commit dea4431c876a11912f6e7acd5b4421fb7f80c646 Author: leancloud-bot Date: Tue Mar 1 21:07:22 2022 +0800 0.10.1 diff --git a/Plugins.meta b/Plugins.meta new file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb16607 --- /dev/null +++ b/Plugins.meta @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +fileFormatVersion: 2 +guid: e96d901bac9bf48a0a27051e2325c098 +folderAsset: yes +DefaultImporter: + externalObjects: {} + userData: + assetBundleName: + assetBundleVariant: diff --git a/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.dll b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.dll new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ec9ab1e Binary files /dev/null and b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.dll differ diff --git a/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.dll.meta b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.dll.meta new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5963ac2 --- /dev/null +++ b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.dll.meta @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ +fileFormatVersion: 2 +guid: 7b13d1cfd626c4272a39598c1ef53fd8 +PluginImporter: + externalObjects: {} + serializedVersion: 2 + iconMap: {} + executionOrder: {} + defineConstraints: [] + isPreloaded: 0 + isOverridable: 0 + isExplicitlyReferenced: 0 + validateReferences: 1 + platformData: + - first: + Any: + second: + enabled: 1 + settings: {} + - first: + Editor: Editor + second: + enabled: 0 + settings: + DefaultValueInitialized: true + - first: + Windows Store Apps: WindowsStoreApps + second: + enabled: 0 + settings: + CPU: AnyCPU + userData: + assetBundleName: + assetBundleVariant: diff --git a/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.pdb b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.pdb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4028af0 Binary files /dev/null and b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.pdb differ diff --git a/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.pdb.meta b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.pdb.meta new file mode 100644 index 0000000..513520c --- /dev/null +++ b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.pdb.meta @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +fileFormatVersion: 2 +guid: 5d58b82e611f146d1968718d48af8257 +DefaultImporter: + externalObjects: {} + userData: + assetBundleName: + assetBundleVariant: diff --git a/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.xml b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.xml new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0a7b479 --- /dev/null +++ b/Plugins/LC.Google.Protobuf.xml @@ -0,0 +1,9125 @@ + + + + LC.Google.Protobuf + + + + + Provides a utility routine to copy small arrays much more quickly than Buffer.BlockCopy + + + + + The threshold above which you should use Buffer.BlockCopy rather than ByteArray.Copy + + + + + Determines which copy routine to use based on the number of bytes to be copied. + + + + + Reverses the order of bytes in the array + + + + + Immutable array of bytes. + + + + + Unsafe operations that can cause IO Failure and/or other catastrophic side-effects. + + + + + Constructs a new ByteString from the given byte array. The array is + *not* copied, and must not be modified after this constructor is called. + + + + + Internal use only. Ensure that the provided array is not mutated and belongs to this instance. + + + + + Constructs a new ByteString from the given byte array. The array is + *not* copied, and must not be modified after this constructor is called. + + + + + Returns an empty ByteString. + + + + + Returns the length of this ByteString in bytes. + + + + + Returns true if this byte string is empty, false otherwise. + + + + + Converts this into a byte array. + + The data is copied - changes to the returned array will not be reflected in this ByteString. + A byte array with the same data as this ByteString. + + + + Converts this into a standard base64 representation. + + A base64 representation of this ByteString. + + + + Constructs a from the Base64 Encoded String. + + + + + Constructs a from data in the given stream, synchronously. + + If successful, will be read completely, from the position + at the start of the call. + The stream to copy into a ByteString. + A ByteString with content read from the given stream. + + + + Constructs a from data in the given stream, asynchronously. + + If successful, will be read completely, from the position + at the start of the call. + The stream to copy into a ByteString. + The cancellation token to use when reading from the stream, if any. + A ByteString with content read from the given stream. + + + + Constructs a from the given array. The contents + are copied, so further modifications to the array will not + be reflected in the returned ByteString. + This method can also be invoked in ByteString.CopyFrom(0xaa, 0xbb, ...) form + which is primarily useful for testing. + + + + + Constructs a from a portion of a byte array. + + + + + Creates a new by encoding the specified text with + the given encoding. + + + + + Creates a new by encoding the specified text in UTF-8. + + + + + Retuns the byte at the given index. + + + + + Converts this into a string by applying the given encoding. + + + This method should only be used to convert binary data which was the result of encoding + text with the given encoding. + + The encoding to use to decode the binary data into text. + The result of decoding the binary data with the given decoding. + + + + Converts this into a string by applying the UTF-8 encoding. + + + This method should only be used to convert binary data which was the result of encoding + text with UTF-8. + + The result of decoding the binary data with the given decoding. + + + + Returns an iterator over the bytes in this . + + An iterator over the bytes in this object. + + + + Returns an iterator over the bytes in this . + + An iterator over the bytes in this object. + + + + Creates a CodedInputStream from this ByteString's data. + + + + + Compares two byte strings for equality. + + The first byte string to compare. + The second byte string to compare. + true if the byte strings are equal; false otherwise. + + + + Compares two byte strings for inequality. + + The first byte string to compare. + The second byte string to compare. + false if the byte strings are equal; true otherwise. + + + + Compares this byte string with another object. + + The object to compare this with. + true if refers to an equal ; false otherwise. + + + + Returns a hash code for this object. Two equal byte strings + will return the same hash code. + + A hash code for this object. + + + + Compares this byte string with another. + + The to compare this with. + true if refers to an equal byte string; false otherwise. + + + + Used internally by CodedOutputStream to avoid creating a copy for the write + + + + + Copies the entire byte array to the destination array provided at the offset specified. + + + + + Writes the entire byte array to the provided stream + + + + + Reads and decodes protocol message fields. + + + + This class is generally used by generated code to read appropriate + primitives from the stream. It effectively encapsulates the lowest + levels of protocol buffer format. + + + Repeated fields and map fields are not handled by this class; use + and to serialize such fields. + + + + + + Whether to leave the underlying stream open when disposing of this stream. + This is always true when there's no stream. + + + + + Buffer of data read from the stream or provided at construction time. + + + + + The index of the buffer at which we need to refill from the stream (if there is one). + + + + + The position within the current buffer (i.e. the next byte to read) + + + + + The stream to read further input from, or null if the byte array buffer was provided + directly on construction, with no further data available. + + + + + The last tag we read. 0 indicates we've read to the end of the stream + (or haven't read anything yet). + + + + + The next tag, used to store the value read by PeekTag. + + + + + The total number of bytes read before the current buffer. The + total bytes read up to the current position can be computed as + totalBytesRetired + bufferPos. + + + + + The absolute position of the end of the current message. + + + + + Creates a new CodedInputStream reading data from the given byte array. + + + + + Creates a new that reads from the given byte array slice. + + + + + Creates a new reading data from the given stream, which will be disposed + when the returned object is disposed. + + The stream to read from. + + + + Creates a new reading data from the given stream. + + The stream to read from. + true to leave open when the returned + is disposed; false to dispose of the given stream when the + returned object is disposed. + + + + Creates a new CodedInputStream reading data from the given + stream and buffer, using the default limits. + + + + + Creates a new CodedInputStream reading data from the given + stream and buffer, using the specified limits. + + + This chains to the version with the default limits instead of vice versa to avoid + having to check that the default values are valid every time. + + + + + Creates a with the specified size and recursion limits, reading + from an input stream. + + + This method exists separately from the constructor to reduce the number of constructor overloads. + It is likely to be used considerably less frequently than the constructors, as the default limits + are suitable for most use cases. + + The input stream to read from + The total limit of data to read from the stream. + The maximum recursion depth to allow while reading. + A CodedInputStream reading from with the specified size + and recursion limits. + + + + Returns the current position in the input stream, or the position in the input buffer + + + + + Returns the last tag read, or 0 if no tags have been read or we've read beyond + the end of the stream. + + + + + Returns the size limit for this stream. + + + This limit is applied when reading from the underlying stream, as a sanity check. It is + not applied when reading from a byte array data source without an underlying stream. + The default value is Int32.MaxValue. + + + The size limit. + + + + + Returns the recursion limit for this stream. This limit is applied whilst reading messages, + to avoid maliciously-recursive data. + + + The default limit is 100. + + + The recursion limit for this stream. + + + + + Internal-only property; when set to true, unknown fields will be discarded while parsing. + + + + + Internal-only property; provides extension identifiers to compatible messages while parsing. + + + + + Disposes of this instance, potentially closing any underlying stream. + + + As there is no flushing to perform here, disposing of a which + was constructed with the leaveOpen option parameter set to true (or one which + was constructed to read from a byte array) has no effect. + + + + + Verifies that the last call to ReadTag() returned tag 0 - in other words, + we've reached the end of the stream when we expected to. + + The + tag read was not the one specified + + + + Peeks at the next field tag. This is like calling , but the + tag is not consumed. (So a subsequent call to will return the + same value.) + + + + + Reads a field tag, returning the tag of 0 for "end of stream". + + + If this method returns 0, it doesn't necessarily mean the end of all + the data in this CodedInputStream; it may be the end of the logical stream + for an embedded message, for example. + + The next field tag, or 0 for end of stream. (0 is never a valid tag.) + + + + Skips the data for the field with the tag we've just read. + This should be called directly after , when + the caller wishes to skip an unknown field. + + + This method throws if the last-read tag was an end-group tag. + If a caller wishes to skip a group, they should skip the whole group, by calling this method after reading the + start-group tag. This behavior allows callers to call this method on any field they don't understand, correctly + resulting in an error if an end-group tag has not been paired with an earlier start-group tag. + + The last tag was an end-group tag + The last read operation read to the end of the logical stream + + + + Skip a group. + + + + + Reads a double field from the stream. + + + + + Reads a float field from the stream. + + + + + Reads a uint64 field from the stream. + + + + + Reads an int64 field from the stream. + + + + + Reads an int32 field from the stream. + + + + + Reads a fixed64 field from the stream. + + + + + Reads a fixed32 field from the stream. + + + + + Reads a bool field from the stream. + + + + + Reads a string field from the stream. + + + + + Reads an embedded message field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads an embedded group field from the stream. + + + + + Reads an embedded group unknown field from the stream. + + + + + Reads a bytes field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads a uint32 field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads an enum field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads an sfixed32 field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads an sfixed64 field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads an sint32 field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads an sint64 field value from the stream. + + + + + Reads a length for length-delimited data. + + + This is internally just reading a varint, but this method exists + to make the calling code clearer. + + + + + Peeks at the next tag in the stream. If it matches , + the tag is consumed and the method returns true; otherwise, the + stream is left in the original position and the method returns false. + + + + + Same code as ReadRawVarint32, but read each byte individually, checking for + buffer overflow. + + + + + Reads a raw Varint from the stream. If larger than 32 bits, discard the upper bits. + This method is optimised for the case where we've got lots of data in the buffer. + That means we can check the size just once, then just read directly from the buffer + without constant rechecking of the buffer length. + + + + + Reads a varint from the input one byte at a time, so that it does not + read any bytes after the end of the varint. If you simply wrapped the + stream in a CodedInputStream and used ReadRawVarint32(Stream) + then you would probably end up reading past the end of the varint since + CodedInputStream buffers its input. + + + + + + + Reads a raw varint from the stream. + + + + + Reads a 32-bit little-endian integer from the stream. + + + + + Reads a 64-bit little-endian integer from the stream. + + + + + Decode a 32-bit value with ZigZag encoding. + + + ZigZag encodes signed integers into values that can be efficiently + encoded with varint. (Otherwise, negative values must be + sign-extended to 64 bits to be varint encoded, thus always taking + 10 bytes on the wire.) + + + + + Decode a 32-bit value with ZigZag encoding. + + + ZigZag encodes signed integers into values that can be efficiently + encoded with varint. (Otherwise, negative values must be + sign-extended to 64 bits to be varint encoded, thus always taking + 10 bytes on the wire.) + + + + + Sets currentLimit to (current position) + byteLimit. This is called + when descending into a length-delimited embedded message. The previous + limit is returned. + + The old limit. + + + + Discards the current limit, returning the previous limit. + + + + + Returns whether or not all the data before the limit has been read. + + + + + + Returns true if the stream has reached the end of the input. This is the + case if either the end of the underlying input source has been reached or + the stream has reached a limit created using PushLimit. + + + + + Called when buffer is empty to read more bytes from the + input. If is true, RefillBuffer() gurantees that + either there will be at least one byte in the buffer when it returns + or it will throw an exception. If is false, + RefillBuffer() returns false if no more bytes were available. + + + + + + + Read one byte from the input. + + + the end of the stream or the current limit was reached + + + + + Reads a fixed size of bytes from the input. + + + the end of the stream or the current limit was reached + + + + + Reads and discards bytes. + + the end of the stream + or the current limit was reached + + + + Abstraction of skipping to cope with streams which can't really skip. + + + + + Encodes and writes protocol message fields. + + + + This class is generally used by generated code to write appropriate + primitives to the stream. It effectively encapsulates the lowest + levels of protocol buffer format. Unlike some other implementations, + this does not include combined "write tag and value" methods. Generated + code knows the exact byte representations of the tags they're going to write, + so there's no need to re-encode them each time. Manually-written code calling + this class should just call one of the WriteTag overloads before each value. + + + Repeated fields and map fields are not handled by this class; use RepeatedField<T> + and MapField<TKey, TValue> to serialize such fields. + + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + double field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + float field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + uint64 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode an + int64 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode an + int32 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + fixed64 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + fixed32 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + bool field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + string field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + group field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode an + embedded message field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + bytes field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + uint32 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a + enum field, including the tag. The caller is responsible for + converting the enum value to its numeric value. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode an + sfixed32 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode an + sfixed64 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode an + sint32 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode an + sint64 field, including the tag. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a length, + as written by . + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a varint. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a varint. + + + + + Computes the number of bytes that would be needed to encode a tag. + + + + + The buffer size used by CreateInstance(Stream). + + + + + Creates a new CodedOutputStream that writes directly to the given + byte array. If more bytes are written than fit in the array, + OutOfSpaceException will be thrown. + + + + + Creates a new CodedOutputStream that writes directly to the given + byte array slice. If more bytes are written than fit in the array, + OutOfSpaceException will be thrown. + + + + + Creates a new which write to the given stream, and disposes of that + stream when the returned CodedOutputStream is disposed. + + The stream to write to. It will be disposed when the returned CodedOutputStream is disposed. + + + + Creates a new CodedOutputStream which write to the given stream and uses + the specified buffer size. + + The stream to write to. It will be disposed when the returned CodedOutputStream is disposed. + The size of buffer to use internally. + + + + Creates a new CodedOutputStream which write to the given stream. + + The stream to write to. + If true, is left open when the returned CodedOutputStream is disposed; + if false, the provided stream is disposed as well. + + + + Creates a new CodedOutputStream which write to the given stream and uses + the specified buffer size. + + The stream to write to. + The size of buffer to use internally. + If true, is left open when the returned CodedOutputStream is disposed; + if false, the provided stream is disposed as well. + + + + Returns the current position in the stream, or the position in the output buffer + + + + + Writes a double field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a float field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a uint64 field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes an int64 field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes an int32 field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a fixed64 field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a fixed32 field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a bool field value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a string field value, without a tag, to the stream. + The data is length-prefixed. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a message, without a tag, to the stream. + The data is length-prefixed. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a group, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Write a byte string, without a tag, to the stream. + The data is length-prefixed. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a uint32 value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes an enum value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes an sfixed32 value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write. + + + + Writes an sfixed64 value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes an sint32 value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes an sint64 value, without a tag, to the stream. + + The value to write + + + + Writes a length (in bytes) for length-delimited data. + + + This method simply writes a rawint, but exists for clarity in calling code. + + Length value, in bytes. + + + + Encodes and writes a tag. + + The number of the field to write the tag for + The wire format type of the tag to write + + + + Writes an already-encoded tag. + + The encoded tag + + + + Writes the given single-byte tag directly to the stream. + + The encoded tag + + + + Writes the given two-byte tag directly to the stream. + + The first byte of the encoded tag + The second byte of the encoded tag + + + + Writes the given three-byte tag directly to the stream. + + The first byte of the encoded tag + The second byte of the encoded tag + The third byte of the encoded tag + + + + Writes the given four-byte tag directly to the stream. + + The first byte of the encoded tag + The second byte of the encoded tag + The third byte of the encoded tag + The fourth byte of the encoded tag + + + + Writes the given five-byte tag directly to the stream. + + The first byte of the encoded tag + The second byte of the encoded tag + The third byte of the encoded tag + The fourth byte of the encoded tag + The fifth byte of the encoded tag + + + + Writes a 32 bit value as a varint. The fast route is taken when + there's enough buffer space left to whizz through without checking + for each byte; otherwise, we resort to calling WriteRawByte each time. + + + + + Writes out an array of bytes. + + + + + Writes out part of an array of bytes. + + + + + Encode a 32-bit value with ZigZag encoding. + + + ZigZag encodes signed integers into values that can be efficiently + encoded with varint. (Otherwise, negative values must be + sign-extended to 64 bits to be varint encoded, thus always taking + 10 bytes on the wire.) + + + + + Encode a 64-bit value with ZigZag encoding. + + + ZigZag encodes signed integers into values that can be efficiently + encoded with varint. (Otherwise, negative values must be + sign-extended to 64 bits to be varint encoded, thus always taking + 10 bytes on the wire.) + + + + + Indicates that a CodedOutputStream wrapping a flat byte array + ran out of space. + + + + + Flushes any buffered data and optionally closes the underlying stream, if any. + + + + By default, any underlying stream is closed by this method. To configure this behaviour, + use a constructor overload with a leaveOpen parameter. If this instance does not + have an underlying stream, this method does nothing. + + + For the sake of efficiency, calling this method does not prevent future write calls - but + if a later write ends up writing to a stream which has been disposed, that is likely to + fail. It is recommend that you not call any other methods after this. + + + + + + Flushes any buffered data to the underlying stream (if there is one). + + + + + Verifies that SpaceLeft returns zero. It's common to create a byte array + that is exactly big enough to hold a message, then write to it with + a CodedOutputStream. Calling CheckNoSpaceLeft after writing verifies that + the message was actually as big as expected, which can help bugs. + + + + + If writing to a flat array, returns the space left in the array. Otherwise, + throws an InvalidOperationException. + + + + + Utility to compare if two Lists are the same, and the hash code + of a List. + + + + + Checks if two lists are equal. + + + + + Gets the list's hash code. + + + + + Representation of a map field in a Protocol Buffer message. + + Key type in the map. Must be a type supported by Protocol Buffer map keys. + Value type in the map. Must be a type supported by Protocol Buffers. + + + For string keys, the equality comparison is provided by . + + + Null values are not permitted in the map, either for wrapper types or regular messages. + If a map is deserialized from a data stream and the value is missing from an entry, a default value + is created instead. For primitive types, that is the regular default value (0, the empty string and so + on); for message types, an empty instance of the message is created, as if the map entry contained a 0-length + encoded value for the field. + + + This implementation does not generally prohibit the use of key/value types which are not + supported by Protocol Buffers (e.g. using a key type of byte) but nor does it guarantee + that all operations will work in such cases. + + + The order in which entries are returned when iterating over this object is undefined, and may change + in future versions. + + + + + + Creates a deep clone of this object. + + + A deep clone of this object. + + + + + Adds the specified key/value pair to the map. + + + This operation fails if the key already exists in the map. To replace an existing entry, use the indexer. + + The key to add + The value to add. + The given key already exists in map. + + + + Determines whether the specified key is present in the map. + + The key to check. + true if the map contains the given key; false otherwise. + + + + Removes the entry identified by the given key from the map. + + The key indicating the entry to remove from the map. + true if the map contained the given key before the entry was removed; false otherwise. + + + + Gets the value associated with the specified key. + + The key whose value to get. + When this method returns, the value associated with the specified key, if the key is found; + otherwise, the default value for the type of the parameter. + This parameter is passed uninitialized. + true if the map contains an element with the specified key; otherwise, false. + + + + Gets or sets the value associated with the specified key. + + The key of the value to get or set. + The property is retrieved and key does not exist in the collection. + The value associated with the specified key. If the specified key is not found, + a get operation throws a , and a set operation creates a new element with the specified key. + + + + Gets a collection containing the keys in the map. + + + + + Gets a collection containing the values in the map. + + + + + Adds the specified entries to the map. The keys and values are not automatically cloned. + + The entries to add to the map. + + + + Returns an enumerator that iterates through the collection. + + + An enumerator that can be used to iterate through the collection. + + + + + Returns an enumerator that iterates through a collection. + + + An object that can be used to iterate through the collection. + + + + + Adds the specified item to the map. + + The item to add to the map. + + + + Removes all items from the map. + + + + + Determines whether map contains an entry equivalent to the given key/value pair. + + The key/value pair to find. + + + + + Copies the key/value pairs in this map to an array. + + The array to copy the entries into. + The index of the array at which to start copying values. + + + + Removes the specified key/value pair from the map. + + Both the key and the value must be found for the entry to be removed. + The key/value pair to remove. + true if the key/value pair was found and removed; false otherwise. + + + + Gets the number of elements contained in the map. + + + + + Gets a value indicating whether the map is read-only. + + + + + Determines whether the specified , is equal to this instance. + + The to compare with this instance. + + true if the specified is equal to this instance; otherwise, false. + + + + + Returns a hash code for this instance. + + + A hash code for this instance, suitable for use in hashing algorithms and data structures like a hash table. + + + + + Compares this map with another for equality. + + + The order of the key/value pairs in the maps is not deemed significant in this comparison. + + The map to compare this with. + true if refers to an equal map; false otherwise. + + + + Adds entries to the map from the given stream. + + + It is assumed that the stream is initially positioned after the tag specified by the codec. + This method will continue reading entries from the stream until the end is reached, or + a different tag is encountered. + + Stream to read from + Codec describing how the key/value pairs are encoded + + + + Writes the contents of this map to the given coded output stream, using the specified codec + to encode each entry. + + The output stream to write to. + The codec to use for each entry. + + + + Calculates the size of this map based on the given entry codec. + + The codec to use to encode each entry. + + + + + Returns a string representation of this repeated field, in the same + way as it would be represented by the default JSON formatter. + + + + + A codec for a specific map field. This contains all the information required to encode and + decode the nested messages. + + + + + Creates a new entry codec based on a separate key codec and value codec, + and the tag to use for each map entry. + + The key codec. + The value codec. + The map tag to use to introduce each map entry. + + + + The tag used in the enclosing message to indicate map entries. + + + + + A mutable message class, used for parsing and serializing. This + delegates the work to a codec, but implements the interface + for interop with and . + This is nested inside Codec as it's tightly coupled to the associated codec, + and it's simpler if it has direct access to all its fields. + + + + + Provides a central place to implement equality comparisons, primarily for bitwise float/double equality. + + + + + Returns an equality comparer for suitable for Protobuf equality comparisons. + This is usually just the default equality comparer for the type, but floating point numbers are compared + bitwise. + + The type of equality comparer to return. + The equality comparer. + + + + Returns an equality comparer suitable for comparing 64-bit floating point values, by bitwise comparison. + (NaN values are considered equal, but only when they have the same representation.) + + + + + Returns an equality comparer suitable for comparing 32-bit floating point values, by bitwise comparison. + (NaN values are considered equal, but only when they have the same representation.) + + + + + Returns an equality comparer suitable for comparing nullable 64-bit floating point values, by bitwise comparison. + (NaN values are considered equal, but only when they have the same representation.) + + + + + Returns an equality comparer suitable for comparing nullable 32-bit floating point values, by bitwise comparison. + (NaN values are considered equal, but only when they have the same representation.) + + + + + Read-only wrapper around another dictionary. + + + + + The contents of a repeated field: essentially, a collection with some extra + restrictions (no null values) and capabilities (deep cloning). + + + This implementation does not generally prohibit the use of types which are not + supported by Protocol Buffers but nor does it guarantee that all operations will work in such cases. + + The element type of the repeated field. + + + + Creates a deep clone of this repeated field. + + + If the field type is + a message type, each element is also cloned; otherwise, it is + assumed that the field type is primitive (including string and + bytes, both of which are immutable) and so a simple copy is + equivalent to a deep clone. + + A deep clone of this repeated field. + + + + Adds the entries from the given input stream, decoding them with the specified codec. + + The input stream to read from. + The codec to use in order to read each entry. + + + + Calculates the size of this collection based on the given codec. + + The codec to use when encoding each field. + The number of bytes that would be written to a by , + using the same codec. + + + + Writes the contents of this collection to the given , + encoding each value using the specified codec. + + The output stream to write to. + The codec to use when encoding each value. + + + + Gets and sets the capacity of the RepeatedField's internal array. WHen set, the internal array is reallocated to the given capacity. + The new value is less than Count -or- when Count is less than 0. + + + + + Adds the specified item to the collection. + + The item to add. + + + + Removes all items from the collection. + + + + + Determines whether this collection contains the given item. + + The item to find. + true if this collection contains the given item; false otherwise. + + + + Copies this collection to the given array. + + The array to copy to. + The first index of the array to copy to. + + + + Removes the specified item from the collection + + The item to remove. + true if the item was found and removed; false otherwise. + + + + Gets the number of elements contained in the collection. + + + + + Gets a value indicating whether the collection is read-only. + + + + + Adds all of the specified values into this collection. + + The values to add to this collection. + + + + Adds all of the specified values into this collection. This method is present to + allow repeated fields to be constructed from queries within collection initializers. + Within non-collection-initializer code, consider using the equivalent + method instead for clarity. + + The values to add to this collection. + + + + Returns an enumerator that iterates through the collection. + + + An enumerator that can be used to iterate through the collection. + + + + + Determines whether the specified , is equal to this instance. + + The to compare with this instance. + + true if the specified is equal to this instance; otherwise, false. + + + + + Returns an enumerator that iterates through a collection. + + + An object that can be used to iterate through the collection. + + + + + Returns a hash code for this instance. + + + A hash code for this instance, suitable for use in hashing algorithms and data structures like a hash table. + + + + + Compares this repeated field with another for equality. + + The repeated field to compare this with. + true if refers to an equal repeated field; false otherwise. + + + + Returns the index of the given item within the collection, or -1 if the item is not + present. + + The item to find in the collection. + The zero-based index of the item, or -1 if it is not found. + + + + Inserts the given item at the specified index. + + The index at which to insert the item. + The item to insert. + + + + Removes the item at the given index. + + The zero-based index of the item to remove. + + + + Returns a string representation of this repeated field, in the same + way as it would be represented by the default JSON formatter. + + + + + Gets or sets the item at the specified index. + + + The element at the specified index. + + The zero-based index of the element to get or set. + The item at the specified index. + + + + Extension methods for , effectively providing + the familiar members from previous desktop framework versions while + targeting the newer releases, .NET Core etc. + + + + + Returns the public getter of a property, or null if there is no such getter + (either because it's read-only, or the getter isn't public). + + + + + Returns the public setter of a property, or null if there is no such setter + (either because it's write-only, or the setter isn't public). + + + + + Provides extension methods on Type that just proxy to TypeInfo. + These are used to support the new type system from .NET 4.5, without + having calls to GetTypeInfo all over the place. While the methods here are meant to be + broadly compatible with the desktop framework, there are some subtle differences in behaviour - but + they're not expected to affect our use cases. While the class is internal, that should be fine: we can + evaluate each new use appropriately. + + + + + See https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.type.isassignablefrom + + + + + Returns a representation of the public property associated with the given name in the given type, + including inherited properties or null if there is no such public property. + Here, "public property" means a property where either the getter, or the setter, or both, is public. + + + + + Returns a representation of the public method associated with the given name in the given type, + including inherited methods. + + + This has a few differences compared with Type.GetMethod in the desktop framework. It will throw + if there is an ambiguous match even between a private method and a public one, but it *won't* throw + if there are two overloads at different levels in the type hierarchy (e.g. class Base declares public void Foo(int) and + class Child : Base declares public void Foo(long)). + + One type in the hierarchy declared more than one method with the same name + + + + Represents a non-generic extension definition. This API is experimental and subject to change. + + + + + Internal use. Creates a new extension with the specified field number. + + + + + Gets the field number of this extension + + + + + Represents a type-safe extension identifier used for getting and setting single extension values in instances. + This API is experimental and subject to change. + + The message type this field applies to + The field value type of this extension + + + + Creates a new extension identifier with the specified field number and codec + + + + + Represents a type-safe extension identifier used for getting repeated extension values in instances. + This API is experimental and subject to change. + + The message type this field applies to + The repeated field value type of this extension + + + + Creates a new repeated extension identifier with the specified field number and codec + + + + + Provides extensions to messages while parsing. This API is experimental and subject to change. + + + + + Creates a new empty extension registry + + + + + Gets the total number of extensions in this extension registry + + + + + Returns whether the registry is readonly + + + + + Adds the specified extension to the registry + + + + + Adds the specified extensions to the registry + + + + + Clears the registry of all values + + + + + Gets whether the extension registry contains the specified extension + + + + + Copies the arrays in the registry set to the specified array at the specified index + + The array to copy to + The array index to start at + + + + Returns an enumerator to enumerate through the items in the registry + + Returns an enumerator for the extensions in this registry + + + + Removes the specified extension from the set + + The extension + true if the extension was removed, otherwise false + + + + Clones the registry into a new registry + + + + + Methods for managing s with null checking. + + Most users will not use this class directly and its API is experimental and subject to change. + + + + + Gets the value of the specified extension + + + + + Gets the value of the specified repeated extension or null if it doesn't exist in this set + + + + + Gets the value of the specified repeated extension, registering it if it doesn't exist + + + + + Sets the value of the specified extension. This will make a new instance of ExtensionSet if the set is null. + + + + + Gets whether the value of the specified extension is set + + + + + Clears the value of the specified extension + + + + + Clears the value of the specified extension + + + + + Tries to merge a field from the coded input, returning true if the field was merged. + If the set is null or the field was not otherwise merged, this returns false. + + + + + Merges the second set into the first set, creating a new instance if first is null + + + + + Clones the set into a new set. If the set is null, this returns null + + + + + Used for keeping track of extensions in messages. + methods route to this set. + + Most users will not need to use this class directly + + The message type that extensions in this set target + + + + Gets a hash code of the set + + + + + Returns whether this set is equal to the other object + + + + + Calculates the size of this extension set + + + + + Writes the extension values in this set to the output stream + + + + + Factory methods for . + + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a string field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a bytes field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a bool field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an int32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sint32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a fixed32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sfixed32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a uint32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an int64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sint64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a fixed64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sfixed64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a uint64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a float field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a double field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an enum field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A conversion function from to the enum type. + A conversion function from the enum type to . + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a string field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a bytes field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a bool field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an int32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sint32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a fixed32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sfixed32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a uint32 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an int64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sint64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a fixed64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an sfixed64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a uint64 field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a float field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a double field with the given tag. + + The tag. + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for an enum field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A conversion function from to the enum type. + A conversion function from the enum type to . + The default value. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a message field with the given tag. + + The tag. + A parser to use for the message type. + A codec for the given tag. + + + + Retrieves a codec suitable for a group field with the given tag. + + The start group tag. + The end group tag. + A parser to use for the group message type. + A codec for given tag + + + + Creates a codec for a wrapper type of a class - which must be string or ByteString. + + + + + Creates a codec for a wrapper type of a struct - which must be Int32, Int64, UInt32, UInt64, + Bool, Single or Double. + + + + + Helper code to create codecs for wrapper types. + + + Somewhat ugly with all the static methods, but the conversions involved to/from nullable types make it + slightly tricky to improve. So long as we keep the public API (ForClassWrapper, ForStructWrapper) in place, + we can refactor later if we come up with something cleaner. + + + + + Returns a field codec which effectively wraps a value of type T in a message. + + + + + + + An encode/decode pair for a single field. This effectively encapsulates + all the information needed to read or write the field value from/to a coded + stream. + + + This class is public and has to be as it is used by generated code, but its public + API is very limited - just what the generated code needs to call directly. + + + + This never writes default values to the stream, and does not address "packedness" + in repeated fields itself, other than to know whether or not the field *should* be packed. + + + + + Merges an input stream into a value + + + + + Merges a value into a reference to another value, returning a boolean if the value was set + + + + + Returns a delegate to write a value (unconditionally) to a coded output stream. + + + + + Returns the size calculator for just a value. + + + + + Returns a delegate to read a value from a coded input stream. It is assumed that + the stream is already positioned on the appropriate tag. + + + + + Returns a delegate to merge a value from a coded input stream. + It is assumed that the stream is already positioned on the appropriate tag + + + + + Returns a delegate to merge two values together. + + + + + Returns the fixed size for an entry, or 0 if sizes vary. + + + + + Gets the tag of the codec. + + + The tag of the codec. + + + + + Gets the end tag of the codec or 0 if there is no end tag + + + The end tag of the codec. + + + + + Default value for this codec. Usually the same for every instance of the same type, but + for string/ByteString wrapper fields the codec's default value is null, whereas for + other string/ByteString fields it's "" or ByteString.Empty. + + + The default value of the codec's type. + + + + + Write a tag and the given value, *if* the value is not the default. + + + + + Reads a value of the codec type from the given . + + The input stream to read from. + The value read from the stream. + + + + Calculates the size required to write the given value, with a tag, + if the value is not the default. + + + + + A tree representation of a FieldMask. Each leaf node in this tree represent + a field path in the FieldMask. + + For example, FieldMask "foo.bar,foo.baz,bar.baz" as a tree will be: + + [root] -+- foo -+- bar + | | + | +- baz + | + +- bar --- baz + + + By representing FieldMasks with this tree structure we can easily convert + a FieldMask to a canonical form, merge two FieldMasks, calculate the + intersection to two FieldMasks and traverse all fields specified by the + FieldMask in a message tree. + + + + + Creates an empty FieldMaskTree. + + + + + Creates a FieldMaskTree for a given FieldMask. + + + + + Adds a field path to the tree. In a FieldMask, every field path matches the + specified field as well as all its sub-fields. For example, a field path + "foo.bar" matches field "foo.bar" and also "foo.bar.baz", etc. When adding + a field path to the tree, redundant sub-paths will be removed. That is, + after adding "foo.bar" to the tree, "foo.bar.baz" will be removed if it + exists, which will turn the tree node for "foo.bar" to a leaf node. + Likewise, if the field path to add is a sub-path of an existing leaf node, + nothing will be changed in the tree. + + + + + Merges all field paths in a FieldMask into this tree. + + + + + Converts this tree to a FieldMask. + + + + + Gathers all field paths in a sub-tree. + + + + + Adds the intersection of this tree with the given to . + + + + + Merges all fields specified by this FieldMaskTree from to . + + + + + Merges all fields specified by a sub-tree from to . + + + + + Class containing helpful workarounds for various platform compatibility + + + + + A message type that has a custom string format for diagnostic purposes. + + + + Calling on a generated message type normally + returns the JSON representation. If a message type implements this interface, + then the method will be called instead of the regular + JSON formatting code, but only when ToString() is called either on the message itself + or on another message which contains it. This does not affect the normal JSON formatting of + the message. + + + For example, if you create a proto message representing a GUID, the internal + representation may be a bytes field or four fixed32 fields. However, when debugging + it may be more convenient to see a result in the same format as provides. + + This interface extends to avoid it accidentally being implemented + on types other than messages, where it would not be used by anything in the framework. + + + + + Returns a string representation of this object, for diagnostic purposes. + + + This method is called when a message is formatted as part of a + call. It does not affect the JSON representation used by other than + in calls to . While it is recommended + that the result is valid JSON, this is never assumed by the Protobuf library. + + A string representation of this object, for diagnostic purposes. + + + + Generic interface for a deeply cloneable type. + + + + All generated messages implement this interface, but so do some non-message types. + Additionally, due to the type constraint on T in , + it is simpler to keep this as a separate interface. + + + The type itself, returned by the method. + + + + Creates a deep clone of this object. + + A deep clone of this object. + + + + Generic interface for a Protocol Buffers message containing one or more extensions, where the type parameter is expected to be the same type as the implementation class. + This interface is experiemental and is subject to change. + + + + + Gets the value of the specified extension + + + + + Gets the value of the specified repeated extension or null if the extension isn't registered in this set. + For a version of this method that never returns null, use + + + + + Gets the value of the specified repeated extension, registering it if it hasn't already been registered. + + + + + Sets the value of the specified extension + + + + + Gets whether the value of the specified extension is set + + + + + Clears the value of the specified extension + + + + + Clears the value of the specified repeated extension + + + + + Interface for a Protocol Buffers message, supporting + basic operations required for serialization. + + + + + Merges the data from the specified coded input stream with the current message. + + See the user guide for precise merge semantics. + + + + + Writes the data to the given coded output stream. + + Coded output stream to write the data to. Must not be null. + + + + Calculates the size of this message in Protocol Buffer wire format, in bytes. + + The number of bytes required to write this message + to a coded output stream. + + + + Descriptor for this message. All instances are expected to return the same descriptor, + and for generated types this will be an explicitly-implemented member, returning the + same value as the static property declared on the type. + + + + + Generic interface for a Protocol Buffers message, + where the type parameter is expected to be the same type as + the implementation class. + + The message type. + + + + Merges the given message into this one. + + See the user guide for precise merge semantics. + The message to merge with this one. Must not be null. + + + + Thrown when an attempt is made to parse invalid JSON, e.g. using + a non-string property key, or including a redundant comma. Parsing a protocol buffer + message represented in JSON using can throw both this + exception and depending on the situation. This + exception is only thrown for "pure JSON" errors, whereas InvalidProtocolBufferException + is thrown when the JSON may be valid in and of itself, but cannot be parsed as a protocol buffer + message. + + + + + Thrown when a protocol message being parsed is invalid in some way, + e.g. it contains a malformed varint or a negative byte length. + + + + + Creates an exception for an error condition of an invalid tag being encountered. + + + + + Reflection-based converter from messages to JSON. + + + + Instances of this class are thread-safe, with no mutable state. + + + This is a simple start to get JSON formatting working. As it's reflection-based, + it's not as quick as baking calls into generated messages - but is a simpler implementation. + (This code is generally not heavily optimized.) + + + + + + Returns a formatter using the default settings. + + + + + The JSON representation of the first 160 characters of Unicode. + Empty strings are replaced by the static constructor. + + + + + Creates a new formatted with the given settings. + + The settings. + + + + Formats the specified message as JSON. + + The message to format. + The formatted message. + + + + Formats the specified message as JSON. + + The message to format. + The TextWriter to write the formatted message to. + The formatted message. + + + + Converts a message to JSON for diagnostic purposes with no extra context. + + + + This differs from calling on the default JSON + formatter in its handling of . As no type registry is available + in calls, the normal way of resolving the type of + an Any message cannot be applied. Instead, a JSON property named @value + is included with the base64 data from the property of the message. + + The value returned by this method is only designed to be used for diagnostic + purposes. It may not be parsable by , and may not be parsable + by other Protocol Buffer implementations. + + The message to format for diagnostic purposes. + The diagnostic-only JSON representation of the message + + + + Writes a single value to the given writer as JSON. Only types understood by + Protocol Buffers can be written in this way. This method is only exposed for + advanced use cases; most users should be using + or . + + The writer to write the value to. Must not be null. + The value to write. May be null. + + + + Central interception point for well-known type formatting. Any well-known types which + don't need special handling can fall back to WriteMessage. We avoid assuming that the + values are using the embedded well-known types, in order to allow for dynamic messages + in the future. + + + + + Writes a string (including leading and trailing double quotes) to a builder, escaping as required. + + + Other than surrogate pair handling, this code is mostly taken from src/google/protobuf/util/internal/json_escaping.cc. + + + + + Settings controlling JSON formatting. + + + + + Default settings, as used by + + + + + Whether fields whose values are the default for the field type (e.g. 0 for integers) + should be formatted (true) or omitted (false). + + + + + The type registry used to format messages. + + + + + Whether to format enums as ints. Defaults to false. + + + + + Creates a new object with the specified formatting of default values + and an empty type registry. + + true if default values (0, empty strings etc) should be formatted; false otherwise. + + + + Creates a new object with the specified formatting of default values + and type registry. + + true if default values (0, empty strings etc) should be formatted; false otherwise. + The to use when formatting messages. + + + + Creates a new object with the specified parameters. + + true if default values (0, empty strings etc) should be formatted; false otherwise. + The to use when formatting messages. TypeRegistry.Empty will be used if it is null. + true to format the enums as integers; false to format enums as enum names. + + + + Creates a new object with the specified formatting of default values and the current settings. + + true if default values (0, empty strings etc) should be formatted; false otherwise. + + + + Creates a new object with the specified type registry and the current settings. + + The to use when formatting messages. + + + + Creates a new object with the specified enums formatting option and the current settings. + + true to format the enums as integers; false to format enums as enum names. + + + + Reflection-based converter from JSON to messages. + + + + Instances of this class are thread-safe, with no mutable state. + + + This is a simple start to get JSON parsing working. As it's reflection-based, + it's not as quick as baking calls into generated messages - but is a simpler implementation. + (This code is generally not heavily optimized.) + + + + + + Returns a formatter using the default settings. + + + + + Creates a new formatted with the given settings. + + The settings. + + + + Parses and merges the information into the given message. + + The message to merge the JSON information into. + The JSON to parse. + + + + Parses JSON read from and merges the information into the given message. + + The message to merge the JSON information into. + Reader providing the JSON to parse. + + + + Merges the given message using data from the given tokenizer. In most cases, the next + token should be a "start object" token, but wrapper types and nullity can invalidate + that assumption. This is implemented as an LL(1) recursive descent parser over the stream + of tokens provided by the tokenizer. This token stream is assumed to be valid JSON, with the + tokenizer performing that validation - but not every token stream is valid "protobuf JSON". + + + + + Parses into a new message. + + The type of message to create. + The JSON to parse. + The JSON does not comply with RFC 7159 + The JSON does not represent a Protocol Buffers message correctly + + + + Parses JSON read from into a new message. + + The type of message to create. + Reader providing the JSON to parse. + The JSON does not comply with RFC 7159 + The JSON does not represent a Protocol Buffers message correctly + + + + Parses into a new message. + + The JSON to parse. + Descriptor of message type to parse. + The JSON does not comply with RFC 7159 + The JSON does not represent a Protocol Buffers message correctly + + + + Parses JSON read from into a new message. + + Reader providing the JSON to parse. + Descriptor of message type to parse. + The JSON does not comply with RFC 7159 + The JSON does not represent a Protocol Buffers message correctly + + + + Creates a new instance of the message type for the given field. + + + + + Checks that any infinite/NaN values originated from the correct text. + This corrects the lenient whitespace handling of double.Parse/float.Parse, as well as the + way that Mono parses out-of-range values as infinity. + + + + + Settings controlling JSON parsing. + + + + + Default settings, as used by . This has the same default + recursion limit as , and an empty type registry. + + + + + The maximum depth of messages to parse. Note that this limit only applies to parsing + messages, not collections - so a message within a collection within a message only counts as + depth 2, not 3. + + + + + The type registry used to parse messages. + + + + + Whether the parser should ignore unknown fields (true) or throw an exception when + they are encountered (false). + + + + + Creates a new object with the specified recursion limit. + + The maximum depth of messages to parse + + + + Creates a new object with the specified recursion limit and type registry. + + The maximum depth of messages to parse + The type registry used to parse messages + + + + Creates a new object set to either ignore unknown fields, or throw an exception + when unknown fields are encountered. + + true if unknown fields should be ignored when parsing; false to throw an exception. + + + + Creates a new object based on this one, but with the specified recursion limit. + + The new recursion limit. + + + + Creates a new object based on this one, but with the specified type registry. + + The new type registry. Must not be null. + + + + Simple but strict JSON tokenizer, rigidly following RFC 7159. + + + + This tokenizer is stateful, and only returns "useful" tokens - names, values etc. + It does not create tokens for the separator between names and values, or for the comma + between values. It validates the token stream as it goes - so callers can assume that the + tokens it produces are appropriate. For example, it would never produce "start object, end array." + + Implementation details: the base class handles single token push-back and + Not thread-safe. + + + + + Creates a tokenizer that reads from the given text reader. + + + + + Creates a tokenizer that first replays the given list of tokens, then continues reading + from another tokenizer. Note that if the returned tokenizer is "pushed back", that does not push back + on the continuation tokenizer, or vice versa. Care should be taken when using this method - it was + created for the sake of Any parsing. + + + + + Returns the depth of the stack, purely in objects (not collections). + Informally, this is the number of remaining unclosed '{' characters we have. + + + + + Returns the next JSON token in the stream. An EndDocument token is returned to indicate the end of the stream, + after which point Next() should not be called again. + + This implementation provides single-token buffering, and calls if there is no buffered token. + The next token in the stream. This is never null. + This method is called after an EndDocument token has been returned + The input text does not comply with RFC 7159 + + + + Returns the next JSON token in the stream, when requested by the base class. (The method delegates + to this if it doesn't have a buffered token.) + + This method is called after an EndDocument token has been returned + The input text does not comply with RFC 7159 + + + + Skips the value we're about to read. This must only be called immediately after reading a property name. + If the value is an object or an array, the complete object/array is skipped. + + + + + Tokenizer which first exhausts a list of tokens, then consults another tokenizer. + + + + + Tokenizer which does all the *real* work of parsing JSON. + + + + + This method essentially just loops through characters skipping whitespace, validating and + changing state (e.g. from ObjectBeforeColon to ObjectAfterColon) + until it reaches something which will be a genuine token (e.g. a start object, or a value) at which point + it returns the token. Although the method is large, it would be relatively hard to break down further... most + of it is the large switch statement, which sometimes returns and sometimes doesn't. + + + + + Reads a string token. It is assumed that the opening " has already been read. + + + + + Reads an escaped character. It is assumed that the leading backslash has already been read. + + + + + Reads an escaped Unicode 4-nybble hex sequence. It is assumed that the leading \u has already been read. + + + + + Consumes a text-only literal, throwing an exception if the read text doesn't match it. + It is assumed that the first letter of the literal has already been read. + + + + + Validates that we're in a valid state to read a value (using the given error prefix if necessary) + and changes the state to the appropriate one, e.g. ObjectAfterColon to ObjectAfterProperty. + + + + + Pops the top-most container, and sets the state to the appropriate one for the end of a value + in the parent container. + + + + + Possible states of the tokenizer. + + + This is a flags enum purely so we can simply and efficiently represent a set of valid states + for checking. + + Each is documented with an example, + where ^ represents the current position within the text stream. The examples all use string values, + but could be any value, including nested objects/arrays. + The complete state of the tokenizer also includes a stack to indicate the contexts (arrays/objects). + Any additional notional state of "AfterValue" indicates that a value has been completed, at which + point there's an immediate transition to ExpectedEndOfDocument, ObjectAfterProperty or ArrayAfterValue. + + + These states were derived manually by reading RFC 7159 carefully. + + + + + + ^ { "foo": "bar" } + Before the value in a document. Next states: ObjectStart, ArrayStart, "AfterValue" + + + + + { "foo": "bar" } ^ + After the value in a document. Next states: ReaderExhausted + + + + + { "foo": "bar" } ^ (and already read to the end of the reader) + Terminal state. + + + + + { ^ "foo": "bar" } + Before the *first* property in an object. + Next states: + "AfterValue" (empty object) + ObjectBeforeColon (read a name) + + + + + { "foo" ^ : "bar", "x": "y" } + Next state: ObjectAfterColon + + + + + { "foo" : ^ "bar", "x": "y" } + Before any property other than the first in an object. + (Equivalently: after any property in an object) + Next states: + "AfterValue" (value is simple) + ObjectStart (value is object) + ArrayStart (value is array) + + + + + { "foo" : "bar" ^ , "x" : "y" } + At the end of a property, so expecting either a comma or end-of-object + Next states: ObjectAfterComma or "AfterValue" + + + + + { "foo":"bar", ^ "x":"y" } + Read the comma after the previous property, so expecting another property. + This is like ObjectStart, but closing brace isn't valid here + Next state: ObjectBeforeColon. + + + + + [ ^ "foo", "bar" ] + Before the *first* value in an array. + Next states: + "AfterValue" (read a value) + "AfterValue" (end of array; will pop stack) + + + + + [ "foo" ^ , "bar" ] + After any value in an array, so expecting either a comma or end-of-array + Next states: ArrayAfterComma or "AfterValue" + + + + + [ "foo", ^ "bar" ] + After a comma in an array, so there *must* be another value (simple or complex). + Next states: "AfterValue" (simple value), StartObject, StartArray + + + + + Wrapper around a text reader allowing small amounts of buffering and location handling. + + + + + The buffered next character, if we have one. + + + + + Returns the next character in the stream, or null if we have reached the end. + + + + + + Creates a new exception appropriate for the current state of the reader. + + + + + Stream implementation which proxies another stream, only allowing a certain amount + of data to be read. Note that this is only used to read delimited streams, so it + doesn't attempt to implement everything. + + + + + Extension methods on and . + + + + + Merges data from the given byte array into an existing message. + + The message to merge the data into. + The data to merge, which must be protobuf-encoded binary data. + + + + Merges data from the given byte array slice into an existing message. + + The message to merge the data into. + The data containing the slice to merge, which must be protobuf-encoded binary data. + The offset of the slice to merge. + The length of the slice to merge. + + + + Merges data from the given byte string into an existing message. + + The message to merge the data into. + The data to merge, which must be protobuf-encoded binary data. + + + + Merges data from the given stream into an existing message. + + The message to merge the data into. + Stream containing the data to merge, which must be protobuf-encoded binary data. + + + + Merges length-delimited data from the given stream into an existing message. + + + The stream is expected to contain a length and then the data. Only the amount of data + specified by the length will be consumed. + + The message to merge the data into. + Stream containing the data to merge, which must be protobuf-encoded binary data. + + + + Converts the given message into a byte array in protobuf encoding. + + The message to convert. + The message data as a byte array. + + + + Writes the given message data to the given stream in protobuf encoding. + + The message to write to the stream. + The stream to write to. + + + + Writes the length and then data of the given message to a stream. + + The message to write. + The output stream to write to. + + + + Converts the given message into a byte string in protobuf encoding. + + The message to convert. + The message data as a byte string. + + + + Checks if all required fields in a message have values set. For proto3 messages, this returns true + + + + + A general message parser, typically used by reflection-based code as all the methods + return simple . + + + + + Creates a template instance ready for population. + + An empty message. + + + + Parses a message from a byte array. + + The byte array containing the message. Must not be null. + The newly parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from a byte array slice. + + The byte array containing the message. Must not be null. + The offset of the slice to parse. + The length of the slice to parse. + The newly parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given byte string. + + The data to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given stream. + + The stream to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a length-delimited message from the given stream. + + + The stream is expected to contain a length and then the data. Only the amount of data + specified by the length will be consumed. + + The stream to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given coded input stream. + + The stream to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given JSON. + + The JSON to parse. + The parsed message. + The JSON does not comply with RFC 7159 + The JSON does not represent a Protocol Buffers message correctly + + + + Creates a new message parser which optionally discards unknown fields when parsing. + + Whether or not to discard unknown fields when parsing. + A newly configured message parser. + + + + Creates a new message parser which registers extensions from the specified registry upon creating the message instance + + The extensions to register + A newly configured message parser. + + + + A parser for a specific message type. + + +

+ This delegates most behavior to the + implementation within the original type, but + provides convenient overloads to parse from a variety of sources. +

+

+ Most applications will never need to create their own instances of this type; + instead, use the static Parser property of a generated message type to obtain a + parser for that type. +

+
+ The type of message to be parsed. +
+ + + Creates a new parser. + + + The factory method is effectively an optimization over using a generic constraint + to require a parameterless constructor: delegates are significantly faster to execute. + + Function to invoke when a new, empty message is required. + + + + Creates a template instance ready for population. + + An empty message. + + + + Parses a message from a byte array. + + The byte array containing the message. Must not be null. + The newly parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from a byte array slice. + + The byte array containing the message. Must not be null. + The offset of the slice to parse. + The length of the slice to parse. + The newly parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given byte string. + + The data to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given stream. + + The stream to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a length-delimited message from the given stream. + + + The stream is expected to contain a length and then the data. Only the amount of data + specified by the length will be consumed. + + The stream to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given coded input stream. + + The stream to parse. + The parsed message. + + + + Parses a message from the given JSON. + + The JSON to parse. + The parsed message. + The JSON does not comply with RFC 7159 + The JSON does not represent a Protocol Buffers message correctly + + + + Creates a new message parser which optionally discards unknown fields when parsing. + + Whether or not to discard unknown fields when parsing. + A newly configured message parser. + + + + Creates a new message parser which registers extensions from the specified registry upon creating the message instance + + The extensions to register + A newly configured message parser. + + + + Struct used to hold the keys for the fieldByNumber table in DescriptorPool and the keys for the + extensionByNumber table in ExtensionRegistry. + + + + + Helper methods for throwing exceptions when preconditions are not met. + + + This class is used internally and by generated code; it is not particularly + expected to be used from application code, although nothing prevents it + from being used that way. + + + + + Throws an ArgumentNullException if the given value is null, otherwise + return the value to the caller. + + + + + Throws an ArgumentNullException if the given value is null, otherwise + return the value to the caller. + + + This is equivalent to but without the type parameter + constraint. In most cases, the constraint is useful to prevent you from calling CheckNotNull + with a value type - but it gets in the way if either you want to use it with a nullable + value type, or you want to use it with an unconstrained type parameter. + + + + + Container for a set of custom options specified within a message, field etc. + + + + This type is publicly immutable, but internally mutable. It is only populated + by the descriptor parsing code - by the time any user code is able to see an instance, + it will be fully initialized. + + + If an option is requested using the incorrect method, an answer may still be returned: all + of the numeric types are represented internally using 64-bit integers, for example. It is up to + the caller to ensure that they make the appropriate method call for the option they're interested in. + Note that enum options are simply stored as integers, so the value should be fetched using + and then cast appropriately. + + + Repeated options are currently not supported. Asking for a single value of an option + which was actually repeated will return the last value, except for message types where + all the set values are merged together. + + + + + + Retrieves a Boolean value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a signed 32-bit integer value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a signed 64-bit integer value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves an unsigned 32-bit integer value for the specified option field, + assuming a fixed-length representation. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves an unsigned 64-bit integer value for the specified option field, + assuming a fixed-length representation. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a signed 32-bit integer value for the specified option field, + assuming a fixed-length representation. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a signed 64-bit integer value for the specified option field, + assuming a fixed-length representation. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a signed 32-bit integer value for the specified option field, + assuming a zigzag encoding. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a signed 64-bit integer value for the specified option field, + assuming a zigzag encoding. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves an unsigned 32-bit integer value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves an unsigned 64-bit integer value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a 32-bit floating point value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a 64-bit floating point value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a string value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a bytes value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + + Retrieves a message value for the specified option field. + + The field to fetch the value for. + The output variable to populate. + true if a suitable value for the field was found; false otherwise. + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/descriptor.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/descriptor.proto + + + + The protocol compiler can output a FileDescriptorSet containing the .proto + files it parses. + + + + Field number for the "file" field. + + + + Describes a complete .proto file. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + file name, relative to root of source tree + + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "package" field. + + + + e.g. "foo", "foo.bar", etc. + + + + Gets whether the "package" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "package" field + + + Field number for the "dependency" field. + + + + Names of files imported by this file. + + + + Field number for the "public_dependency" field. + + + + Indexes of the public imported files in the dependency list above. + + + + Field number for the "weak_dependency" field. + + + + Indexes of the weak imported files in the dependency list. + For Google-internal migration only. Do not use. + + + + Field number for the "message_type" field. + + + + All top-level definitions in this file. + + + + Field number for the "enum_type" field. + + + Field number for the "service" field. + + + Field number for the "extension" field. + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + Field number for the "source_code_info" field. + + + + This field contains optional information about the original source code. + You may safely remove this entire field without harming runtime + functionality of the descriptors -- the information is needed only by + development tools. + + + + Field number for the "syntax" field. + + + + The syntax of the proto file. + The supported values are "proto2" and "proto3". + + + + Gets whether the "syntax" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "syntax" field + + + + Describes a message type. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "field" field. + + + Field number for the "extension" field. + + + Field number for the "nested_type" field. + + + Field number for the "enum_type" field. + + + Field number for the "extension_range" field. + + + Field number for the "oneof_decl" field. + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + Field number for the "reserved_range" field. + + + Field number for the "reserved_name" field. + + + + Reserved field names, which may not be used by fields in the same message. + A given name may only be reserved once. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the DescriptorProto message type. + + + Field number for the "start" field. + + + + Inclusive. + + + + Gets whether the "start" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "start" field + + + Field number for the "end" field. + + + + Exclusive. + + + + Gets whether the "end" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "end" field + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Range of reserved tag numbers. Reserved tag numbers may not be used by + fields or extension ranges in the same message. Reserved ranges may + not overlap. + + + + Field number for the "start" field. + + + + Inclusive. + + + + Gets whether the "start" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "start" field + + + Field number for the "end" field. + + + + Exclusive. + + + + Gets whether the "end" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "end" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + + Describes a field within a message. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "number" field. + + + Gets whether the "number" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "number" field + + + Field number for the "label" field. + + + Gets whether the "label" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "label" field + + + Field number for the "type" field. + + + + If type_name is set, this need not be set. If both this and type_name + are set, this must be one of TYPE_ENUM, TYPE_MESSAGE or TYPE_GROUP. + + + + Gets whether the "type" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "type" field + + + Field number for the "type_name" field. + + + + For message and enum types, this is the name of the type. If the name + starts with a '.', it is fully-qualified. Otherwise, C++-like scoping + rules are used to find the type (i.e. first the nested types within this + message are searched, then within the parent, on up to the root + namespace). + + + + Gets whether the "type_name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "type_name" field + + + Field number for the "extendee" field. + + + + For extensions, this is the name of the type being extended. It is + resolved in the same manner as type_name. + + + + Gets whether the "extendee" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "extendee" field + + + Field number for the "default_value" field. + + + + For numeric types, contains the original text representation of the value. + For booleans, "true" or "false". + For strings, contains the default text contents (not escaped in any way). + For bytes, contains the C escaped value. All bytes >= 128 are escaped. + TODO(kenton): Base-64 encode? + + + + Gets whether the "default_value" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "default_value" field + + + Field number for the "oneof_index" field. + + + + If set, gives the index of a oneof in the containing type's oneof_decl + list. This field is a member of that oneof. + + + + Gets whether the "oneof_index" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "oneof_index" field + + + Field number for the "json_name" field. + + + + JSON name of this field. The value is set by protocol compiler. If the + user has set a "json_name" option on this field, that option's value + will be used. Otherwise, it's deduced from the field's name by converting + it to camelCase. + + + + Gets whether the "json_name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "json_name" field + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + Field number for the "proto3_optional" field. + + + + If true, this is a proto3 "optional". When a proto3 field is optional, it + tracks presence regardless of field type. + + When proto3_optional is true, this field must be belong to a oneof to + signal to old proto3 clients that presence is tracked for this field. This + oneof is known as a "synthetic" oneof, and this field must be its sole + member (each proto3 optional field gets its own synthetic oneof). Synthetic + oneofs exist in the descriptor only, and do not generate any API. Synthetic + oneofs must be ordered after all "real" oneofs. + + For message fields, proto3_optional doesn't create any semantic change, + since non-repeated message fields always track presence. However it still + indicates the semantic detail of whether the user wrote "optional" or not. + This can be useful for round-tripping the .proto file. For consistency we + give message fields a synthetic oneof also, even though it is not required + to track presence. This is especially important because the parser can't + tell if a field is a message or an enum, so it must always create a + synthetic oneof. + + Proto2 optional fields do not set this flag, because they already indicate + optional with `LABEL_OPTIONAL`. + + + + Gets whether the "proto3_optional" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "proto3_optional" field + + + Container for nested types declared in the FieldDescriptorProto message type. + + + + 0 is reserved for errors. + Order is weird for historical reasons. + + + + + Not ZigZag encoded. Negative numbers take 10 bytes. Use TYPE_SINT64 if + negative values are likely. + + + + + Not ZigZag encoded. Negative numbers take 10 bytes. Use TYPE_SINT32 if + negative values are likely. + + + + + Tag-delimited aggregate. + Group type is deprecated and not supported in proto3. However, Proto3 + implementations should still be able to parse the group wire format and + treat group fields as unknown fields. + + + + + Length-delimited aggregate. + + + + + New in version 2. + + + + + Uses ZigZag encoding. + + + + + Uses ZigZag encoding. + + + + + 0 is reserved for errors + + + + + Describes a oneof. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Describes an enum type. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + Field number for the "reserved_range" field. + + + + Range of reserved numeric values. Reserved numeric values may not be used + by enum values in the same enum declaration. Reserved ranges may not + overlap. + + + + Field number for the "reserved_name" field. + + + + Reserved enum value names, which may not be reused. A given name may only + be reserved once. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the EnumDescriptorProto message type. + + + + Range of reserved numeric values. Reserved values may not be used by + entries in the same enum. Reserved ranges may not overlap. + + Note that this is distinct from DescriptorProto.ReservedRange in that it + is inclusive such that it can appropriately represent the entire int32 + domain. + + + + Field number for the "start" field. + + + + Inclusive. + + + + Gets whether the "start" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "start" field + + + Field number for the "end" field. + + + + Inclusive. + + + + Gets whether the "end" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "end" field + + + + Describes a value within an enum. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "number" field. + + + Gets whether the "number" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "number" field + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Describes a service. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "method" field. + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Describes a method of a service. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Gets whether the "name" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name" field + + + Field number for the "input_type" field. + + + + Input and output type names. These are resolved in the same way as + FieldDescriptorProto.type_name, but must refer to a message type. + + + + Gets whether the "input_type" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "input_type" field + + + Field number for the "output_type" field. + + + Gets whether the "output_type" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "output_type" field + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + Field number for the "client_streaming" field. + + + + Identifies if client streams multiple client messages + + + + Gets whether the "client_streaming" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "client_streaming" field + + + Field number for the "server_streaming" field. + + + + Identifies if server streams multiple server messages + + + + Gets whether the "server_streaming" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "server_streaming" field + + + Field number for the "java_package" field. + + + + Sets the Java package where classes generated from this .proto will be + placed. By default, the proto package is used, but this is often + inappropriate because proto packages do not normally start with backwards + domain names. + + + + Gets whether the "java_package" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "java_package" field + + + Field number for the "java_outer_classname" field. + + + + If set, all the classes from the .proto file are wrapped in a single + outer class with the given name. This applies to both Proto1 + (equivalent to the old "--one_java_file" option) and Proto2 (where + a .proto always translates to a single class, but you may want to + explicitly choose the class name). + + + + Gets whether the "java_outer_classname" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "java_outer_classname" field + + + Field number for the "java_multiple_files" field. + + + + If set true, then the Java code generator will generate a separate .java + file for each top-level message, enum, and service defined in the .proto + file. Thus, these types will *not* be nested inside the outer class + named by java_outer_classname. However, the outer class will still be + generated to contain the file's getDescriptor() method as well as any + top-level extensions defined in the file. + + + + Gets whether the "java_multiple_files" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "java_multiple_files" field + + + Field number for the "java_generate_equals_and_hash" field. + + + + This option does nothing. + + + + Gets whether the "java_generate_equals_and_hash" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "java_generate_equals_and_hash" field + + + Field number for the "java_string_check_utf8" field. + + + + If set true, then the Java2 code generator will generate code that + throws an exception whenever an attempt is made to assign a non-UTF-8 + byte sequence to a string field. + Message reflection will do the same. + However, an extension field still accepts non-UTF-8 byte sequences. + This option has no effect on when used with the lite runtime. + + + + Gets whether the "java_string_check_utf8" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "java_string_check_utf8" field + + + Field number for the "optimize_for" field. + + + Gets whether the "optimize_for" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "optimize_for" field + + + Field number for the "go_package" field. + + + + Sets the Go package where structs generated from this .proto will be + placed. If omitted, the Go package will be derived from the following: + - The basename of the package import path, if provided. + - Otherwise, the package statement in the .proto file, if present. + - Otherwise, the basename of the .proto file, without extension. + + + + Gets whether the "go_package" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "go_package" field + + + Field number for the "cc_generic_services" field. + + + + Should generic services be generated in each language? "Generic" services + are not specific to any particular RPC system. They are generated by the + main code generators in each language (without additional plugins). + Generic services were the only kind of service generation supported by + early versions of google.protobuf. + + Generic services are now considered deprecated in favor of using plugins + that generate code specific to your particular RPC system. Therefore, + these default to false. Old code which depends on generic services should + explicitly set them to true. + + + + Gets whether the "cc_generic_services" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "cc_generic_services" field + + + Field number for the "java_generic_services" field. + + + Gets whether the "java_generic_services" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "java_generic_services" field + + + Field number for the "py_generic_services" field. + + + Gets whether the "py_generic_services" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "py_generic_services" field + + + Field number for the "php_generic_services" field. + + + Gets whether the "php_generic_services" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "php_generic_services" field + + + Field number for the "deprecated" field. + + + + Is this file deprecated? + Depending on the target platform, this can emit Deprecated annotations + for everything in the file, or it will be completely ignored; in the very + least, this is a formalization for deprecating files. + + + + Gets whether the "deprecated" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "deprecated" field + + + Field number for the "cc_enable_arenas" field. + + + + Enables the use of arenas for the proto messages in this file. This applies + only to generated classes for C++. + + + + Gets whether the "cc_enable_arenas" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "cc_enable_arenas" field + + + Field number for the "objc_class_prefix" field. + + + + Sets the objective c class prefix which is prepended to all objective c + generated classes from this .proto. There is no default. + + + + Gets whether the "objc_class_prefix" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "objc_class_prefix" field + + + Field number for the "csharp_namespace" field. + + + + Namespace for generated classes; defaults to the package. + + + + Gets whether the "csharp_namespace" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "csharp_namespace" field + + + Field number for the "swift_prefix" field. + + + + By default Swift generators will take the proto package and CamelCase it + replacing '.' with underscore and use that to prefix the types/symbols + defined. When this options is provided, they will use this value instead + to prefix the types/symbols defined. + + + + Gets whether the "swift_prefix" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "swift_prefix" field + + + Field number for the "php_class_prefix" field. + + + + Sets the php class prefix which is prepended to all php generated classes + from this .proto. Default is empty. + + + + Gets whether the "php_class_prefix" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "php_class_prefix" field + + + Field number for the "php_namespace" field. + + + + Use this option to change the namespace of php generated classes. Default + is empty. When this option is empty, the package name will be used for + determining the namespace. + + + + Gets whether the "php_namespace" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "php_namespace" field + + + Field number for the "php_metadata_namespace" field. + + + + Use this option to change the namespace of php generated metadata classes. + Default is empty. When this option is empty, the proto file name will be + used for determining the namespace. + + + + Gets whether the "php_metadata_namespace" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "php_metadata_namespace" field + + + Field number for the "ruby_package" field. + + + + Use this option to change the package of ruby generated classes. Default + is empty. When this option is not set, the package name will be used for + determining the ruby package. + + + + Gets whether the "ruby_package" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "ruby_package" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. + See the documentation for the "Options" section above. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the FileOptions message type. + + + + Generated classes can be optimized for speed or code size. + + + + + Generate complete code for parsing, serialization, + + + + + etc. + + + + + Generate code using MessageLite and the lite runtime. + + + + Field number for the "message_set_wire_format" field. + + + + Set true to use the old proto1 MessageSet wire format for extensions. + This is provided for backwards-compatibility with the MessageSet wire + format. You should not use this for any other reason: It's less + efficient, has fewer features, and is more complicated. + + The message must be defined exactly as follows: + message Foo { + option message_set_wire_format = true; + extensions 4 to max; + } + Note that the message cannot have any defined fields; MessageSets only + have extensions. + + All extensions of your type must be singular messages; e.g. they cannot + be int32s, enums, or repeated messages. + + Because this is an option, the above two restrictions are not enforced by + the protocol compiler. + + + + Gets whether the "message_set_wire_format" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "message_set_wire_format" field + + + Field number for the "no_standard_descriptor_accessor" field. + + + + Disables the generation of the standard "descriptor()" accessor, which can + conflict with a field of the same name. This is meant to make migration + from proto1 easier; new code should avoid fields named "descriptor". + + + + Gets whether the "no_standard_descriptor_accessor" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "no_standard_descriptor_accessor" field + + + Field number for the "deprecated" field. + + + + Is this message deprecated? + Depending on the target platform, this can emit Deprecated annotations + for the message, or it will be completely ignored; in the very least, + this is a formalization for deprecating messages. + + + + Gets whether the "deprecated" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "deprecated" field + + + Field number for the "map_entry" field. + + + + Whether the message is an automatically generated map entry type for the + maps field. + + For maps fields: + map<KeyType, ValueType> map_field = 1; + The parsed descriptor looks like: + message MapFieldEntry { + option map_entry = true; + optional KeyType key = 1; + optional ValueType value = 2; + } + repeated MapFieldEntry map_field = 1; + + Implementations may choose not to generate the map_entry=true message, but + use a native map in the target language to hold the keys and values. + The reflection APIs in such implementations still need to work as + if the field is a repeated message field. + + NOTE: Do not set the option in .proto files. Always use the maps syntax + instead. The option should only be implicitly set by the proto compiler + parser. + + + + Gets whether the "map_entry" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "map_entry" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + Field number for the "ctype" field. + + + + The ctype option instructs the C++ code generator to use a different + representation of the field than it normally would. See the specific + options below. This option is not yet implemented in the open source + release -- sorry, we'll try to include it in a future version! + + + + Gets whether the "ctype" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "ctype" field + + + Field number for the "packed" field. + + + + The packed option can be enabled for repeated primitive fields to enable + a more efficient representation on the wire. Rather than repeatedly + writing the tag and type for each element, the entire array is encoded as + a single length-delimited blob. In proto3, only explicit setting it to + false will avoid using packed encoding. + + + + Gets whether the "packed" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "packed" field + + + Field number for the "jstype" field. + + + + The jstype option determines the JavaScript type used for values of the + field. The option is permitted only for 64 bit integral and fixed types + (int64, uint64, sint64, fixed64, sfixed64). A field with jstype JS_STRING + is represented as JavaScript string, which avoids loss of precision that + can happen when a large value is converted to a floating point JavaScript. + Specifying JS_NUMBER for the jstype causes the generated JavaScript code to + use the JavaScript "number" type. The behavior of the default option + JS_NORMAL is implementation dependent. + + This option is an enum to permit additional types to be added, e.g. + goog.math.Integer. + + + + Gets whether the "jstype" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "jstype" field + + + Field number for the "lazy" field. + + + + Should this field be parsed lazily? Lazy applies only to message-type + fields. It means that when the outer message is initially parsed, the + inner message's contents will not be parsed but instead stored in encoded + form. The inner message will actually be parsed when it is first accessed. + + This is only a hint. Implementations are free to choose whether to use + eager or lazy parsing regardless of the value of this option. However, + setting this option true suggests that the protocol author believes that + using lazy parsing on this field is worth the additional bookkeeping + overhead typically needed to implement it. + + This option does not affect the public interface of any generated code; + all method signatures remain the same. Furthermore, thread-safety of the + interface is not affected by this option; const methods remain safe to + call from multiple threads concurrently, while non-const methods continue + to require exclusive access. + + Note that implementations may choose not to check required fields within + a lazy sub-message. That is, calling IsInitialized() on the outer message + may return true even if the inner message has missing required fields. + This is necessary because otherwise the inner message would have to be + parsed in order to perform the check, defeating the purpose of lazy + parsing. An implementation which chooses not to check required fields + must be consistent about it. That is, for any particular sub-message, the + implementation must either *always* check its required fields, or *never* + check its required fields, regardless of whether or not the message has + been parsed. + + + + Gets whether the "lazy" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "lazy" field + + + Field number for the "deprecated" field. + + + + Is this field deprecated? + Depending on the target platform, this can emit Deprecated annotations + for accessors, or it will be completely ignored; in the very least, this + is a formalization for deprecating fields. + + + + Gets whether the "deprecated" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "deprecated" field + + + Field number for the "weak" field. + + + + For Google-internal migration only. Do not use. + + + + Gets whether the "weak" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "weak" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the FieldOptions message type. + + + + Default mode. + + + + + Use the default type. + + + + + Use JavaScript strings. + + + + + Use JavaScript numbers. + + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + Field number for the "allow_alias" field. + + + + Set this option to true to allow mapping different tag names to the same + value. + + + + Gets whether the "allow_alias" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "allow_alias" field + + + Field number for the "deprecated" field. + + + + Is this enum deprecated? + Depending on the target platform, this can emit Deprecated annotations + for the enum, or it will be completely ignored; in the very least, this + is a formalization for deprecating enums. + + + + Gets whether the "deprecated" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "deprecated" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + Field number for the "deprecated" field. + + + + Is this enum value deprecated? + Depending on the target platform, this can emit Deprecated annotations + for the enum value, or it will be completely ignored; in the very least, + this is a formalization for deprecating enum values. + + + + Gets whether the "deprecated" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "deprecated" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + Field number for the "deprecated" field. + + + + Is this service deprecated? + Depending on the target platform, this can emit Deprecated annotations + for the service, or it will be completely ignored; in the very least, + this is a formalization for deprecating services. + + + + Gets whether the "deprecated" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "deprecated" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + Field number for the "deprecated" field. + + + + Is this method deprecated? + Depending on the target platform, this can emit Deprecated annotations + for the method, or it will be completely ignored; in the very least, + this is a formalization for deprecating methods. + + + + Gets whether the "deprecated" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "deprecated" field + + + Field number for the "idempotency_level" field. + + + Gets whether the "idempotency_level" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "idempotency_level" field + + + Field number for the "uninterpreted_option" field. + + + + The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the MethodOptions message type. + + + + Is this method side-effect-free (or safe in HTTP parlance), or idempotent, + or neither? HTTP based RPC implementation may choose GET verb for safe + methods, and PUT verb for idempotent methods instead of the default POST. + + + + + implies idempotent + + + + + idempotent, but may have side effects + + + + + A message representing a option the parser does not recognize. This only + appears in options protos created by the compiler::Parser class. + DescriptorPool resolves these when building Descriptor objects. Therefore, + options protos in descriptor objects (e.g. returned by Descriptor::options(), + or produced by Descriptor::CopyTo()) will never have UninterpretedOptions + in them. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + Field number for the "identifier_value" field. + + + + The value of the uninterpreted option, in whatever type the tokenizer + identified it as during parsing. Exactly one of these should be set. + + + + Gets whether the "identifier_value" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "identifier_value" field + + + Field number for the "positive_int_value" field. + + + Gets whether the "positive_int_value" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "positive_int_value" field + + + Field number for the "negative_int_value" field. + + + Gets whether the "negative_int_value" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "negative_int_value" field + + + Field number for the "double_value" field. + + + Gets whether the "double_value" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "double_value" field + + + Field number for the "string_value" field. + + + Gets whether the "string_value" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "string_value" field + + + Field number for the "aggregate_value" field. + + + Gets whether the "aggregate_value" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "aggregate_value" field + + + Container for nested types declared in the UninterpretedOption message type. + + + + The name of the uninterpreted option. Each string represents a segment in + a dot-separated name. is_extension is true iff a segment represents an + extension (denoted with parentheses in options specs in .proto files). + E.g.,{ ["foo", false], ["bar.baz", true], ["qux", false] } represents + "foo.(bar.baz).qux". + + + + Field number for the "name_part" field. + + + Gets whether the "name_part" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "name_part" field + + + Field number for the "is_extension" field. + + + Gets whether the "is_extension" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "is_extension" field + + + + Encapsulates information about the original source file from which a + FileDescriptorProto was generated. + + + + Field number for the "location" field. + + + + A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which + corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended + to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar + tools. + + For example, say we have a file like: + message Foo { + optional string foo = 1; + } + Let's look at just the field definition: + optional string foo = 1; + ^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^ + a bc de f ghi + We have the following locations: + span path represents + [a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition. + [a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional). + [c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string). + [e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo). + [g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1). + + Notes: + - A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any + particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are + logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire + extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will + have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated + field without an index. + - Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single + logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most + obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple + extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path. + - A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For + example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the + beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within + the block. + - Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span + does not mean that it is a descendant. For example, a "group" defines + both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations + corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap. + - Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to + ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could + be recorded in the future. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the SourceCodeInfo message type. + + + Field number for the "path" field. + + + + Identifies which part of the FileDescriptorProto was defined at this + location. + + Each element is a field number or an index. They form a path from + the root FileDescriptorProto to the place where the definition. For + example, this path: + [ 4, 3, 2, 7, 1 ] + refers to: + file.message_type(3) // 4, 3 + .field(7) // 2, 7 + .name() // 1 + This is because FileDescriptorProto.message_type has field number 4: + repeated DescriptorProto message_type = 4; + and DescriptorProto.field has field number 2: + repeated FieldDescriptorProto field = 2; + and FieldDescriptorProto.name has field number 1: + optional string name = 1; + + Thus, the above path gives the location of a field name. If we removed + the last element: + [ 4, 3, 2, 7 ] + this path refers to the whole field declaration (from the beginning + of the label to the terminating semicolon). + + + + Field number for the "span" field. + + + + Always has exactly three or four elements: start line, start column, + end line (optional, otherwise assumed same as start line), end column. + These are packed into a single field for efficiency. Note that line + and column numbers are zero-based -- typically you will want to add + 1 to each before displaying to a user. + + + + Field number for the "leading_comments" field. + + + + If this SourceCodeInfo represents a complete declaration, these are any + comments appearing before and after the declaration which appear to be + attached to the declaration. + + A series of line comments appearing on consecutive lines, with no other + tokens appearing on those lines, will be treated as a single comment. + + leading_detached_comments will keep paragraphs of comments that appear + before (but not connected to) the current element. Each paragraph, + separated by empty lines, will be one comment element in the repeated + field. + + Only the comment content is provided; comment markers (e.g. //) are + stripped out. For block comments, leading whitespace and an asterisk + will be stripped from the beginning of each line other than the first. + Newlines are included in the output. + + Examples: + + optional int32 foo = 1; // Comment attached to foo. + // Comment attached to bar. + optional int32 bar = 2; + + optional string baz = 3; + // Comment attached to baz. + // Another line attached to baz. + + // Comment attached to qux. + // + // Another line attached to qux. + optional double qux = 4; + + // Detached comment for corge. This is not leading or trailing comments + // to qux or corge because there are blank lines separating it from + // both. + + // Detached comment for corge paragraph 2. + + optional string corge = 5; + /* Block comment attached + * to corge. Leading asterisks + * will be removed. */ + /* Block comment attached to + * grault. */ + optional int32 grault = 6; + + // ignored detached comments. + + + + Gets whether the "leading_comments" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "leading_comments" field + + + Field number for the "trailing_comments" field. + + + Gets whether the "trailing_comments" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "trailing_comments" field + + + Field number for the "leading_detached_comments" field. + + + + Describes the relationship between generated code and its original source + file. A GeneratedCodeInfo message is associated with only one generated + source file, but may contain references to different source .proto files. + + + + Field number for the "annotation" field. + + + + An Annotation connects some span of text in generated code to an element + of its generating .proto file. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the GeneratedCodeInfo message type. + + + Field number for the "path" field. + + + + Identifies the element in the original source .proto file. This field + is formatted the same as SourceCodeInfo.Location.path. + + + + Field number for the "source_file" field. + + + + Identifies the filesystem path to the original source .proto. + + + + Gets whether the "source_file" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "source_file" field + + + Field number for the "begin" field. + + + + Identifies the starting offset in bytes in the generated code + that relates to the identified object. + + + + Gets whether the "begin" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "begin" field + + + Field number for the "end" field. + + + + Identifies the ending offset in bytes in the generated code that + relates to the identified offset. The end offset should be one past + the last relevant byte (so the length of the text = end - begin). + + + + Gets whether the "end" field is set + + + Clears the value of the "end" field + + + + Base class for nearly all descriptors, providing common functionality. + + + + + The index of this descriptor within its parent descriptor. + + + This returns the index of this descriptor within its parent, for + this descriptor's type. (There can be duplicate values for different + types, e.g. one enum type with index 0 and one message type with index 0.) + + + + + Returns the name of the entity (field, message etc) being described. + + + + + The fully qualified name of the descriptor's target. + + + + + The file this descriptor was declared in. + + + + + The declaration information about the descriptor, or null if no declaration information + is available for this descriptor. + + + This information is typically only available for dynamically loaded descriptors, + for example within a protoc plugin where the full descriptors, including source info, + are passed to the code by protoc. + + + + + Retrieves the list of nested descriptors corresponding to the given field number, if any. + If the field is unknown or not a nested descriptor list, return null to terminate the search. + The default implementation returns null. + + + + + Provides additional information about the declaration of a descriptor, + such as source location and comments. + + + + + The descriptor this declaration relates to. + + + + + The start line of the declaration within the source file. This value is 1-based. + + + + + The start column of the declaration within the source file. This value is 1-based. + + + + + // The end line of the declaration within the source file. This value is 1-based. + + + + + The end column of the declaration within the source file. This value is 1-based, and + exclusive. (The final character of the declaration is on the column before this value.) + + + + + Comments appearing before the declaration. Never null, but may be empty. Multi-line comments + are represented as a newline-separated string. Leading whitespace and the comment marker ("//") + are removed from each line. + + + + + Comments appearing after the declaration. Never null, but may be empty. Multi-line comments + are represented as a newline-separated string. Leading whitespace and the comment marker ("//") + are removed from each line. + + + + + Comments appearing before the declaration, but separated from it by blank + lines. Each string represents a newline-separated paragraph of comments. + Leading whitespace and the comment marker ("//") are removed from each line. + The list is never null, but may be empty. Likewise each element is never null, but may be empty. + + + + + Contains lookup tables containing all the descriptors defined in a particular file. + + + + + Finds a symbol of the given name within the pool. + + The type of symbol to look for + Fully-qualified name to look up + The symbol with the given name and type, + or null if the symbol doesn't exist or has the wrong type + + + + Adds a package to the symbol tables. If a package by the same name + already exists, that is fine, but if some other kind of symbol + exists under the same name, an exception is thrown. If the package + has multiple components, this also adds the parent package(s). + + + + + Adds a symbol to the symbol table. + + The symbol already existed + in the symbol table. + + + + Verifies that the descriptor's name is valid (i.e. it contains + only letters, digits and underscores, and does not start with a digit). + + + + + + Returns the field with the given number in the given descriptor, + or null if it can't be found. + + + + + Adds a field to the fieldsByNumber table. + + A field with the same + containing type and number already exists. + + + + Adds an enum value to the enumValuesByNumber table. If an enum value + with the same type and number already exists, this method does nothing. + (This is allowed; the first value defined with the number takes precedence.) + + + + + Looks up a descriptor by name, relative to some other descriptor. + The name may be fully-qualified (with a leading '.'), partially-qualified, + or unqualified. C++-like name lookup semantics are used to search for the + matching descriptor. + + + This isn't heavily optimized, but it's only used during cross linking anyway. + If it starts being used more widely, we should look at performance more carefully. + + + + + Internal class containing utility methods when working with descriptors. + + + + + Equivalent to Func[TInput, int, TOutput] but usable in .NET 2.0. Only used to convert + arrays. + + + + + Converts the given array into a read-only list, applying the specified conversion to + each input element. + + + + + Thrown when building descriptors fails because the source DescriptorProtos + are not valid. + + + + + The full name of the descriptor where the error occurred. + + + + + A human-readable description of the error. (The Message property + is made up of the descriptor's name and this description.) + + + + + Descriptor for an enum type in a .proto file. + + + + + The brief name of the descriptor's target. + + + + + The CLR type for this enum. For generated code, this will be a CLR enum type. + + + + + If this is a nested type, get the outer descriptor, otherwise null. + + + + + An unmodifiable list of defined value descriptors for this enum. + + + + + Finds an enum value by number. If multiple enum values have the + same number, this returns the first defined value with that number. + If there is no value for the given number, this returns null. + + + + + Finds an enum value by name. + + The unqualified name of the value (e.g. "FOO"). + The value's descriptor, or null if not found. + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this enum. + + + + + The EnumOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value enum option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value enum option for this descriptor + + + + + Descriptor for a single enum value within an enum in a .proto file. + + + + + Returns the name of the enum value described by this object. + + + + + Returns the number associated with this enum value. + + + + + Returns the enum descriptor that this value is part of. + + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this enum value. + + + + + The EnumValueOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value enum value option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value enum value option for this descriptor + + + + + A collection to simplify retrieving the descriptors of extensions in a descriptor for a message + + + + + Returns a readonly list of all the extensions defined in this type in + the order they were defined in the source .proto file + + + + + Returns a readonly list of all the extensions define in this type that extend + the provided descriptor type in the order they were defined in the source .proto file + + + + + Returns a readonly list of all the extensions define in this type that extend + the provided descriptor type in accending field order + + + + + Base class for field accessors. + + + + + Descriptor for a field or extension within a message in a .proto file. + + + + + Get the field's containing message type, or null if it is a field defined at the top level of a file as an extension. + + + + + Returns the oneof containing this field, or null if it is not part of a oneof. + + + + + Returns the oneof containing this field if it's a "real" oneof, or null if either this + field is not part of a oneof, or the oneof is synthetic. + + + + + The effective JSON name for this field. This is usually the lower-camel-cased form of the field name, + but can be overridden using the json_name option in the .proto file. + + + + + Indicates whether this field supports presence, either implicitly (e.g. due to it being a message + type field) or explicitly via Has/Clear members. If this returns true, it is safe to call + and + on this field's accessor with a suitable message. + + + + + An extension identifier for this field, or null if this field isn't an extension. + + + + + The brief name of the descriptor's target. + + + + + Returns the accessor for this field. + + + + While a describes the field, it does not provide + any way of obtaining or changing the value of the field within a specific message; + that is the responsibility of the accessor. + + + In descriptors for generated code, the value returned by this property will be non-null for all + regular fields. However, if a message containing a map field is introspected, the list of nested messages will include + an auto-generated nested key/value pair message for the field. This is not represented in any + generated type, and the value of the map field itself is represented by a dictionary in the + reflection API. There are never instances of those "hidden" messages, so no accessor is provided + and this property will return null. + + + In dynamically loaded descriptors, the value returned by this property will current be null; + if and when dynamic messages are supported, it will return a suitable accessor to work with + them. + + + + + + Maps a field type as included in the .proto file to a FieldType. + + + + + Returns true if this field is a repeated field; false otherwise. + + + + + Returns true if this field is a required field; false otherwise. + + + + + Returns true if this field is a map field; false otherwise. + + + + + Returns true if this field is a packed, repeated field; false otherwise. + + + + + Returns true if this field extends another message type; false otherwise. + + + + + Returns the type of the field. + + + + + Returns the field number declared in the proto file. + + + + + Compares this descriptor with another one, ordering in "canonical" order + which simply means ascending order by field number. + must be a field of the same type, i.e. the of + both fields must be the same. + + + + + For enum fields, returns the field's type. + + + + + For embedded message and group fields, returns the field's type. + + + + + For extension fields, returns the extended type + + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this field. + + + + + The FieldOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value field option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value field option for this descriptor + + + + + Look up and cross-link all field types etc. + + + + + Enumeration of all the possible field types. + + + + + The double field type. + + + + + The float field type. + + + + + The int64 field type. + + + + + The uint64 field type. + + + + + The int32 field type. + + + + + The fixed64 field type. + + + + + The fixed32 field type. + + + + + The bool field type. + + + + + The string field type. + + + + + The field type used for groups. + + + + + The field type used for message fields. + + + + + The bytes field type. + + + + + The uint32 field type. + + + + + The sfixed32 field type. + + + + + The sfixed64 field type. + + + + + The sint32 field type. + + + + + The sint64 field type. + + + + + The field type used for enum fields. + + + + + The syntax of a .proto file + + + + + Proto2 syntax + + + + + Proto3 syntax + + + + + An unknown declared syntax + + + + + Describes a .proto file, including everything defined within. + IDescriptor is implemented such that the File property returns this descriptor, + and the FullName is the same as the Name. + + + + + Computes the full name of a descriptor within this file, with an optional parent message. + + + + + Extracts public dependencies from direct dependencies. This is a static method despite its + first parameter, as the value we're in the middle of constructing is only used for exceptions. + + + + + The descriptor in its protocol message representation. + + + + + The syntax of the file + + + + + The file name. + + + + + The package as declared in the .proto file. This may or may not + be equivalent to the .NET namespace of the generated classes. + + + + + Unmodifiable list of top-level message types declared in this file. + + + + + Unmodifiable list of top-level enum types declared in this file. + + + + + Unmodifiable list of top-level services declared in this file. + + + + + Unmodifiable list of top-level extensions declared in this file. + Note that some extensions may be incomplete (FieldDescriptor.Extension may be null) + if this descriptor was generated using a version of protoc that did not fully + support extensions in C#. + + + + + Unmodifiable list of this file's dependencies (imports). + + + + + Unmodifiable list of this file's public dependencies (public imports). + + + + + The original serialized binary form of this descriptor. + + + + + Implementation of IDescriptor.FullName - just returns the same as Name. + + + + + Implementation of IDescriptor.File - just returns this descriptor. + + + + + Pool containing symbol descriptors. + + + + + Finds a type (message, enum, service or extension) in the file by name. Does not find nested types. + + The unqualified type name to look for. + The type of descriptor to look for + The type's descriptor, or null if not found. + + + + Builds a FileDescriptor from its protocol buffer representation. + + The original serialized descriptor data. + We have only limited proto2 support, so serializing FileDescriptorProto + would not necessarily give us this. + The protocol message form of the FileDescriptor. + FileDescriptors corresponding to all of the + file's dependencies, in the exact order listed in the .proto file. May be null, + in which case it is treated as an empty array. + Whether unknown dependencies are ignored (true) or cause an exception to be thrown (false). + Details about generated code, for the purposes of reflection. + If is not + a valid descriptor. This can occur for a number of reasons, such as a field + having an undefined type or because two messages were defined with the same name. + + + + Creates a descriptor for generated code. + + + This method is only designed to be used by the results of generating code with protoc, + which creates the appropriate dependencies etc. It has to be public because the generated + code is "external", but should not be called directly by end users. + + + + + Converts the given descriptor binary data into FileDescriptor objects. + Note: reflection using the returned FileDescriptors is not currently supported. + + The binary file descriptor proto data. Must not be null, and any + dependencies must come before the descriptor which depends on them. (If A depends on B, and B + depends on C, then the descriptors must be presented in the order C, B, A.) This is compatible + with the order in which protoc provides descriptors to plugins. + The file descriptors corresponding to . + + + + Returns a that represents this instance. + + + A that represents this instance. + + + + + Returns the file descriptor for descriptor.proto. + + + This is used for protos which take a direct dependency on descriptor.proto, typically for + annotations. While descriptor.proto is a proto2 file, it is built into the Google.Protobuf + runtime for reflection purposes. The messages are internal to the runtime as they would require + proto2 semantics for full support, but the file descriptor is available via this property. The + C# codegen in protoc automatically uses this property when it detects a dependency on descriptor.proto. + + + The file descriptor for descriptor.proto. + + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this file. + + + + + The FileOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value file option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value file option for this descriptor + + + + + Performs initialization for the given generic type argument. + + + This method is present for the sake of AOT compilers. It allows code (whether handwritten or generated) + to make calls into the reflection machinery of this library to express an intention to use that type + reflectively (e.g. for JSON parsing and formatting). The call itself does almost nothing, but AOT compilers + attempting to determine which generic type arguments need to be handled will spot the code path and act + accordingly. + + The type to force initialization for. + + + + Extra information provided by generated code when initializing a message or file descriptor. + These are constructed as required, and are not long-lived. Hand-written code should + never need to use this type. + + + + + Irrelevant for file descriptors; the CLR type for the message for message descriptors. + + + + + Irrelevant for file descriptors; the parser for message descriptors. + + + + + Irrelevant for file descriptors; the CLR property names (in message descriptor field order) + for fields in the message for message descriptors. + + + + + The extensions defined within this file/message descriptor + + + + + Irrelevant for file descriptors; the CLR property "base" names (in message descriptor oneof order) + for oneofs in the message for message descriptors. It is expected that for a oneof name of "Foo", + there will be a "FooCase" property and a "ClearFoo" method. + + + + + The reflection information for types within this file/message descriptor. Elements may be null + if there is no corresponding generated type, e.g. for map entry types. + + + + + The CLR types for enums within this file/message descriptor. + + + + + Creates a GeneratedClrTypeInfo for a message descriptor, with nested types, nested enums, the CLR type, property names and oneof names. + Each array parameter may be null, to indicate a lack of values. + The parameter order is designed to make it feasible to format the generated code readably. + + + + + Creates a GeneratedClrTypeInfo for a message descriptor, with nested types, nested enums, the CLR type, property names and oneof names. + Each array parameter may be null, to indicate a lack of values. + The parameter order is designed to make it feasible to format the generated code readably. + + + + + Creates a GeneratedClrTypeInfo for a file descriptor, with only types, enums, and extensions. + + + + + Creates a GeneratedClrTypeInfo for a file descriptor, with only types and enums. + + + + + Interface implemented by all descriptor types. + + + + + Returns the name of the entity (message, field etc) being described. + + + + + Returns the fully-qualified name of the entity being described. + + + + + Returns the descriptor for the .proto file that this entity is part of. + + + + + Allows fields to be reflectively accessed. + + + + + Returns the descriptor associated with this field. + + + + + Clears the field in the specified message. (For repeated fields, + this clears the list.) + + + + + Fetches the field value. For repeated values, this will be an + implementation. For map values, this will be an + implementation. + + + + + Indicates whether the field in the specified message is set. + For proto3 fields that aren't explicitly optional, this throws an + + + + + Mutator for single "simple" fields only. + + + Repeated fields are mutated by fetching the value and manipulating it as a list. + Map fields are mutated by fetching the value and manipulating it as a dictionary. + + The field is not a "simple" field. + + + + Accessor for map fields. + + + + + Describes a message type. + + + + + The brief name of the descriptor's target. + + + + + The CLR type used to represent message instances from this descriptor. + + + + The value returned by this property will be non-null for all regular fields. However, + if a message containing a map field is introspected, the list of nested messages will include + an auto-generated nested key/value pair message for the field. This is not represented in any + generated type, so this property will return null in such cases. + + + For wrapper types ( and the like), the type returned here + will be the generated message type, not the native type used by reflection for fields of those types. Code + using reflection should call to determine whether a message descriptor represents + a wrapper type, and handle the result appropriately. + + + + + + A parser for this message type. + + + + As is not generic, this cannot be statically + typed to the relevant type, but it should produce objects of a type compatible with . + + + The value returned by this property will be non-null for all regular fields. However, + if a message containing a map field is introspected, the list of nested messages will include + an auto-generated nested key/value pair message for the field. No message parser object is created for + such messages, so this property will return null in such cases. + + + For wrapper types ( and the like), the parser returned here + will be the generated message type, not the native type used by reflection for fields of those types. Code + using reflection should call to determine whether a message descriptor represents + a wrapper type, and handle the result appropriately. + + + + + + Returns whether this message is one of the "well known types" which may have runtime/protoc support. + + + + + Returns whether this message is one of the "wrapper types" used for fields which represent primitive values + with the addition of presence. + + + + + If this is a nested type, get the outer descriptor, otherwise null. + + + + + A collection of fields, which can be retrieved by name or field number. + + + + + An unmodifiable list of extensions defined in this message's scope. + Note that some extensions may be incomplete (FieldDescriptor.Extension may be null) + if they are declared in a file generated using a version of protoc that did not fully + support extensions in C#. + + + + + An unmodifiable list of this message type's nested types. + + + + + An unmodifiable list of this message type's enum types. + + + + + An unmodifiable list of the "oneof" field collections in this message type. + All "real" oneofs (where returns false) + come before synthetic ones. + + + + + The number of real "oneof" descriptors in this message type. Every element in + with an index less than this will have a property value + of false; every element with an index greater than or equal to this will have a + property value of true. + + + + + Finds a field by field name. + + The unqualified name of the field (e.g. "foo"). + The field's descriptor, or null if not found. + + + + Finds a field by field number. + + The field number within this message type. + The field's descriptor, or null if not found. + + + + Finds a nested descriptor by name. The is valid for fields, nested + message types, oneofs and enums. + + The unqualified name of the descriptor, e.g. "Foo" + The descriptor, or null if not found. + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this message. + + + + + The MessageOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value message option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value message option for this descriptor + + + + + Looks up and cross-links all fields and nested types. + + + + + A collection to simplify retrieving the field accessor for a particular field. + + + + + Returns the fields in the message as an immutable list, in the order in which they + are declared in the source .proto file. + + + + + Returns the fields in the message as an immutable list, in ascending field number + order. Field numbers need not be contiguous, so there is no direct mapping from the + index in the list to the field number; to retrieve a field by field number, it is better + to use the indexer. + + + + + Returns a read-only dictionary mapping the field names in this message as they're available + in the JSON representation to the field descriptors. For example, a field foo_bar + in the message would result two entries, one with a key fooBar and one with a key + foo_bar, both referring to the same field. + + + + + Retrieves the descriptor for the field with the given number. + + Number of the field to retrieve the descriptor for + The accessor for the given field + The message descriptor does not contain a field + with the given number + + + + Retrieves the descriptor for the field with the given name. + + Name of the field to retrieve the descriptor for + The descriptor for the given field + The message descriptor does not contain a field + with the given name + + + + Describes a single method in a service. + + + + + The service this method belongs to. + + + + + The method's input type. + + + + + The method's input type. + + + + + Indicates if client streams multiple requests. + + + + + Indicates if server streams multiple responses. + + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this method. + + + + + The MethodOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value method option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value method option for this descriptor + + + + + The brief name of the descriptor's target. + + + + + Reflection access for a oneof, allowing clear and "get case" actions. + + + + + Gets the descriptor for this oneof. + + + The descriptor of the oneof. + + + + + Clears the oneof in the specified message. + + + + + Indicates which field in the oneof is set for specified message + + + + + Describes a "oneof" field collection in a message type: a set of + fields of which at most one can be set in any particular message. + + + + + The brief name of the descriptor's target. + + + + + Gets the message type containing this oneof. + + + The message type containing this oneof. + + + + + Gets the fields within this oneof, in declaration order. + + + The fields within this oneof, in declaration order. + + + + + Returns true if this oneof is a synthetic oneof containing a proto3 optional field; + false otherwise. + + + + + Gets an accessor for reflective access to the values associated with the oneof + in a particular message. + + + + In descriptors for generated code, the value returned by this property will always be non-null. + + + In dynamically loaded descriptors, the value returned by this property will current be null; + if and when dynamic messages are supported, it will return a suitable accessor to work with + them. + + + + The accessor used for reflective access. + + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this oneof. + + + + + The OneofOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value oneof option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value oneof option for this descriptor + + + + + Specifies the original name (in the .proto file) of a named element, + such as an enum value. + + + + + The name of the element in the .proto file. + + + + + If the name is preferred in the .proto file. + + + + + Constructs a new attribute instance for the given name. + + The name of the element in the .proto file. + + + + Represents a package in the symbol table. We use PackageDescriptors + just as placeholders so that someone cannot define, say, a message type + that has the same name as an existing package. + + + + + The methods in this class are somewhat evil, and should not be tampered with lightly. + Basically they allow the creation of relatively weakly typed delegates from MethodInfos + which are more strongly typed. They do this by creating an appropriate strongly typed + delegate from the MethodInfo, and then calling that within an anonymous method. + Mind-bending stuff (at least to your humble narrator) but the resulting delegates are + very fast compared with calling Invoke later on. + + + + + Empty Type[] used when calling GetProperty to force property instead of indexer fetching. + + + + + Creates a delegate which will cast the argument to the type that declares the method, + call the method on it, then convert the result to object. + + The method to create a delegate for, which must be declared in an IMessage + implementation. + + + + Creates a delegate which will cast the argument to the type that declares the method, + call the method on it, then convert the result to the specified type. The method is expected + to actually return an enum (because of where we're calling it - for oneof cases). Sometimes that + means we need some extra work to perform conversions. + + The method to create a delegate for, which must be declared in an IMessage + implementation. + + + + Creates a delegate which will execute the given method after casting the first argument to + the type that declares the method, and the second argument to the first parameter type of the method. + + The method to create a delegate for, which must be declared in an IMessage + implementation. + + + + Creates a delegate which will execute the given method after casting the first argument to + type that declares the method. + + The method to create a delegate for, which must be declared in an IMessage + implementation. + + + + Creates a delegate which will execute the given method after casting the first argument to + the type that declares the method, and the second argument to the first parameter type of the method. + + + + + Creates a reflection helper for the given type arguments. Currently these are created on demand + rather than cached; this will be "busy" when initially loading a message's descriptor, but after that + they can be garbage collected. We could cache them by type if that proves to be important, but creating + an object is pretty cheap. + + + + + Accessor for repeated fields. + + + + + Describes a service type. + + + + + The brief name of the descriptor's target. + + + + + An unmodifiable list of methods in this service. + + + + + Finds a method by name. + + The unqualified name of the method (e.g. "Foo"). + The method's descriptor, or null if not found. + + + + The (possibly empty) set of custom options for this service. + + + + + The ServiceOptions, defined in descriptor.proto. + If the options message is not present (i.e. there are no options), null is returned. + Custom options can be retrieved as extensions of the returned message. + NOTE: A defensive copy is created each time this property is retrieved. + + + + + Gets a single value service option for this descriptor + + + + + Gets a repeated value service option for this descriptor + + + + + Accessor for single fields. + + + + + An immutable registry of types which can be looked up by their full name. + + + + + An empty type registry, containing no types. + + + + + Attempts to find a message descriptor by its full name. + + The full name of the message, which is the dot-separated + combination of package, containing messages and message name + The message descriptor corresponding to or null + if there is no such message descriptor. + + + + Creates a type registry from the specified set of file descriptors. + + + This is a convenience overload for + to allow calls such as TypeRegistry.FromFiles(descriptor1, descriptor2). + + The set of files to include in the registry. Must not contain null values. + A type registry for the given files. + + + + Creates a type registry from the specified set of file descriptors. + + + All message types within all the specified files are added to the registry, and + the dependencies of the specified files are also added, recursively. + + The set of files to include in the registry. Must not contain null values. + A type registry for the given files. + + + + Creates a type registry from the file descriptor parents of the specified set of message descriptors. + + + This is a convenience overload for + to allow calls such as TypeRegistry.FromFiles(descriptor1, descriptor2). + + The set of message descriptors to use to identify file descriptors to include in the registry. + Must not contain null values. + A type registry for the given files. + + + + Creates a type registry from the file descriptor parents of the specified set of message descriptors. + + + The specified message descriptors are only used to identify their file descriptors; the returned registry + contains all the types within the file descriptors which contain the specified message descriptors (and + the dependencies of those files), not just the specified messages. + + The set of message descriptors to use to identify file descriptors to include in the registry. + Must not contain null values. + A type registry for the given files. + + + + Builder class which isn't exposed, but acts as a convenient alternative to passing round two dictionaries in recursive calls. + + + + + Represents a single field in an UnknownFieldSet. + + An UnknownField consists of four lists of values. The lists correspond + to the four "wire types" used in the protocol buffer binary format. + Normally, only one of the four lists will contain any values, since it + is impossible to define a valid message type that declares two different + types for the same field number. However, the code is designed to allow + for the case where the same unknown field number is encountered using + multiple different wire types. + + + + + + Creates a new UnknownField. + + + + + Checks if two unknown field are equal. + + + + + Get the hash code of the unknown field. + + + + + Serializes the field, including the field number, and writes it to + + + The unknown field number. + The CodedOutputStream to write to. + + + + Computes the number of bytes required to encode this field, including field + number. + + + + + Merge the values in into this field. For each list + of values, 's values are append to the ones in this + field. + + + + + Returns a new list containing all of the given specified values from + both the and lists. + If is null and is empty, + null is returned. Otherwise, either a new list is created (if + is null) or the elements of are added to . + + + + + Adds a varint value. + + + + + Adds a fixed32 value. + + + + + Adds a fixed64 value. + + + + + Adds a length-delimited value. + + + + + Adds to the , creating + a new list if is null. The list is returned - either + the original reference or the new list. + + + + + Used to keep track of fields which were seen when parsing a protocol message + but whose field numbers or types are unrecognized. This most frequently + occurs when new fields are added to a message type and then messages containing + those fields are read by old software that was built before the new types were + added. + + Most users will never need to use this class directly. + + + + + Creates a new UnknownFieldSet. + + + + + Checks whether or not the given field number is present in the set. + + + + + Serializes the set and writes it to . + + + + + Gets the number of bytes required to encode this set. + + + + + Checks if two unknown field sets are equal. + + + + + Gets the unknown field set's hash code. + + + + + Adds a field to the set. If a field with the same number already exists, it + is replaced. + + + + + Parse a single field from and merge it + into this set. + + The coded input stream containing the field + false if the tag is an "end group" tag, true otherwise + + + + Create a new UnknownFieldSet if unknownFields is null. + Parse a single field from and merge it + into unknownFields. If is configured to discard unknown fields, + will be returned as-is and the field will be skipped. + + The UnknownFieldSet which need to be merged + The coded input stream containing the field + The merged UnknownFieldSet + + + + Merges the fields from into this set. + If a field number exists in both sets, the values in + will be appended to the values in this set. + + + + + Created a new UnknownFieldSet to if + needed and merges the fields from into the first set. + If a field number exists in both sets, the values in + will be appended to the values in this set. + + + + + Adds a field to the unknown field set. If a field with the same + number already exists, the two are merged. + + + + + Clone an unknown field set from . + + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/any.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/any.proto + + + + `Any` contains an arbitrary serialized protocol buffer message along with a + URL that describes the type of the serialized message. + + Protobuf library provides support to pack/unpack Any values in the form + of utility functions or additional generated methods of the Any type. + + Example 1: Pack and unpack a message in C++. + + Foo foo = ...; + Any any; + any.PackFrom(foo); + ... + if (any.UnpackTo(&foo)) { + ... + } + + Example 2: Pack and unpack a message in Java. + + Foo foo = ...; + Any any = Any.pack(foo); + ... + if (any.is(Foo.class)) { + foo = any.unpack(Foo.class); + } + + Example 3: Pack and unpack a message in Python. + + foo = Foo(...) + any = Any() + any.Pack(foo) + ... + if any.Is(Foo.DESCRIPTOR): + any.Unpack(foo) + ... + + Example 4: Pack and unpack a message in Go + + foo := &pb.Foo{...} + any, err := ptypes.MarshalAny(foo) + ... + foo := &pb.Foo{} + if err := ptypes.UnmarshalAny(any, foo); err != nil { + ... + } + + The pack methods provided by protobuf library will by default use + 'type.googleapis.com/full.type.name' as the type URL and the unpack + methods only use the fully qualified type name after the last '/' + in the type URL, for example "foo.bar.com/x/y.z" will yield type + name "y.z". + + JSON + ==== + The JSON representation of an `Any` value uses the regular + representation of the deserialized, embedded message, with an + additional field `@type` which contains the type URL. Example: + + package google.profile; + message Person { + string first_name = 1; + string last_name = 2; + } + + { + "@type": "type.googleapis.com/google.profile.Person", + "firstName": <string>, + "lastName": <string> + } + + If the embedded message type is well-known and has a custom JSON + representation, that representation will be embedded adding a field + `value` which holds the custom JSON in addition to the `@type` + field. Example (for message [google.protobuf.Duration][]): + + { + "@type": "type.googleapis.com/google.protobuf.Duration", + "value": "1.212s" + } + + + + Field number for the "type_url" field. + + + + A URL/resource name that uniquely identifies the type of the serialized + protocol buffer message. This string must contain at least + one "/" character. The last segment of the URL's path must represent + the fully qualified name of the type (as in + `path/google.protobuf.Duration`). The name should be in a canonical form + (e.g., leading "." is not accepted). + + In practice, teams usually precompile into the binary all types that they + expect it to use in the context of Any. However, for URLs which use the + scheme `http`, `https`, or no scheme, one can optionally set up a type + server that maps type URLs to message definitions as follows: + + * If no scheme is provided, `https` is assumed. + * An HTTP GET on the URL must yield a [google.protobuf.Type][] + value in binary format, or produce an error. + * Applications are allowed to cache lookup results based on the + URL, or have them precompiled into a binary to avoid any + lookup. Therefore, binary compatibility needs to be preserved + on changes to types. (Use versioned type names to manage + breaking changes.) + + Note: this functionality is not currently available in the official + protobuf release, and it is not used for type URLs beginning with + type.googleapis.com. + + Schemes other than `http`, `https` (or the empty scheme) might be + used with implementation specific semantics. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + Must be a valid serialized protocol buffer of the above specified type. + + + + + Retrieves the type name for a type URL, matching the + of the packed message type. + + + + This is always just the last part of the URL, after the final slash. No validation of + anything before the trailing slash is performed. If the type URL does not include a slash, + an empty string is returned rather than an exception being thrown; this won't match any types, + and the calling code is probably in a better position to give a meaningful error. + + + There is no handling of fragments or queries at the moment. + + + The URL to extract the type name from + The type name + + + + Returns a bool indictating whether this Any message is of the target message type + + The descriptor of the message type + true if the type name matches the descriptor's full name or false otherwise + + + + Unpacks the content of this Any message into the target message type, + which must match the type URL within this Any message. + + The type of message to unpack the content into. + The unpacked message. + The target message type doesn't match the type URL in this message + + + + Attempts to unpack the content of this Any message into the target message type, + if it matches the type URL within this Any message. + + The type of message to attempt to unpack the content into. + true if the message was successfully unpacked; false if the type name didn't match + + + + Packs the specified message into an Any message using a type URL prefix of "type.googleapis.com". + + The message to pack. + An Any message with the content and type URL of . + + + + Packs the specified message into an Any message using the specified type URL prefix. + + The message to pack. + The prefix for the type URL. + An Any message with the content and type URL of . + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/api.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/api.proto + + + + Api is a light-weight descriptor for an API Interface. + + Interfaces are also described as "protocol buffer services" in some contexts, + such as by the "service" keyword in a .proto file, but they are different + from API Services, which represent a concrete implementation of an interface + as opposed to simply a description of methods and bindings. They are also + sometimes simply referred to as "APIs" in other contexts, such as the name of + this message itself. See https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/glossary for + detailed terminology. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + The fully qualified name of this interface, including package name + followed by the interface's simple name. + + + + Field number for the "methods" field. + + + + The methods of this interface, in unspecified order. + + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Any metadata attached to the interface. + + + + Field number for the "version" field. + + + + A version string for this interface. If specified, must have the form + `major-version.minor-version`, as in `1.10`. If the minor version is + omitted, it defaults to zero. If the entire version field is empty, the + major version is derived from the package name, as outlined below. If the + field is not empty, the version in the package name will be verified to be + consistent with what is provided here. + + The versioning schema uses [semantic + versioning](http://semver.org) where the major version number + indicates a breaking change and the minor version an additive, + non-breaking change. Both version numbers are signals to users + what to expect from different versions, and should be carefully + chosen based on the product plan. + + The major version is also reflected in the package name of the + interface, which must end in `v<major-version>`, as in + `google.feature.v1`. For major versions 0 and 1, the suffix can + be omitted. Zero major versions must only be used for + experimental, non-GA interfaces. + + + + Field number for the "source_context" field. + + + + Source context for the protocol buffer service represented by this + message. + + + + Field number for the "mixins" field. + + + + Included interfaces. See [Mixin][]. + + + + Field number for the "syntax" field. + + + + The source syntax of the service. + + + + + Method represents a method of an API interface. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + The simple name of this method. + + + + Field number for the "request_type_url" field. + + + + A URL of the input message type. + + + + Field number for the "request_streaming" field. + + + + If true, the request is streamed. + + + + Field number for the "response_type_url" field. + + + + The URL of the output message type. + + + + Field number for the "response_streaming" field. + + + + If true, the response is streamed. + + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Any metadata attached to the method. + + + + Field number for the "syntax" field. + + + + The source syntax of this method. + + + + + Declares an API Interface to be included in this interface. The including + interface must redeclare all the methods from the included interface, but + documentation and options are inherited as follows: + + - If after comment and whitespace stripping, the documentation + string of the redeclared method is empty, it will be inherited + from the original method. + + - Each annotation belonging to the service config (http, + visibility) which is not set in the redeclared method will be + inherited. + + - If an http annotation is inherited, the path pattern will be + modified as follows. Any version prefix will be replaced by the + version of the including interface plus the [root][] path if + specified. + + Example of a simple mixin: + + package google.acl.v1; + service AccessControl { + // Get the underlying ACL object. + rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { + option (google.api.http).get = "/v1/{resource=**}:getAcl"; + } + } + + package google.storage.v2; + service Storage { + rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl); + + // Get a data record. + rpc GetData(GetDataRequest) returns (Data) { + option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}"; + } + } + + Example of a mixin configuration: + + apis: + - name: google.storage.v2.Storage + mixins: + - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl + + The mixin construct implies that all methods in `AccessControl` are + also declared with same name and request/response types in + `Storage`. A documentation generator or annotation processor will + see the effective `Storage.GetAcl` method after inherting + documentation and annotations as follows: + + service Storage { + // Get the underlying ACL object. + rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { + option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}:getAcl"; + } + ... + } + + Note how the version in the path pattern changed from `v1` to `v2`. + + If the `root` field in the mixin is specified, it should be a + relative path under which inherited HTTP paths are placed. Example: + + apis: + - name: google.storage.v2.Storage + mixins: + - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl + root: acls + + This implies the following inherited HTTP annotation: + + service Storage { + // Get the underlying ACL object. + rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { + option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/acls/{resource=**}:getAcl"; + } + ... + } + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + The fully qualified name of the interface which is included. + + + + Field number for the "root" field. + + + + If non-empty specifies a path under which inherited HTTP paths + are rooted. + + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/duration.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/duration.proto + + + + A Duration represents a signed, fixed-length span of time represented + as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond + resolution. It is independent of any calendar and concepts like "day" + or "month". It is related to Timestamp in that the difference between + two Timestamp values is a Duration and it can be added or subtracted + from a Timestamp. Range is approximately +-10,000 years. + + # Examples + + Example 1: Compute Duration from two Timestamps in pseudo code. + + Timestamp start = ...; + Timestamp end = ...; + Duration duration = ...; + + duration.seconds = end.seconds - start.seconds; + duration.nanos = end.nanos - start.nanos; + + if (duration.seconds < 0 && duration.nanos > 0) { + duration.seconds += 1; + duration.nanos -= 1000000000; + } else if (duration.seconds > 0 && duration.nanos < 0) { + duration.seconds -= 1; + duration.nanos += 1000000000; + } + + Example 2: Compute Timestamp from Timestamp + Duration in pseudo code. + + Timestamp start = ...; + Duration duration = ...; + Timestamp end = ...; + + end.seconds = start.seconds + duration.seconds; + end.nanos = start.nanos + duration.nanos; + + if (end.nanos < 0) { + end.seconds -= 1; + end.nanos += 1000000000; + } else if (end.nanos >= 1000000000) { + end.seconds += 1; + end.nanos -= 1000000000; + } + + Example 3: Compute Duration from datetime.timedelta in Python. + + td = datetime.timedelta(days=3, minutes=10) + duration = Duration() + duration.FromTimedelta(td) + + # JSON Mapping + + In JSON format, the Duration type is encoded as a string rather than an + object, where the string ends in the suffix "s" (indicating seconds) and + is preceded by the number of seconds, with nanoseconds expressed as + fractional seconds. For example, 3 seconds with 0 nanoseconds should be + encoded in JSON format as "3s", while 3 seconds and 1 nanosecond should + be expressed in JSON format as "3.000000001s", and 3 seconds and 1 + microsecond should be expressed in JSON format as "3.000001s". + + + + Field number for the "seconds" field. + + + + Signed seconds of the span of time. Must be from -315,576,000,000 + to +315,576,000,000 inclusive. Note: these bounds are computed from: + 60 sec/min * 60 min/hr * 24 hr/day * 365.25 days/year * 10000 years + + + + Field number for the "nanos" field. + + + + Signed fractions of a second at nanosecond resolution of the span + of time. Durations less than one second are represented with a 0 + `seconds` field and a positive or negative `nanos` field. For durations + of one second or more, a non-zero value for the `nanos` field must be + of the same sign as the `seconds` field. Must be from -999,999,999 + to +999,999,999 inclusive. + + + + + The number of nanoseconds in a second. + + + + + The number of nanoseconds in a BCL tick (as used by and ). + + + + + The maximum permitted number of seconds. + + + + + The minimum permitted number of seconds. + + + + + Converts this to a . + + If the duration is not a precise number of ticks, it is truncated towards 0. + The value of this duration, as a TimeSpan. + This value isn't a valid normalized duration, as + described in the documentation. + + + + Converts the given to a . + + The TimeSpan to convert. + The value of the given TimeSpan, as a Duration. + + + + Returns the result of negating the duration. For example, the negation of 5 minutes is -5 minutes. + + The duration to negate. Must not be null. + The negated value of this duration. + + + + Adds the two specified values together. + + The first value to add. Must not be null. + The second value to add. Must not be null. + + + + + Subtracts one from another. + + The duration to subtract from. Must not be null. + The duration to subtract. Must not be null. + The difference between the two specified durations. + + + + Creates a duration with the normalized values from the given number of seconds and + nanoseconds, conforming with the description in the proto file. + + + + + Converts a duration specified in seconds/nanoseconds to a string. + + + If the value is a normalized duration in the range described in duration.proto, + is ignored. Otherwise, if the parameter is true, + a JSON object with a warning is returned; if it is false, an is thrown. + + Seconds portion of the duration. + Nanoseconds portion of the duration. + Determines the handling of non-normalized values + The represented duration is invalid, and is false. + + + + Returns a string representation of this for diagnostic purposes. + + + Normally the returned value will be a JSON string value (including leading and trailing quotes) but + when the value is non-normalized or out of range, a JSON object representation will be returned + instead, including a warning. This is to avoid exceptions being thrown when trying to + diagnose problems - the regular JSON formatter will still throw an exception for non-normalized + values. + + A string representation of this value. + + + + Appends a number of nanoseconds to a StringBuilder. Either 0 digits are added (in which + case no "." is appended), or 3 6 or 9 digits. This is internal for use in Timestamp as well + as Duration. + + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/empty.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/empty.proto + + + + A generic empty message that you can re-use to avoid defining duplicated + empty messages in your APIs. A typical example is to use it as the request + or the response type of an API method. For instance: + + service Foo { + rpc Bar(google.protobuf.Empty) returns (google.protobuf.Empty); + } + + The JSON representation for `Empty` is empty JSON object `{}`. + + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/field_mask.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/field_mask.proto + + + + `FieldMask` represents a set of symbolic field paths, for example: + + paths: "f.a" + paths: "f.b.d" + + Here `f` represents a field in some root message, `a` and `b` + fields in the message found in `f`, and `d` a field found in the + message in `f.b`. + + Field masks are used to specify a subset of fields that should be + returned by a get operation or modified by an update operation. + Field masks also have a custom JSON encoding (see below). + + # Field Masks in Projections + + When used in the context of a projection, a response message or + sub-message is filtered by the API to only contain those fields as + specified in the mask. For example, if the mask in the previous + example is applied to a response message as follows: + + f { + a : 22 + b { + d : 1 + x : 2 + } + y : 13 + } + z: 8 + + The result will not contain specific values for fields x,y and z + (their value will be set to the default, and omitted in proto text + output): + + f { + a : 22 + b { + d : 1 + } + } + + A repeated field is not allowed except at the last position of a + paths string. + + If a FieldMask object is not present in a get operation, the + operation applies to all fields (as if a FieldMask of all fields + had been specified). + + Note that a field mask does not necessarily apply to the + top-level response message. In case of a REST get operation, the + field mask applies directly to the response, but in case of a REST + list operation, the mask instead applies to each individual message + in the returned resource list. In case of a REST custom method, + other definitions may be used. Where the mask applies will be + clearly documented together with its declaration in the API. In + any case, the effect on the returned resource/resources is required + behavior for APIs. + + # Field Masks in Update Operations + + A field mask in update operations specifies which fields of the + targeted resource are going to be updated. The API is required + to only change the values of the fields as specified in the mask + and leave the others untouched. If a resource is passed in to + describe the updated values, the API ignores the values of all + fields not covered by the mask. + + If a repeated field is specified for an update operation, new values will + be appended to the existing repeated field in the target resource. Note that + a repeated field is only allowed in the last position of a `paths` string. + + If a sub-message is specified in the last position of the field mask for an + update operation, then new value will be merged into the existing sub-message + in the target resource. + + For example, given the target message: + + f { + b { + d: 1 + x: 2 + } + c: [1] + } + + And an update message: + + f { + b { + d: 10 + } + c: [2] + } + + then if the field mask is: + + paths: ["f.b", "f.c"] + + then the result will be: + + f { + b { + d: 10 + x: 2 + } + c: [1, 2] + } + + An implementation may provide options to override this default behavior for + repeated and message fields. + + In order to reset a field's value to the default, the field must + be in the mask and set to the default value in the provided resource. + Hence, in order to reset all fields of a resource, provide a default + instance of the resource and set all fields in the mask, or do + not provide a mask as described below. + + If a field mask is not present on update, the operation applies to + all fields (as if a field mask of all fields has been specified). + Note that in the presence of schema evolution, this may mean that + fields the client does not know and has therefore not filled into + the request will be reset to their default. If this is unwanted + behavior, a specific service may require a client to always specify + a field mask, producing an error if not. + + As with get operations, the location of the resource which + describes the updated values in the request message depends on the + operation kind. In any case, the effect of the field mask is + required to be honored by the API. + + ## Considerations for HTTP REST + + The HTTP kind of an update operation which uses a field mask must + be set to PATCH instead of PUT in order to satisfy HTTP semantics + (PUT must only be used for full updates). + + # JSON Encoding of Field Masks + + In JSON, a field mask is encoded as a single string where paths are + separated by a comma. Fields name in each path are converted + to/from lower-camel naming conventions. + + As an example, consider the following message declarations: + + message Profile { + User user = 1; + Photo photo = 2; + } + message User { + string display_name = 1; + string address = 2; + } + + In proto a field mask for `Profile` may look as such: + + mask { + paths: "user.display_name" + paths: "photo" + } + + In JSON, the same mask is represented as below: + + { + mask: "user.displayName,photo" + } + + # Field Masks and Oneof Fields + + Field masks treat fields in oneofs just as regular fields. Consider the + following message: + + message SampleMessage { + oneof test_oneof { + string name = 4; + SubMessage sub_message = 9; + } + } + + The field mask can be: + + mask { + paths: "name" + } + + Or: + + mask { + paths: "sub_message" + } + + Note that oneof type names ("test_oneof" in this case) cannot be used in + paths. + + ## Field Mask Verification + + The implementation of any API method which has a FieldMask type field in the + request should verify the included field paths, and return an + `INVALID_ARGUMENT` error if any path is unmappable. + + + + Field number for the "paths" field. + + + + The set of field mask paths. + + + + + Converts a field mask specified by paths to a string. + + + If the value is a normalized duration in the range described in field_mask.proto, + is ignored. Otherwise, if the parameter is true, + a JSON object with a warning is returned; if it is false, an is thrown. + + Paths in the field mask + Determines the handling of non-normalized values + The represented field mask is invalid, and is false. + + + + Returns a string representation of this for diagnostic purposes. + + + Normally the returned value will be a JSON string value (including leading and trailing quotes) but + when the value is non-normalized or out of range, a JSON object representation will be returned + instead, including a warning. This is to avoid exceptions being thrown when trying to + diagnose problems - the regular JSON formatter will still throw an exception for non-normalized + values. + + A string representation of this value. + + + + Parses from a string to a FieldMask. + + + + + Parses from a string to a FieldMask and validates all field paths. + + The type to validate the field paths against. + + + + Constructs a FieldMask for a list of field paths in a certain type. + + The type to validate the field paths against. + + + + Constructs a FieldMask from the passed field numbers. + + The type to validate the field paths against. + + + + Constructs a FieldMask from the passed field numbers. + + The type to validate the field paths against. + + + + Checks whether the given path is valid for a field mask. + + true if the path is valid; false otherwise + + + + Checks whether paths in a given fields mask are valid. + + The type to validate the field paths against. + + + + Checks whether paths in a given fields mask are valid. + + + + + Checks whether a given field path is valid. + + The type to validate the field paths against. + + + + Checks whether paths in a given fields mask are valid. + + + + + Converts this FieldMask to its canonical form. In the canonical form of a + FieldMask, all field paths are sorted alphabetically and redundant field + paths are removed. + + + + + Creates a union of two or more FieldMasks. + + + + + Calculates the intersection of two FieldMasks. + + + + + Merges fields specified by this FieldMask from one message to another with the + specified merge options. + + + + + Merges fields specified by this FieldMask from one message to another. + + + + + Options to customize merging behavior. + + + + + Whether to replace message fields(i.e., discard existing content in + destination message fields) when merging. + Default behavior is to merge the source message field into the + destination message field. + + + + + Whether to replace repeated fields (i.e., discard existing content in + destination repeated fields) when merging. + Default behavior is to append elements from source repeated field to the + destination repeated field. + + + + + Whether to replace primitive (non-repeated and non-message) fields in + destination message fields with the source primitive fields (i.e., if the + field is set in the source, the value is copied to the + destination; if the field is unset in the source, the field is cleared + from the destination) when merging. + + Default behavior is to always set the value of the source primitive + field to the destination primitive field, and if the source field is + unset, the default value of the source field is copied to the + destination. + + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/source_context.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/source_context.proto + + + + `SourceContext` represents information about the source of a + protobuf element, like the file in which it is defined. + + + + Field number for the "file_name" field. + + + + The path-qualified name of the .proto file that contained the associated + protobuf element. For example: `"google/protobuf/source_context.proto"`. + + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/struct.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/struct.proto + + + + `NullValue` is a singleton enumeration to represent the null value for the + `Value` type union. + + The JSON representation for `NullValue` is JSON `null`. + + + + + Null value. + + + + + `Struct` represents a structured data value, consisting of fields + which map to dynamically typed values. In some languages, `Struct` + might be supported by a native representation. For example, in + scripting languages like JS a struct is represented as an + object. The details of that representation are described together + with the proto support for the language. + + The JSON representation for `Struct` is JSON object. + + + + Field number for the "fields" field. + + + + Unordered map of dynamically typed values. + + + + + `Value` represents a dynamically typed value which can be either + null, a number, a string, a boolean, a recursive struct value, or a + list of values. A producer of value is expected to set one of that + variants, absence of any variant indicates an error. + + The JSON representation for `Value` is JSON value. + + + + Field number for the "null_value" field. + + + + Represents a null value. + + + + Field number for the "number_value" field. + + + + Represents a double value. + + + + Field number for the "string_value" field. + + + + Represents a string value. + + + + Field number for the "bool_value" field. + + + + Represents a boolean value. + + + + Field number for the "struct_value" field. + + + + Represents a structured value. + + + + Field number for the "list_value" field. + + + + Represents a repeated `Value`. + + + + Enum of possible cases for the "kind" oneof. + + + + Convenience method to create a Value message with a string value. + + Value to set for the StringValue property. + A newly-created Value message with the given value. + + + + Convenience method to create a Value message with a number value. + + Value to set for the NumberValue property. + A newly-created Value message with the given value. + + + + Convenience method to create a Value message with a Boolean value. + + Value to set for the BoolValue property. + A newly-created Value message with the given value. + + + + Convenience method to create a Value message with a null initial value. + + A newly-created Value message a null initial value. + + + + Convenience method to create a Value message with an initial list of values. + + The values provided are not cloned; the references are copied directly. + A newly-created Value message an initial list value. + + + + Convenience method to create a Value message with an initial struct value + + The value provided is not cloned; the reference is copied directly. + A newly-created Value message an initial struct value. + + + + `ListValue` is a wrapper around a repeated field of values. + + The JSON representation for `ListValue` is JSON array. + + + + Field number for the "values" field. + + + + Repeated field of dynamically typed values. + + + + + Extension methods on BCL time-related types, converting to protobuf types. + + + + + Converts the given to a . + + The date and time to convert to a timestamp. + The value has a other than Utc. + The converted timestamp. + + + + Converts the given to a + + The offset is taken into consideration when converting the value (so the same instant in time + is represented) but is not a separate part of the resulting value. In other words, there is no + roundtrip operation to retrieve the original DateTimeOffset. + The date and time (with UTC offset) to convert to a timestamp. + The converted timestamp. + + + + Converts the given to a . + + The time span to convert. + The converted duration. + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/timestamp.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/timestamp.proto + + + + A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local + calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at + nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on + January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the + Gregorian calendar backwards to year one. + + All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are "smeared" so that no leap + second table is needed for interpretation, using a [24-hour linear + smear](https://developers.google.com/time/smear). + + The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By + restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from [RFC + 3339](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3339.txt) date strings. + + # Examples + + Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX `time()`. + + Timestamp timestamp; + timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL)); + timestamp.set_nanos(0); + + Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX `gettimeofday()`. + + struct timeval tv; + gettimeofday(&tv, NULL); + + Timestamp timestamp; + timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec); + timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000); + + Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 `GetSystemTimeAsFileTime()`. + + FILETIME ft; + GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft); + UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime; + + // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z + // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. + Timestamp timestamp; + timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL)); + timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100)); + + Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java `System.currentTimeMillis()`. + + long millis = System.currentTimeMillis(); + + Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000) + .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build(); + + Example 5: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python. + + timestamp = Timestamp() + timestamp.GetCurrentTime() + + # JSON Mapping + + In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the + [RFC 3339](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3339.txt) format. That is, the + format is "{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z" + where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, + {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional + seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), + are optional. The "Z" suffix indicates the timezone ("UTC"); the timezone + is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by + "Z") when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be + able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset). + + For example, "2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z" encodes 15.01 seconds past + 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017. + + In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the + standard + [toISOString()](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/toISOString) + method. In Python, a standard `datetime.datetime` object can be converted + to this format using + [`strftime`](https://docs.python.org/2/library/time.html#time.strftime) with + the time format spec '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ'. Likewise, in Java, one can use + the Joda Time's [`ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime()`]( + http://www.joda.org/joda-time/apidocs/org/joda/time/format/ISODateTimeFormat.html#dateTime%2D%2D + ) to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format. + + + + Field number for the "seconds" field. + + + + Represents seconds of UTC time since Unix epoch + 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. Must be from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to + 9999-12-31T23:59:59Z inclusive. + + + + Field number for the "nanos" field. + + + + Non-negative fractions of a second at nanosecond resolution. Negative + second values with fractions must still have non-negative nanos values + that count forward in time. Must be from 0 to 999,999,999 + inclusive. + + + + + Returns the difference between one and another, as a . + + The timestamp to subtract from. Must not be null. + The timestamp to subtract. Must not be null. + The difference between the two specified timestamps. + + + + Adds a to a , to obtain another Timestamp. + + The timestamp to add the duration to. Must not be null. + The duration to add. Must not be null. + The result of adding the duration to the timestamp. + + + + Subtracts a from a , to obtain another Timestamp. + + The timestamp to subtract the duration from. Must not be null. + The duration to subtract. + The result of subtracting the duration from the timestamp. + + + + Converts this timestamp into a . + + + The resulting DateTime will always have a Kind of Utc. + If the timestamp is not a precise number of ticks, it will be truncated towards the start + of time. For example, a timestamp with a value of 99 will result in a + value precisely on a second. + + This timestamp as a DateTime. + The timestamp contains invalid values; either it is + incorrectly normalized or is outside the valid range. + + + + Converts this timestamp into a . + + + The resulting DateTimeOffset will always have an Offset of zero. + If the timestamp is not a precise number of ticks, it will be truncated towards the start + of time. For example, a timestamp with a value of 99 will result in a + value precisely on a second. + + This timestamp as a DateTimeOffset. + The timestamp contains invalid values; either it is + incorrectly normalized or is outside the valid range. + + + + Converts the specified to a . + + + The Kind of is not DateTimeKind.Utc. + The converted timestamp. + + + + Converts the given to a + + The offset is taken into consideration when converting the value (so the same instant in time + is represented) but is not a separate part of the resulting value. In other words, there is no + roundtrip operation to retrieve the original DateTimeOffset. + The date and time (with UTC offset) to convert to a timestamp. + The converted timestamp. + + + + Converts a timestamp specified in seconds/nanoseconds to a string. + + + If the value is a normalized duration in the range described in timestamp.proto, + is ignored. Otherwise, if the parameter is true, + a JSON object with a warning is returned; if it is false, an is thrown. + + Seconds portion of the duration. + Nanoseconds portion of the duration. + Determines the handling of non-normalized values + The represented duration is invalid, and is false. + + + + Given another timestamp, returns 0 if the timestamps are equivalent, -1 if this timestamp precedes the other, and 1 otherwise + + + Make sure the timestamps are normalized. Comparing non-normalized timestamps is not specified and may give unexpected results. + + Timestamp to compare + an integer indicating whether this timestamp precedes or follows the other + + + + Compares two timestamps and returns whether the first is less than (chronologically precedes) the second + + + Make sure the timestamps are normalized. Comparing non-normalized timestamps is not specified and may give unexpected results. + + + + true if a precedes b + + + + Compares two timestamps and returns whether the first is greater than (chronologically follows) the second + + + Make sure the timestamps are normalized. Comparing non-normalized timestamps is not specified and may give unexpected results. + + + + true if a follows b + + + + Compares two timestamps and returns whether the first is less than (chronologically precedes) the second + + + Make sure the timestamps are normalized. Comparing non-normalized timestamps is not specified and may give unexpected results. + + + + true if a precedes b + + + + Compares two timestamps and returns whether the first is greater than (chronologically follows) the second + + + Make sure the timestamps are normalized. Comparing non-normalized timestamps is not specified and may give unexpected results. + + + + true if a follows b + + + + Returns whether two timestamps are equivalent + + + Make sure the timestamps are normalized. Comparing non-normalized timestamps is not specified and may give unexpected results. + + + + true if the two timestamps refer to the same nanosecond + + + + Returns whether two timestamps differ + + + Make sure the timestamps are normalized. Comparing non-normalized timestamps is not specified and may give unexpected results. + + + + true if the two timestamps differ + + + + Returns a string representation of this for diagnostic purposes. + + + Normally the returned value will be a JSON string value (including leading and trailing quotes) but + when the value is non-normalized or out of range, a JSON object representation will be returned + instead, including a warning. This is to avoid exceptions being thrown when trying to + diagnose problems - the regular JSON formatter will still throw an exception for non-normalized + values. + + A string representation of this value. + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/type.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/type.proto + + + + The syntax in which a protocol buffer element is defined. + + + + + Syntax `proto2`. + + + + + Syntax `proto3`. + + + + + A protocol buffer message type. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + The fully qualified message name. + + + + Field number for the "fields" field. + + + + The list of fields. + + + + Field number for the "oneofs" field. + + + + The list of types appearing in `oneof` definitions in this type. + + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + The protocol buffer options. + + + + Field number for the "source_context" field. + + + + The source context. + + + + Field number for the "syntax" field. + + + + The source syntax. + + + + + A single field of a message type. + + + + Field number for the "kind" field. + + + + The field type. + + + + Field number for the "cardinality" field. + + + + The field cardinality. + + + + Field number for the "number" field. + + + + The field number. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + The field name. + + + + Field number for the "type_url" field. + + + + The field type URL, without the scheme, for message or enumeration + types. Example: `"type.googleapis.com/google.protobuf.Timestamp"`. + + + + Field number for the "oneof_index" field. + + + + The index of the field type in `Type.oneofs`, for message or enumeration + types. The first type has index 1; zero means the type is not in the list. + + + + Field number for the "packed" field. + + + + Whether to use alternative packed wire representation. + + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + The protocol buffer options. + + + + Field number for the "json_name" field. + + + + The field JSON name. + + + + Field number for the "default_value" field. + + + + The string value of the default value of this field. Proto2 syntax only. + + + + Container for nested types declared in the Field message type. + + + + Basic field types. + + + + + Field type unknown. + + + + + Field type double. + + + + + Field type float. + + + + + Field type int64. + + + + + Field type uint64. + + + + + Field type int32. + + + + + Field type fixed64. + + + + + Field type fixed32. + + + + + Field type bool. + + + + + Field type string. + + + + + Field type group. Proto2 syntax only, and deprecated. + + + + + Field type message. + + + + + Field type bytes. + + + + + Field type uint32. + + + + + Field type enum. + + + + + Field type sfixed32. + + + + + Field type sfixed64. + + + + + Field type sint32. + + + + + Field type sint64. + + + + + Whether a field is optional, required, or repeated. + + + + + For fields with unknown cardinality. + + + + + For optional fields. + + + + + For required fields. Proto2 syntax only. + + + + + For repeated fields. + + + + + Enum type definition. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + Enum type name. + + + + Field number for the "enumvalue" field. + + + + Enum value definitions. + + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Protocol buffer options. + + + + Field number for the "source_context" field. + + + + The source context. + + + + Field number for the "syntax" field. + + + + The source syntax. + + + + + Enum value definition. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + Enum value name. + + + + Field number for the "number" field. + + + + Enum value number. + + + + Field number for the "options" field. + + + + Protocol buffer options. + + + + + A protocol buffer option, which can be attached to a message, field, + enumeration, etc. + + + + Field number for the "name" field. + + + + The option's name. For protobuf built-in options (options defined in + descriptor.proto), this is the short name. For example, `"map_entry"`. + For custom options, it should be the fully-qualified name. For example, + `"google.api.http"`. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The option's value packed in an Any message. If the value is a primitive, + the corresponding wrapper type defined in google/protobuf/wrappers.proto + should be used. If the value is an enum, it should be stored as an int32 + value using the google.protobuf.Int32Value type. + + + + Holder for reflection information generated from google/protobuf/wrappers.proto + + + File descriptor for google/protobuf/wrappers.proto + + + + Field number for the single "value" field in all wrapper types. + + + + + Wrapper message for `double`. + + The JSON representation for `DoubleValue` is JSON number. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The double value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `float`. + + The JSON representation for `FloatValue` is JSON number. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The float value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `int64`. + + The JSON representation for `Int64Value` is JSON string. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The int64 value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `uint64`. + + The JSON representation for `UInt64Value` is JSON string. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The uint64 value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `int32`. + + The JSON representation for `Int32Value` is JSON number. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The int32 value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `uint32`. + + The JSON representation for `UInt32Value` is JSON number. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The uint32 value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `bool`. + + The JSON representation for `BoolValue` is JSON `true` and `false`. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The bool value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `string`. + + The JSON representation for `StringValue` is JSON string. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The string value. + + + + + Wrapper message for `bytes`. + + The JSON representation for `BytesValue` is JSON string. + + + + Field number for the "value" field. + + + + The bytes value. + + + + + This class is used internally by the Protocol Buffer Library and generated + message implementations. It is public only for the sake of those generated + messages. Others should not use this class directly. + + This class contains constants and helper functions useful for dealing with + the Protocol Buffer wire format. + + + + + + Wire types within protobuf encoding. + + + + + Variable-length integer. + + + + + A fixed-length 64-bit value. + + + + + A length-delimited value, i.e. a length followed by that many bytes of data. + + + + + A "start group" value + + + + + An "end group" value + + + + + A fixed-length 32-bit value. + + + + + Given a tag value, determines the wire type (lower 3 bits). + + + + + Given a tag value, determines the field number (the upper 29 bits). + + + + + Makes a tag value given a field number and wire type. + + +
+
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