This repository provides a plugin for the protoc compiler. It generates Dart files for working with data in protocol buffers format.
To compile a .proto file, you must use the ‘protoc’ command which is installed separately. Protobuf 3.0.0 or above is required.
The generated files are pure Dart code that run in either in the Dart VM or in a browser (using dart2js). They depend the protobuf Dart package. A Dart project that includes generated files should add “protobuf” to its pubspec.yaml file.
Note: currently the workflow is POSIX-oriented.
To build standalone protoc
plugin:
dart pub get
to install all dependenciesbin
directory to your PATH
, or passing it directly with protoc
's --plugin
option.Please, remember that the plugin is pure Dart script and requires the presence of dart
executable in your PATH
.
When both the dart
executable and bin/protoc-gen-dart
are in the PATH
the protocol buffer compiler can be invoked to generate like this:
$ protoc --dart_out=. test.proto
pub global
$ pub global activate protoc_plugin
And then add .pub-cache/bin
in your home dir to your PATH
if you haven't already.
This will activate the latest published version of the plugin. If you wish to use a local working copy, use
$ pub global activate -s path <path/to/your/dart-protoc-plugin>
The protocol buffer compiler accepts options for each plugin. For the Dart plugin, these options are passed together with the --dart_out
option. The individial options are separated using comma, and the final output directive is separated from the options using colon. Pass options <option 1>
and <option 2>
like this:
--dart_out="<option 1>,<option 2>:."
The plugin includes the generate_kythe_info
option, which, if passed at run time, will make the plugin generate metadata files alongside the .dart
files generated for the proto messages and their enums. Pass this along with the other dart_out options:
--dart_out="generate_kythe_info,<other options>:."
The protocol buffer compiler produces several files for each .proto
file it compiles. In some cases this is not exactly what is needed, e.g one would like to create new libraries which exposes the objects in these libraries or create new librares combining object definitions from several .proto
libraries into one.
The best way to aproach this is to create the new libraries needed and re-export the relevant protocol buffer classes.
Say we have the file m1.proto
with the following content
message M1 { optional string a; }
and m2.proto
containing
message M2 { optional string b; }
Compiling these to Dart will produce two libraries in m1.pb.dart
and m2.pb.dart
. The following code shows a library M which combines these two protocol buffer libraries, exposes the classes M1
and M2
and adds som additional methods.
library M; import "m1.pb.dart"; import "m2.pb.dart"; export "m1.pb.dart" show M1; export "m2.pb.dart" show M2; M1 createM1() => new M1(); M2 createM2() => new M2();
Here are some ways to get protoc:
apt-get install protobuf-compiler
brew install protobuf
If the version installed this way doesn't work, an alternative is to compile protoc from source.
Remember to run the tests. That is as easy as make run-tests
.