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Kotlin core Protocol Buffers library. Protocol Buffers are a way of encoding structured data in an efficient yet extensible format.

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// Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
// Copyright 2008 Google Inc.  All rights reserved.
//
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file or at
// https://developers.google.com/open-source/licenses/bsd

package com.google.protobuf;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.OutputStream;

/**
 * Abstract interface implemented by Protocol Message objects.
 *
 * 

This interface is implemented by all protocol message objects. Non-lite messages additionally * implement the Message interface, which is a subclass of MessageLite. Use MessageLite instead when * you only need the subset of features which it supports -- namely, nothing that uses descriptors * or reflection. You can instruct the protocol compiler to generate classes which implement only * MessageLite, not the full Message interface, by adding the follow line to the .proto file: * *

 *   option optimize_for = LITE_RUNTIME;
 * 
* *

This is particularly useful on resource-constrained systems where the full protocol buffers * runtime library is too big. * *

Note that on non-constrained systems (e.g. servers) when you need to link in lots of protocol * definitions, a better way to reduce total code footprint is to use {@code optimize_for = * CODE_SIZE}. This will make the generated code smaller while still supporting all the same * features (at the expense of speed). {@code optimize_for = LITE_RUNTIME} is best when you only * have a small number of message types linked into your binary, in which case the size of the * protocol buffers runtime itself is the biggest problem. * * @author [email protected] Kenton Varda */ @CheckReturnValue public interface MessageLite extends MessageLiteOrBuilder { /** * Serializes the message and writes it to {@code output}. This does not flush or close the * stream. */ void writeTo(CodedOutputStream output) throws IOException; /** * Get the number of bytes required to encode this message. The result is only computed on the * first call and memoized after that. * * If this message requires more than Integer.MAX_VALUE bytes to encode, the return value will * be smaller than the actual number of bytes required and might be negative. */ int getSerializedSize(); /** Gets the parser for a message of the same type as this message. */ Parser getParserForType(); // ----------------------------------------------------------------- // Convenience methods. /** * Serializes the message to a {@code ByteString} and returns it. This is just a trivial wrapper * around {@link #writeTo(CodedOutputStream)}. * * If this message requires more than Integer.MAX_VALUE bytes to encode, the behavior is * unpredictable. It may throw a runtime exception or truncate or slice the data. */ ByteString toByteString(); /** * Serializes the message to a {@code byte} array and returns it. This is just a trivial wrapper * around {@link #writeTo(CodedOutputStream)}. * * If this message requires more than Integer.MAX_VALUE bytes to encode, the behavior is * unpredictable. It may throw a runtime exception or truncate or slice the data. */ byte[] toByteArray(); /** * Serializes the message and writes it to {@code output}. This is just a trivial wrapper around * {@link #writeTo(CodedOutputStream)}. This does not flush or close the stream. * *

NOTE: Protocol Buffers are not self-delimiting. Therefore, if you write any more data to the * stream after the message, you must somehow ensure that the parser on the receiving end does not * interpret this as being part of the protocol message. This can be done, for instance, by * writing the size of the message before the data, then making sure to limit the input to that * size on the receiving end by wrapping the InputStream in one which limits the input. * Alternatively, just use {@link #writeDelimitedTo(OutputStream)}. */ void writeTo(OutputStream output) throws IOException; /** * Like {@link #writeTo(OutputStream)}, but writes the size of the message as a varint before * writing the data. This allows more data to be written to the stream after the message without * the need to delimit the message data yourself. Use {@link * Builder#mergeDelimitedFrom(InputStream)} (or the static method {@code * YourMessageType.parseDelimitedFrom(InputStream)}) to parse messages written by this method. */ void writeDelimitedTo(OutputStream output) throws IOException; // ================================================================= // Builders /** Constructs a new builder for a message of the same type as this message. */ Builder newBuilderForType(); /** * Constructs a builder initialized with the current message. Use this to derive a new message * from the current one. */ Builder toBuilder(); /** Abstract interface implemented by Protocol Message builders. */ interface Builder extends MessageLiteOrBuilder, Cloneable { /** Resets all fields to their default values. */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder clear(); /** * Constructs the message based on the state of the Builder. Subsequent changes to the Builder * will not affect the returned message. * * @throws UninitializedMessageException The message is missing one or more required fields * (i.e. {@link #isInitialized()} returns false). Use {@link #buildPartial()} to bypass this * check. */ MessageLite build(); /** * Like {@link #build()}, but does not throw an exception if the message is missing required * fields. Instead, a partial message is returned. Subsequent changes to the Builder will not * affect the returned message. */ MessageLite buildPartial(); /** * Clones the Builder. * * @see Object#clone() */ Builder clone(); /** * Parses a message of this type from the input and merges it with this message. * *

Warning: This does not verify that all required fields are present in the input message. * If you call {@link #build()} without setting all required fields, it will throw an {@link * UninitializedMessageException}, which is a {@code RuntimeException} and thus might not be * caught. There are a few good ways to deal with this: * *

    *
  • Call {@link #isInitialized()} to verify that all required fields are set before * building. *
  • Use {@code buildPartial()} to build, which ignores missing required fields. *
* *

Note: The caller should call {@link CodedInputStream#checkLastTagWas(int)} after calling * this to verify that the last tag seen was the appropriate end-group tag, or zero for EOF. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes read are not syntactically correct according * to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or was never * a protobuf in the first place. * @throws IOException an I/O error reading from the stream */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(CodedInputStream input) throws IOException; /** * Like {@link Builder#mergeFrom(CodedInputStream)}, but also parses extensions. The extensions * that you want to be able to parse must be registered in {@code extensionRegistry}. Extensions * not in the registry will be treated as unknown fields. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes read are not syntactically correct according * to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or was never * a protobuf in the first place. * @throws IOException an I/O error reading from the stream */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(CodedInputStream input, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws IOException; // --------------------------------------------------------------- // Convenience methods. /** * Parse {@code data} as a message of this type and merge it with the message being built. This * is just a small wrapper around {@link #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream)}. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes in data are not syntactically correct * according to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or * was never a protobuf in the first place. * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(ByteString data) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException; /** * Parse {@code data} as a message of this type and merge it with the message being built. This * is just a small wrapper around {@link #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream,ExtensionRegistryLite)}. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes in data are not syntactically correct * according to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or * was never a protobuf in the first place. * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(ByteString data, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException; /** * Parse {@code data} as a message of this type and merge it with the message being built. This * is just a small wrapper around {@link #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream)}. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes in data are not syntactically correct * according to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or * was never a protobuf in the first place. * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(byte[] data) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException; /** * Parse {@code data} as a message of this type and merge it with the message being built. This * is just a small wrapper around {@link #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream)}. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes in data are not syntactically correct * according to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or * was never a protobuf in the first place. * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(byte[] data, int off, int len) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException; /** * Parse {@code data} as a message of this type and merge it with the message being built. This * is just a small wrapper around {@link #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream,ExtensionRegistryLite)}. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes in data are not syntactically correct * according to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or * was never a protobuf in the first place. * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(byte[] data, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException; /** * Parse {@code data} as a message of this type and merge it with the message being built. This * is just a small wrapper around {@link #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream,ExtensionRegistryLite)}. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes in data are not syntactically correct * according to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or * was never a protobuf in the first place. * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(byte[] data, int off, int len, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException; /** * Parse a message of this type from {@code input} and merge it with the message being built. * This is just a small wrapper around {@link #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream)}. Note that this * method always reads the entire input (unless it throws an exception). If you want it * to stop earlier, you will need to wrap your input in some wrapper stream that limits reading. * Or, use {@link MessageLite#writeDelimitedTo(OutputStream)} to write your message and {@link * #mergeDelimitedFrom(InputStream)} to read it. * *

Despite usually reading the entire input, this does not close the stream. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes read are not syntactically correct according * to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or was never * a protobuf in the first place. * @throws IOException an I/O error reading from the stream * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(InputStream input) throws IOException; /** * Parse a message of this type from {@code input} and merge it with the message being built. * This is just a small wrapper around {@link * #mergeFrom(CodedInputStream,ExtensionRegistryLite)}. * * @return this */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(InputStream input, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws IOException; /** * Merge {@code other} into the message being built. {@code other} must have the exact same type * as {@code this} (i.e. {@code getClass().equals(getDefaultInstanceForType().getClass())}). * *

Merging occurs as follows. For each field:
* * For singular primitive fields, if the field is set in {@code other}, then {@code other}'s * value overwrites the value in this message.
* * For singular message fields, if the field is set in {@code other}, it is merged into the * corresponding sub-message of this message using the same merging rules.
* * For repeated fields, the elements in {@code other} are concatenated with the elements in * this message. * For oneof groups, if the other message has one of the fields set, the group * of this message is cleared and replaced by the field of the other message, so that the oneof * constraint is preserved. * *

This is equivalent to the {@code Message::MergeFrom} method in C++. */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue Builder mergeFrom(MessageLite other); /** * Like {@link #mergeFrom(InputStream)}, but does not read until EOF. Instead, the size of the * message (encoded as a varint) is read first, then the message data. Use {@link * MessageLite#writeDelimitedTo(OutputStream)} to write messages in this format. * * @return true if successful, or false if the stream is at EOF when the method starts. Any * other error (including reaching EOF during parsing) causes an exception to be thrown. * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes read are not syntactically correct according * to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or was never * a protobuf in the first place. * @throws IOException an I/O error reading from the stream */ boolean mergeDelimitedFrom(InputStream input) throws IOException; /** * Like {@link #mergeDelimitedFrom(InputStream)} but supporting extensions. * * @return true if successful, or false if the stream is at EOF when the method starts. Any * other error (including reaching EOF during parsing) causes an exception to be thrown. * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException the bytes read are not syntactically correct according * to the protobuf wire format specification. The data is corrupt, incomplete, or was never * a protobuf in the first place. * @throws IOException an I/O error reading from the stream */ boolean mergeDelimitedFrom(InputStream input, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws IOException; } }





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