[−][src]Struct prost_build::Config
Configuration options for Protobuf code generation.
This configuration builder can be used to set non-default code generation options.
Methods
impl Config
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pub fn new() -> Config
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Creates a new code generator configuration with default options.
pub fn btree_map<I, S>(&mut self, paths: I) -> &mut Self where
I: IntoIterator<Item = S>,
S: AsRef<str>,
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I: IntoIterator<Item = S>,
S: AsRef<str>,
Configure the code generator to generate Rust BTreeMap
fields for Protobuf
map
type fields.
Arguments
paths
- paths to specific fields, messages, or packages which should use a Rust
BTreeMap
for Protobuf map
fields. Paths are specified in terms of the Protobuf type
name (not the generated Rust type name). Paths with a leading .
are treated as fully
qualified names. Paths without a leading .
are treated as relative, and are suffix
matched on the fully qualified field name. If a Protobuf map field matches any of the
paths, a Rust BTreeMap
field is generated instead of the default HashMap
.
The matching is done on the Protobuf names, before converting to Rust-friendly casing standards.
Examples
// Match a specific field in a message type. config.btree_map(&[".my_messages.MyMessageType.my_map_field"]); // Match all map fields in a message type. config.btree_map(&[".my_messages.MyMessageType"]); // Match all map fields in a package. config.btree_map(&[".my_messages"]); // Match all map fields. config.btree_map(&["."]); // Match all map fields in a nested message. config.btree_map(&[".my_messages.MyMessageType.MyNestedMessageType"]); // Match all fields named 'my_map_field'. config.btree_map(&["my_map_field"]); // Match all fields named 'my_map_field' in messages named 'MyMessageType', regardless of // package or nesting. config.btree_map(&["MyMessageType.my_map_field"]); // Match all fields named 'my_map_field', and all fields in the 'foo.bar' package. config.btree_map(&["my_map_field", ".foo.bar"]);
pub fn field_attribute<P, A>(&mut self, path: P, attribute: A) -> &mut Self where
P: AsRef<str>,
A: AsRef<str>,
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P: AsRef<str>,
A: AsRef<str>,
Add additional attribute to matched fields.
Arguments
path
- a patch matching any number of fields. These fields get the attribute.
For details about matching fields see btree_map
.
attribute
- an arbitrary string that'll be placed before each matched field. The
expected usage are additional attributes, usually in concert with whole-type
attributes set with type_attribute
, but it is not
checked and anything can be put there.
Note that the calls to this method are cumulative ‒ if multiple paths from multiple calls match the same field, the field gets all the corresponding attributes.
Examples
// Prost renames fields named `in` to `in_`. But if serialized through serde, // they should as `in`. config.field_attribute("in", "#[serde(rename = \"in\")]");
pub fn type_attribute<P, A>(&mut self, path: P, attribute: A) -> &mut Self where
P: AsRef<str>,
A: AsRef<str>,
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P: AsRef<str>,
A: AsRef<str>,
Add additional attribute to matched messages, enums and one-ofs.
Arguments
paths
- a path matching any number of types. It works the same way as in
btree_map
, just with the field name omitted.
attribute
- an arbitrary string to be placed before each matched type. The
expected usage are additional attributes, but anything is allowed.
The calls to this method are cumulative. They don't overwrite previous calls and if a type is matched by multiple calls of the method, all relevant attributes are added to it.
For things like serde it might be needed to combine with field attributes.
Examples
// Nothing around uses floats, so we can derive real `Eq` in addition to `PartialEq`. config.type_attribute(".", "#[derive(Eq)]"); // Some messages want to be serializable with serde as well. config.type_attribute("my_messages.MyMessageType", "#[derive(Serialize)] #[serde(rename-all = \"snake_case\")]"); config.type_attribute("my_messages.MyMessageType.MyNestedMessageType", "#[derive(Serialize)] #[serde(rename-all = \"snake_case\")]");
Oneof fields
The oneof
fields don't have a type name of their own inside Protobuf. Therefore, the
field name can be used both with type_attribute
and field_attribute
‒ the first is
placed before the enum
type definition, the other before the field inside corresponding
message struct
.
In other words, to place an attribute on the enum
implementing the oneof
, the match
would look like my_messages.MyMessageType.oneofname
.
pub fn service_generator(
&mut self,
service_generator: Box<dyn ServiceGenerator>
) -> &mut Self
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&mut self,
service_generator: Box<dyn ServiceGenerator>
) -> &mut Self
Configures the code generator to use the provided service generator.
pub fn compile_well_known_types(&mut self) -> &mut Self
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Configures the code generator to not use the prost_types
crate for Protobuf well-known
types, and instead generate Protobuf well-known types from their .proto
definitions.
pub fn extern_path<P1, P2>(
&mut self,
proto_path: P1,
rust_path: P2
) -> &mut Self where
P1: Into<String>,
P2: Into<String>,
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&mut self,
proto_path: P1,
rust_path: P2
) -> &mut Self where
P1: Into<String>,
P2: Into<String>,
Declare an externally provided Protobuf package or type.
extern_path
allows prost
types in external crates to be referenced in generated code.
When prost
compiles a .proto
which includes an import of another .proto
, it will
automatically recursively compile the imported file as well. extern_path
can be used
to instead substitute types from an external crate.
Example
As an example, consider a crate, uuid
, with a prost
-generated Uuid
type:
// uuid.proto
syntax = "proto3";
package uuid;
message Uuid {
string uuid_str = 1;
}
The uuid
crate implements some traits for Uuid
, and publicly exports it:
// lib.rs in the uuid crate include!(concat!(env!("OUT_DIR"), "/uuid.rs")); pub trait DoSomething { fn do_it(&self); } impl DoSomething for Uuid { fn do_it(&self) { println!("Done"); } }
A separate crate, my_application
, uses prost
to generate message types which reference
Uuid
:
// my_application.proto
syntax = "proto3";
package my_application;
import "uuid.proto";
message MyMessage {
uuid.Uuid message_id = 1;
string some_payload = 2;
}
Additionally, my_application
depends on the trait impls provided by the uuid
crate:
// `main.rs` of `my_application` use uuid::{DoSomething, Uuid}; include!(concat!(env!("OUT_DIR"), "/my_application.rs")); pub fn process_message(msg: MyMessage) { if let Some(uuid) = msg.message_id { uuid.do_it(); } }
Without configuring uuid
as an external path in my_application
's build.rs
, prost
would compile a completely separate version of the Uuid
type, and process_message
would
fail to compile. However, if my_application
configures uuid
as an extern path with a
call to .extern_path(".uuid", "::uuid")
, prost
will use the external type instead of
compiling a new version of Uuid
. Note that the configuration could also be specified as
.extern_path(".uuid.Uuid", "::uuid::Uuid")
if only the Uuid
type were externally
provided, and not the whole uuid
package.
Usage
extern_path
takes a fully-qualified Protobuf path, and the corresponding Rust path that
it will be substituted with in generated code. The Protobuf path can refer to a package or
a type, and the Rust path should correspondingly refer to a Rust module or type.
// Declare the `uuid` Protobuf package and all nested packages and types as externally // provided by the `uuid` crate. config.extern_path(".uuid", "::uuid"); // Declare the `foo.bar.baz` Protobuf package and all nested packages and types as // externally provided by the `foo_bar_baz` crate. config.extern_path(".foo.bar.baz", "::foo_bar_baz"); // Declare the `uuid.Uuid` Protobuf type (and all nested types) as externally provided // by the `uuid` crate's `Uuid` type. config.extern_path(".uuid.Uuid", "::uuid::Uuid");
pub fn retain_enum_prefix(&mut self) -> &mut Self
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Configures the code generator to not strip the enum name from variant names.
Protobuf enum definitions commonly include the enum name as a prefix of every variant name.
This style is non-idiomatic in Rust, so by default prost
strips the enum name prefix from
variants which include it. Configuring this option prevents prost
from stripping the
prefix.
pub fn out_dir<P>(&mut self, path: P) -> &mut Self where
P: Into<PathBuf>,
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P: Into<PathBuf>,
Configures the output directory where generated Rust files will be written.
If unset, defaults to the OUT_DIR
environment variable. OUT_DIR
is set by Cargo when
executing build scripts, so out_dir
typically does not need to be configured.
pub fn compile_protos<P>(&mut self, protos: &[P], includes: &[P]) -> Result<()> where
P: AsRef<Path>,
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P: AsRef<Path>,
Compile .proto
files into Rust files during a Cargo build with additional code generator
configuration options.
This method is like the prost_build::compile_protos
function, with the added ability to
specify non-default code generation options. See that function for more information about
the arguments and generated outputs.
Example build.rs
fn main() { let mut prost_build = prost_build::Config::new(); prost_build.btree_map(&["."]); prost_build.compile_protos(&["src/frontend.proto", "src/backend.proto"], &["src"]).unwrap(); }
Trait Implementations
Auto Trait Implementations
impl !RefUnwindSafe for Config
impl !Send for Config
impl !Sync for Config
impl Unpin for Config
impl !UnwindSafe for Config
Blanket Implementations
impl<T> Any for T where
T: 'static + ?Sized,
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T: 'static + ?Sized,
impl<T> Borrow<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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T: ?Sized,
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
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impl<T> From<T> for T
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impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where
U: From<T>,
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U: From<T>,
impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T where
U: Into<T>,
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U: Into<T>,
type Error = Infallible
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>
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impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T where
U: TryFrom<T>,
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U: TryFrom<T>,
type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
fn try_into(self) -> Result<U, <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error>
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impl<V, T> VZip<V> for T where
V: MultiLane<T>,
V: MultiLane<T>,