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An implementation of Google's Protocol Buffers for Erlang, based on ngerakines/erlang_protobuffs.

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This module is a composite of other open source modules and original code to make interfacing with the Protocol Buffers protocol easy.

Encode / Decode

Encoding is simple.

1> protobuffs:encode(1, 1, uint32).
["\b",[1]]
2> erlang:iolist_to_binary([
    protobuffs:encode(1, <<"Nick">>, string),
    protobuffs:encode(2, 25, uint32)
]).
<<10,4,78,105,99,107,16,25>>

Decoding is simple too.

1> protobuffs:decode(<<8, 1>>, uint32).
{{1, 1}, <<>>}
2> protobuffs:decode(<<10,4,78,105,99,107,16,25>>, bytes).
{{1, <<"Nick">>}, <<16,25>>}
3> protobuffs:decode(<<16,25>>, bytes).
{{2, 25}, <<>>}

Using .proto Files

The main objective of this module is to allow developers to use .proto files easily. This module provides very basic functionality to do so.

Consider the test/erlang_protobuffs_SUITE_data/proto/simple.proto file.

message Person {
    required string name = 1;
    required string address = 2;
    required string phone_number = 3;
    required int32 age = 4;
    optional Location location = 5;
}

message Location
{
    required string region = 1;
    required string country = 2;
}

From that file we can create an Erlang module that can encode and decode the Person message into records.

1> protobuffs_compile:scan_file("simple.proto").
ok
2> simple_pb:decode_person(<<10,4,78,105,99,107,18,13,77,111,...>>).
{person,<<"Nick">>,<<"Mountain View">>, <<"+1 (000) 555-1234">>,25,undefined}
3> simple_pb:encode_person({person, <<"Nick">>, <<"Mountain View">>,
    <<"+1 (000) 555-1234">>,25, undefined}).
[[["\n",[4],<<"Nick">>],
  [[18],"\r",<<"Mountain View">>],
  [[26],[17],<<"+1 (000) 555-1234">>],
  [" ",[25]],
  []]]

How cool is that? From .proto files, we create modules that export encode and decode functions for the messages defined.

If you want to encode several messages with automatic delimination as the java version can, pass in a list of records.

1> protobuffs_compile:scan_file("simple.proto").
ok
2> simple_pb:encode([
    {person, <<"Nick">>, <<"Mountain View">>, <<"+1 (000) 555-1234">>, 25, undefined},
    {person, <<"Jill">>, <<"Denver">>, <<"+1 (000) 555-4321">>, 29, undefined}
]).
[[42,
  [[["\n",[4],<<"Nick">>],
    [[18],"\r",<<"Mountain View">>],
    [[26],[17],<<"+1 (000) 555-1234">>],
    [" ",[25]],
    []]]],
 [35,
  [[["\n",[4],<<"Jill">>],
    [[18],[6],<<"Denver">>],
    [[26],[17],<<"+1 (000) 555-4321">>],
    [" ",[29]],
    []]]]]

If you have a stream of delimited messages and they are all of the same type, you can automatically have them decoded as well.

1> simple_pb:delimited_decode_person(<<42,10,4,78,105,99,107,18,13...>>).
{[{person,"Nick","Mountain View","+1 (000) 555-1234",25,
          undefined},
  {person,"Jill","Denver","+1 (000) 555-4321",29,undefined}],
 <<>>}

The return from the delimited decode function is a tuple containing the list of records in the order they were found, and any remaing binary, allowing for easy maintainance of a buffer.

Deep lists

You might have noticed that the examples above produce deep lists (also known as iolists), not binaries, when encoding messages. Since we assume most messages will be sent to another computer over the network or written to disk, we can delay flattening the encoding until the last instant, i.e. writing to the port that will send the message. All ports accept deep lists, so there's no reason to flatten them in our encoding or application code. If you absolutely must have a binary, use the iolist_to_binary/1 BIF on the encoded message.

Ref: Erlang Efficiency Guide

no_debug_info

The protobuffs_compile module relies on the pokemon_pb module being compiled with debug info. This is because pokemon_pb serves as a template for generated _pb modules. Running protobuffs_compile:scan_file/1 reads the erlang forms from the pokemon_pb.beam file and expands and alters those forms to create the generated module.

Building with rebar

To compile %>./rebar compile

To run all tests %>./rebar eunit %>./rebar ct

Se rebar doc for more information.

CREDITS

Some of the protobuffs.erl module came from code written by Brian Buchanan.

Some of the protobuffs_compile.erl module came from code written by Tim Fletcher.

The rest of it and it's test suite was written by Nick Gerakines. Major contributions have been made by Jacob Vorreuter.

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An implementation of Google's Protocol Buffers for Erlang, based on ngerakines/erlang_protobuffs.

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