View Source Protobuf.JSON (protobuf v0.12.0-git-d5a0)
JSON encoding and decoding utilities for Protobuf structs.
It follows Google's specs and reference implementation. Some features such as well-known types are not fully supported yet.
Proto3 is supported as per the specification. Proto2 is supported in practice, but some of its features might not work correctly, such as extensions.
types
Types
| Protobuf | JSON | Supported |
|---|---|---|
bool | true/false | Yes |
int32, fixed32, uint32 | Number | Yes |
int64, fixed64, uint64 | String | Yes |
float, double | Number | Yes |
bytes | Base64 string | Yes |
string | String | Yes |
message | Object ({…}) | Yes |
enum | String | Yes |
map<K,V> | Object ({…}) | Yes |
repeated V | Array of [v, …] | Yes |
Any | Object ({…}) | Yes |
Timestamp | RFC3339 datetime | Yes |
Duration | String (seconds.fraction) | Yes |
Struct | Object ({…}) | Yes |
Wrapper types | Various types | Yes |
FieldMask | String | Yes |
ListValue | Array | Yes |
Value | Any JSON value | Yes |
NullValue | null | Yes |
Empty | Object ({…}) | Yes |
usage
Usage
Protobuf.JSON requires a JSON library to work, so first make sure you have :jason added
to your dependencies:
defp deps do
[
{:jason, "~> 1.2"},
# ...
]
endWith encode/1 you can turn any Protobuf message struct into a JSON string:
iex> message = %Car{color: :RED, top_speed: 125.3}
iex> Protobuf.JSON.encode(message)
{:ok, "{\"color\":\"RED\",\"topSpeed\":125.3}"}And go the other way around with decode/1:
iex> json = ~S|{"color":"RED","topSpeed":125.3}|
iex> Protobuf.JSON.decode(json, Car)
{:ok, %Car{color: :RED, top_speed: 125.3}}JSON keys are encoded as camelCase strings by default, specified by the json_name field
option. So make sure to recompile the .proto files in your project before working with
JSON encoding, the compiler will generate all the required json_name options. You can set
your own json_name for a particular field too:
message GeoCoordinate {
double latitude = 1 [ json_name = "lat" ];
double longitude = 2 [ json_name = "long" ];
}
known-issues-and-limitations
Known Issues and Limitations
Currently, the protoc compiler won't check for field name collisions. This library won't
check that either. Make sure your field names will be unique when serialized to JSON.
For instance, this message definition will not encode correctly since it will emit just
one of the two fields and the problem might go unnoticed:
message CollidingFields {
int32 f1 = 1 [json_name = "sameName"];
float f2 = 2 [json_name = "sameName"];
}According to the specification, when duplicated JSON keys are found in maps, the library should raise a decoding error. It currently ignores duplicates and keeps the last occurrence.
google-protobuf-any
google.protobuf.Any
The google.protobuf.Any type is supported. It can be used to encode and decode arbitrary
messages. When decoding, the "type URL" is used to determine the message type to decode
to. The type URL is expected to be in the format of
type.googleapis.com/<package>.<message>. For example, the type URL for the
google.protobuf.Duration message would be
type.googleapis.com/google.protobuf.Duration. To determine the Elixir module from the
type URL, the package and message names are split on . and transformed into a module
name. In the previous example, we'd end up with Google.Protobuf.Duration. Due to
arbitrary atom construction, we're forced to use Module.safe_concat/1 to construct the
module name. This means that the module must exist before decoding. If the module doesn't
exist, decoding will raise an error.
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Decodes a JSON iodata into a module Protobuf struct.
Decodes a JSON iodata into a module Protobuf struct.
Generates a JSON representation of the given protobuf struct.
Generates a JSON representation of the given protobuf struct.
Decodes a json_data map into a module Protobuf struct.
Generates a JSON-encodable map for the given Protobuf struct.
Link to this section Types
Link to this section Functions
@spec decode(iodata(), module()) :: {:ok, struct()} | {:error, Protobuf.JSON.DecodeError.t() | Exception.t()}
Decodes a JSON iodata into a module Protobuf struct.
examples
Examples
Given this Protobuf message:
syntax = "proto3";
message Car {
enum Color {
GREEN = 0;
RED = 1;
}
Color color = 1;
float top_speed = 2;
}You can build its structs from JSON like this:
iex> Protobuf.JSON.decode("{}", Car)
{:ok, %Car{color: :GREEN, top_speed: 0.0}}
iex> ~S|{"color":"RED"}| |> Protobuf.JSON.decode(Car)
{:ok, %Car{color: :RED, top_speed: 0.0}}
iex> ~S|{"color":"GREEN","topSpeed":80.0}| |> Protobuf.JSON.decode(Car)
{:ok, %Car{color: :GREEN, top_speed: 80.0}}
Decodes a JSON iodata into a module Protobuf struct.
Similar to decode!/2 except it will unwrap the error tuple and raise in case of errors.
examples
Examples
iex> Protobuf.JSON.decode!("{}", Car)
%Car{color: :GREEN, top_speed: 0.0}
iex> ~S|{"color":"RED"}| |> Protobuf.JSON.decode!(Car)
%Car{color: :RED, top_speed: 0.0}
iex> ~S|{"color":"GREEN","topSpeed":80.0}| |> Protobuf.JSON.decode!(Car)
%Car{color: :GREEN, top_speed: 80.0}
@spec encode(struct(), [encode_opt()]) :: {:ok, String.t()} | {:error, Protobuf.JSON.EncodeError.t() | Exception.t()}
Generates a JSON representation of the given protobuf struct.
options
Options
:use_proto_names- use original fieldnameinstead of the camelCasejson_namefor JSON keys. Defaults tofalse.:use_enum_numbers- encodeenumfield values as numbers instead of their labels. Defaults tofalse.:emit_unpopulated- emit all fields, even when they are blank, empty, or set to their default value. Defaults tofalse.
examples
Examples
Suppose that this is you Protobuf message:
syntax = "proto3";
message Car {
enum Color {
GREEN = 0;
RED = 1;
}
Color color = 1;
float top_speed = 2;
}Encoding is as simple as:
iex> Protobuf.JSON.encode(%Car{color: :RED, top_speed: 125.3})
{:ok, ~S|{"color":"RED","topSpeed":125.3}|}
iex> Protobuf.JSON.encode(%Car{color: :GREEN})
{:ok, "{}"}
iex> Protobuf.JSON.encode(%Car{}, emit_unpopulated: true)
{:ok, ~S|{"color":"GREEN","topSpeed":0.0}|}
@spec encode!(struct(), [encode_opt()]) :: String.t() | no_return()
Generates a JSON representation of the given protobuf struct.
Similar to encode/2 except it will unwrap the error tuple and raise in case of errors.
examples
Examples
iex> Protobuf.JSON.encode!(%Car{top_speed: 80.0})
~S|{"topSpeed":80.0}|
@spec from_decoded(json_data(), module()) :: {:ok, struct()} | {:error, Protobuf.JSON.DecodeError.t()}
Decodes a json_data map into a module Protobuf struct.
Similar to decode/2 except it takes a JSON map representation of the data.
This is especially useful if you want to use custom JSON encoding or a custom
JSON library.
examples
Examples
iex> Protobuf.JSON.from_decoded(%{}, Car)
{:ok, %Car{color: :GREEN, top_speed: 0.0}}
iex> Protobuf.JSON.from_decoded(%{"color" => "RED"}, Car)
{:ok, %Car{color: :RED, top_speed: 0.0}}
iex> Protobuf.JSON.from_decoded(%{"color" => "GREEN","topSpeed" => 80.0}, Car)
{:ok, %Car{color: :GREEN, top_speed: 80.0}}
@spec to_encodable(struct(), [encode_opt()]) :: {:ok, json_data()} | {:error, Protobuf.JSON.EncodeError.t()}
Generates a JSON-encodable map for the given Protobuf struct.
Similar to encode/2 except it will return an intermediate map representation.
This is especially useful if you want to use custom JSON encoding or a custom
JSON library.
Supports the same options as encode/2.
examples
Examples
iex> Protobuf.JSON.to_encodable(%Car{color: :RED, top_speed: 125.3})
{:ok, %{"color" => :RED, "topSpeed" => 125.3}}
iex> Protobuf.JSON.to_encodable(%Car{color: :GREEN})
{:ok, %{}}
iex> Protobuf.JSON.to_encodable(%Car{}, emit_unpopulated: true)
{:ok, %{"color" => :GREEN, "topSpeed" => 0.0}}