1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
|
=====================
Nanopb: API reference
=====================
.. include :: menu.rst
.. contents ::
Compilation options
===================
The following options can be specified using -D switch given to the C compiler:
:__BIG_ENDIAN__: Set this if your platform stores integers and floats in big-endian format. Mixed-endian systems (different layout for ints and floats) are currently not supported.
pb.h
====
pb_type_t
---------
Defines the encoder/decoder behaviour that should be used for a field. ::
typedef enum { ... } pb_type_t;
The low-order byte of the enumeration values defines the function that can be used for encoding and decoding the field data:
==================== ===== ================================================
LTYPE identifier Value Storage format
==================== ===== ================================================
PB_LTYPE_VARINT 0x00 Integer.
PB_LTYPE_SVARINT 0x01 Integer, zigzag encoded.
PB_LTYPE_FIXED 0x02 Integer or floating point.
PB_LTYPE_BYTES 0x03 Structure with *size_t* field and byte array.
PB_LTYPE_STRING 0x04 Null-terminated string.
PB_LTYPE_SUBMESSAGE 0x05 Submessage structure.
==================== ===== ================================================
The high-order byte defines whether the field is required, optional, repeated or callback:
==================== ===== ================================================
HTYPE identifier Value Field handling
==================== ===== ================================================
PB_HTYPE_REQUIRED 0x00 Verify that field exists in decoded message.
PB_HTYPE_OPTIONAL 0x10 Use separate *has_<field>* boolean to specify
whether the field is present.
PB_HTYPE_ARRAY 0x20 A repeated field with preallocated array.
Separate *<field>_count* for number of items.
PB_HTYPE_CALLBACK 0x30 A field with dynamic storage size, data is
actually a pointer to a structure containing a
callback function.
==================== ===== ================================================
pb_field_t
----------
Describes a single structure field with memory position in relation to others. The descriptions are usually autogenerated. ::
typedef struct _pb_field_t pb_field_t;
struct _pb_field_t {
uint8_t tag;
pb_type_t type;
uint8_t data_offset;
int8_t size_offset;
uint8_t data_size;
uint8_t array_size;
const void *ptr;
} pb_packed;
:tag: Tag number of the field or 0 to terminate a list of fields.
:type: LTYPE and HTYPE of the field.
:data_offset: Offset of field data, relative to the end of the previous field.
:size_offset: Offset of *bool* flag for optional fields or *size_t* count for arrays, relative to field data.
:data_size: Size of a single data entry, in bytes. For PB_LTYPE_BYTES, the size of the byte array inside the containing structure. For PB_HTYPE_CALLBACK, size of the C data type if known.
:array_size: Maximum number of entries in an array, if it is an array type.
:ptr: Pointer to default value for optional fields, or to submessage description for PB_LTYPE_SUBMESSAGE.
The *uint8_t* datatypes limit the maximum size of a single item to 255 bytes and arrays to 255 items. Compiler will warn "Initializer too large for type" if the limits are exceeded. The types can be changed to larger ones if necessary.
pb_bytes_array_t
----------------
An byte array with a field for storing the length::
typedef struct {
size_t size;
uint8_t bytes[1];
} pb_bytes_array_t;
In an actual array, the length of *bytes* may be different.
pb_callback_t
-------------
Part of a message structure, for fields with type PB_HTYPE_CALLBACK::
typedef struct _pb_callback_t pb_callback_t;
struct _pb_callback_t {
union {
bool (*decode)(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *arg);
bool (*encode)(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, const void *arg);
} funcs;
void *arg;
};
The *arg* is passed to the callback when calling. It can be used to store any information that the callback might need.
When calling `pb_encode`_, *funcs.encode* is used, and similarly when calling `pb_decode`_, *funcs.decode* is used. The function pointers are stored in the same memory location but are of incompatible types. You can set the function pointer to NULL to skip the field.
pb_wire_type_t
--------------
Protocol Buffers wire types. These are used with `pb_encode_tag`_. ::
typedef enum {
PB_WT_VARINT = 0,
PB_WT_64BIT = 1,
PB_WT_STRING = 2,
PB_WT_32BIT = 5
} pb_wire_type_t;
pb_encode.h
===========
pb_ostream_from_buffer
----------------------
Constructs an output stream for writing into a memory buffer. This is just a helper function, it doesn't do anything you couldn't do yourself in a callback function. It uses an internal callback that stores the pointer in stream *state* field. ::
pb_ostream_t pb_ostream_from_buffer(uint8_t *buf, size_t bufsize);
:buf: Memory buffer to write into.
:bufsize: Maximum number of bytes to write.
:returns: An output stream.
After writing, you can check *stream.bytes_written* to find out how much valid data there is in the buffer.
pb_write
--------
Writes data to an output stream. Always use this function, instead of trying to call stream callback manually. ::
bool pb_write(pb_ostream_t *stream, const uint8_t *buf, size_t count);
:stream: Output stream to write to.
:buf: Pointer to buffer with the data to be written.
:count: Number of bytes to write.
:returns: True on success, false if maximum length is exceeded or an IO error happens.
If an error happens, *bytes_written* is not incremented. Depending on the callback used, calling pb_write again after it has failed once may be dangerous. Nanopb itself never does this, instead it returns the error to user application. The builtin pb_ostream_from_buffer is safe to call again after failed write.
pb_encode
---------
Encodes the contents of a structure as a protocol buffers message and writes it to output stream. ::
bool pb_encode(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct);
:stream: Output stream to write to.
:fields: A field description array, usually autogenerated.
:src_struct: Pointer to the data that will be serialized.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error, on detectable errors in field description, or if a field encoder returns false.
Normally pb_encode simply walks through the fields description array and serializes each field in turn. However, submessages must be serialized twice: first to calculate their size and then to actually write them to output. This causes some constraints for callback fields, which must return the same data on every call.
.. sidebar:: Encoding fields manually
The functions with names *pb_encode_\** are used when dealing with callback fields. The typical reason for using callbacks is to have an array of unlimited size. In that case, `pb_encode`_ will call your callback function, which in turn will call *pb_encode_\** functions repeatedly to write out values.
The tag of a field must be encoded separately with `pb_encode_tag_for_field`_. After that, you can call exactly one of the content-writing functions to encode the payload of the field. For repeated fields, you can repeat this process multiple times.
Writing packed arrays is a little bit more involved: you need to use `pb_encode_tag` and specify `PB_WT_STRING` as the wire type. Then you need to know exactly how much data you are going to write, and use `pb_encode_varint`_ to write out the number of bytes before writing the actual data. Substreams can be used to determine the number of bytes beforehand; see `pb_encode_submessage`_ source code for an example.
pb_encode_tag
-------------
Starts a field in the Protocol Buffers binary format: encodes the field number and the wire type of the data. ::
bool pb_encode_tag(pb_ostream_t *stream, pb_wire_type_t wiretype, int field_number);
:stream: Output stream to write to. 1-5 bytes will be written.
:wiretype: PB_WT_VARINT, PB_WT_64BIT, PB_WT_STRING or PB_WT_32BIT
:field_number: Identifier for the field, defined in the .proto file. You can get it from field->tag.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error.
pb_encode_tag_for_field
-----------------------
Same as `pb_encode_tag`_, except takes the parameters from a *pb_field_t* structure. ::
bool pb_encode_tag_for_field(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field);
:stream: Output stream to write to. 1-5 bytes will be written.
:field: Field description structure. Usually autogenerated.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error or unknown field type.
This function only considers the LTYPE of the field. You can use it from your field callbacks, because the source generator writes correct LTYPE also for callback type fields.
Wire type mapping is as follows:
========================= ============
LTYPEs Wire type
========================= ============
VARINT, SVARINT PB_WT_VARINT
FIXED64 PB_WT_64BIT
STRING, BYTES, SUBMESSAGE PB_WT_STRING
FIXED32 PB_WT_32BIT
========================= ============
pb_encode_varint
----------------
Encodes a signed or unsigned integer in the varint_ format. Works for fields of type `bool`, `enum`, `int32`, `int64`, `uint32` and `uint64`::
bool pb_encode_varint(pb_ostream_t *stream, uint64_t value);
:stream: Output stream to write to. 1-10 bytes will be written.
:value: Value to encode. Just cast e.g. int32_t directly to uint64_t.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error.
.. _varint: http://code.google.com/apis/protocolbuffers/docs/encoding.html#varints
pb_encode_svarint
-----------------
Encodes a signed integer in the 'zig-zagged' format. Works for fields of type `sint32` and `sint64`::
bool pb_encode_svarint(pb_ostream_t *stream, int64_t value);
(parameters are the same as for `pb_encode_varint`_
pb_encode_string
----------------
Writes the length of a string as varint and then contents of the string. Works for fields of type `bytes` and `string`::
bool pb_encode_string(pb_ostream_t *stream, const uint8_t *buffer, size_t size);
:stream: Output stream to write to.
:buffer: Pointer to string data.
:size: Number of bytes in the string. Pass `strlen(s)` for strings.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error.
pb_encode_fixed32
-----------------
Writes 4 bytes to stream and swaps bytes on big-endian architectures. Works for fields of type `fixed32`, `sfixed32` and `float`::
bool pb_encode_fixed32(pb_ostream_t *stream, const void *value);
:stream: Output stream to write to.
:value: Pointer to a 4-bytes large C variable, for example `uint32_t foo;`.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error.
pb_encode_fixed64
-----------------
Writes 8 bytes to stream and swaps bytes on big-endian architecture. Works for fields of type `fixed64`, `sfixed64` and `double`::
bool pb_encode_fixed64(pb_ostream_t *stream, const void *value);
:stream: Output stream to write to.
:value: Pointer to a 8-bytes large C variable, for example `uint64_t foo;`.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error.
pb_encode_submessage
--------------------
Encodes a submessage field, including the size header for it. Works for fields of any message type::
bool pb_encode_submessage(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct);
:stream: Output stream to write to.
:fields: Pointer to the autogenerated field description array for the submessage type, e.g. `MyMessage_fields`.
:src: Pointer to the structure where submessage data is.
:returns: True on success, false on IO errors, pb_encode errors or if submessage size changes between calls.
In Protocol Buffers format, the submessage size must be written before the submessage contents. Therefore, this function has to encode the submessage twice in order to know the size beforehand.
If the submessage contains callback fields, the callback function might misbehave and write out a different amount of data on the second call. This situation is recognized and *false* is returned, but garbage will be written to the output before the problem is detected.
pb_decode.h
===========
pb_istream_from_buffer
----------------------
Helper function for creating an input stream that reads data from a memory buffer. ::
pb_istream_t pb_istream_from_buffer(uint8_t *buf, size_t bufsize);
:buf: Pointer to byte array to read from.
:bufsize: Size of the byte array.
:returns: An input stream ready to use.
pb_read
-------
Read data from input stream. Always use this function, don't try to call the stream callback directly. ::
bool pb_read(pb_istream_t *stream, uint8_t *buf, size_t count);
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:buf: Buffer to store the data to, or NULL to just read data without storing it anywhere.
:count: Number of bytes to read.
:returns: True on success, false if *stream->bytes_left* is less than *count* or if an IO error occurs.
End of file is signalled by *stream->bytes_left* being zero after pb_read returns false.
pb_decode
---------
Read and decode all fields of a structure. Reads until EOF on input stream. ::
bool pb_decode(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct);
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:fields: A field description array. Usually autogenerated.
:dest_struct: Pointer to structure where data will be stored.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error, on detectable errors in field description, if a field encoder returns false or if a required field is missing.
In Protocol Buffers binary format, EOF is only allowed between fields. If it happens anywhere else, pb_decode will return *false*. If pb_decode returns false, you cannot trust any of the data in the structure.
In addition to EOF, the pb_decode implementation supports terminating a message with a 0 byte. This is compatible with the official Protocol Buffers because 0 is never a valid field tag.
For optional fields, this function applies the default value and sets *has_<field>* to false if the field is not present.
Because of memory concerns, the detection of missing required fields is not perfect if the structure contains more than 32 fields.
pb_decode_varint
----------------
Read and decode a varint_ encoded integer. ::
bool pb_decode_varint(pb_istream_t *stream, uint64_t *dest);
:stream: Input stream to read from. 1-10 bytes will be read.
:dest: Storage for the decoded integer. Value is undefined on error.
:returns: True on success, false if value exceeds uint64_t range or an IO error happens.
pb_skip_varint
--------------
Skip a varint_ encoded integer without decoding it. ::
bool pb_skip_varint(pb_istream_t *stream);
:stream: Input stream to read from. Will read 1 byte at a time until the MSB is clear.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error.
pb_skip_string
--------------
Skip a varint-length-prefixed string. This means skipping a value with wire type PB_WT_STRING. ::
bool pb_skip_string(pb_istream_t *stream);
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error or length exceeding uint32_t.
pb_decode_tag
-------------
Decode the tag that comes before field in the protobuf encoding::
bool pb_decode_tag(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_wire_type_t *wire_type, int *tag, bool *eof);
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:wire_type: Pointer to variable where to store the wire type of the field.
:tag: Pointer to variable where to store the tag of the field.
:eof: Pointer to variable where to store end-of-file status.
:returns: True on success, false on error or EOF.
When the message (stream) ends, this function will return false and set *eof* to true. On other
errors, *eof* will be set to false.
pb_skip_field
-------------
Remove the data for a field from the stream, without actually decoding it::
bool pb_skip_field(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_wire_type_t wire_type);
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:wire_type: Type of field to skip.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error.
.. sidebar:: Field decoders
The functions with names beginning with *pb_dec_* are called field decoders. Each PB_LTYPE has an own field decoder, which handles translating from Protocol Buffers data to C data.
Each field decoder reads and decodes a single value. For arrays, the decoder is called repeatedly.
You can use the decoders from your callbacks. Just be aware that the pb_field_t passed to the callback is not directly compatible
with the *varint* field decoders. Instead, you must create a new pb_field_t structure and set the data_size according to the data type
you pass to *dest*, e.g. *field.data_size = sizeof(int);*. Other fields in the *pb_field_t* don't matter.
The field decoder interface is a bit messy as a result of the interface required inside the nanopb library.
Eventually they may be replaced by separate wrapper functions with a more friendly interface.
pb_dec_varint
-------------
Field decoder for PB_LTYPE_VARINT. ::
bool pb_dec_varint(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *dest)
:stream: Input stream to read from. 1-10 bytes will be read.
:field: Field description structure. Only *field->data_size* matters.
:dest: Pointer to destination integer. Must have size of *field->data_size* bytes.
:returns: True on success, false on IO errors or if `pb_decode_varint`_ fails.
This function first calls `pb_decode_varint`_. It then copies the first bytes of the 64-bit result value to *dest*, or on big endian architectures, the last bytes.
pb_dec_svarint
--------------
Field decoder for PB_LTYPE_SVARINT. Similar to `pb_dec_varint`_, except that it performs zigzag-decoding on the value. ::
bool pb_dec_svarint(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *dest);
(parameters are the same as `pb_dec_varint`_)
pb_dec_fixed32
--------------
Field decoder for PB_LTYPE_FIXED32. ::
bool pb_dec_fixed32(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *dest);
:stream: Input stream to read from. 4 bytes will be read.
:field: Not used.
:dest: Pointer to destination *int32_t*, *uint32_t* or *float*.
:returns: True on success, false on IO errors.
This function reads 4 bytes from the input stream.
On big endian architectures, it then reverses the order of the bytes.
Finally, it writes the bytes to *dest*.
pb_dec_fixed64
--------------
Field decoder for PB_LTYPE_FIXED64. ::
bool pb_dec_fixed(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *dest);
:stream: Input stream to read from. 8 bytes will be read.
:field: Not used.
:dest: Pointer to destination *int64_t*, *uint64_t* or *double*.
:returns: True on success, false on IO errors.
Same as `pb_dec_fixed32`_, except this reads 8 bytes.
pb_dec_bytes
------------
Field decoder for PB_LTYPE_BYTES. Reads a length-prefixed block of bytes. ::
bool pb_dec_bytes(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *dest);
**Note:** This is an internal function that is not useful in decoder callbacks. To read bytes fields in callbacks, use
*stream->bytes_left* and `pb_read`_.
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:field: Field description structure. Only *field->data_size* matters.
:dest: Pointer to a structure similar to pb_bytes_array_t.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error or if length exceeds the array size.
This function expects a pointer to a structure with a *size_t* field at start, and a variable sized byte array after it. It will deduce the maximum size of the array from *field->data_size*.
pb_dec_string
-------------
Field decoder for PB_LTYPE_STRING. Reads a length-prefixed string. ::
bool pb_dec_string(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *dest);
**Note:** This is an internal function that is not useful in decoder callbacks. To read string fields in callbacks, use
*stream->bytes_left* and `pb_read`_.
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:field: Field description structure. Only *field->data_size* matters.
:dest: Pointer to a character array of size *field->data_size*.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error or if length exceeds the array size.
This function null-terminates the string when successful. On error, the contents of the destination array is undefined.
pb_dec_submessage
-----------------
Field decoder for PB_LTYPE_SUBMESSAGE. Calls `pb_decode`_ to perform the actual decoding. ::
bool pb_dec_submessage(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void *dest)
**Note:** This is an internal function that is not useful in decoder callbacks. To read submessage fields in callbacks, use
`pb_decode`_ directly.
:stream: Input stream to read from.
:field: Field description structure. Only *field->ptr* matters.
:dest: Pointer to the destination structure.
:returns: True on success, false on IO error or if `pb_decode`_ fails.
The *field->ptr* should be a pointer to *pb_field_t* array describing the submessage.
|