto/googleapis"], // specify the root location to search proto dependencies
).unwrap();
}
Then you can reference the generated Rust like this this in your code:
pub mod api {
tonic::include_proto!("google.pubsub.v1");
}
use api::{publisher_client::PublisherClient, ListTopicsRequest};
Or if you want to save the generated code in your own code base,
you can uncomment the line .out_dir(...)
above, and in your lib file
config a mod like this:
pub mod google {
#[path = ""]
pub mod pubsub {
#[path = "google.pubsub.v1.rs"]
pub mod v1;
}
}
See the example here