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diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/docs/reference.rst b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/docs/reference.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e59a0c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/docs/reference.rst @@ -0,0 +1,770 @@ +===================== +Nanopb: API reference +===================== + +.. include :: menu.rst + +.. contents :: + + + + +Compilation options +=================== +The following options can be specified in one of two ways: + +1. Using the -D switch on the C compiler command line. +2. By #defining them at the top of pb.h. + +You must have the same settings for the nanopb library and all code that +includes pb.h. + +============================ ================================================ +PB_NO_PACKED_STRUCTS Disable packed structs. Increases RAM usage but + is necessary on some platforms that do not + support unaligned memory access. +PB_ENABLE_MALLOC Set this to enable dynamic allocation support + in the decoder. +PB_MAX_REQUIRED_FIELDS Maximum number of required fields to check for + presence. Default value is 64. Increases stack + usage 1 byte per every 8 fields. Compiler + warning will tell if you need this. +PB_FIELD_16BIT Add support for tag numbers > 255 and fields + larger than 255 bytes or 255 array entries. + Increases code size 3 bytes per each field. + Compiler error will tell if you need this. +PB_FIELD_32BIT Add support for tag numbers > 65535 and fields + larger than 65535 bytes or 65535 array entries. + Increases code size 9 bytes per each field. + Compiler error will tell if you need this. +PB_NO_ERRMSG Disables the support for error messages; only + error information is the true/false return + value. Decreases the code size by a few hundred + bytes. +PB_BUFFER_ONLY Disables the support for custom streams. Only + supports encoding and decoding with memory + buffers. Speeds up execution and decreases code + size slightly. +PB_OLD_CALLBACK_STYLE Use the old function signature (void\* instead + of void\*\*) for callback fields. This was the + default until nanopb-0.2.1. +PB_SYSTEM_HEADER Replace the standard header files with a single + header file. It should define all the required + functions and typedefs listed on the + `overview page`_. Value must include quotes, + for example *#define PB_SYSTEM_HEADER "foo.h"*. +============================ ================================================ + +The PB_MAX_REQUIRED_FIELDS, PB_FIELD_16BIT and PB_FIELD_32BIT settings allow +raising some datatype limits to suit larger messages. Their need is recognized +automatically by C-preprocessor #if-directives in the generated .pb.h files. +The default setting is to use the smallest datatypes (least resources used). + +.. _`overview page`: index.html#compiler-requirements + + +Proto file options +================== +The generator behaviour can be adjusted using these options, defined in the +'nanopb.proto' file in the generator folder: + +============================ ================================================ +max_size Allocated size for *bytes* and *string* fields. +max_count Allocated number of entries in arrays + (*repeated* fields). +int_size Override the integer type of a field. + (To use e.g. uint8_t to save RAM.) +type Type of the generated field. Default value + is *FT_DEFAULT*, which selects automatically. + You can use *FT_CALLBACK*, *FT_POINTER*, + *FT_STATIC* or *FT_IGNORE* to + force a callback field, a dynamically + allocated field, a static field or to + completely ignore the field. +long_names Prefix the enum name to the enum value in + definitions, i.e. *EnumName_EnumValue*. Enabled + by default. +packed_struct Make the generated structures packed. + NOTE: This cannot be used on CPUs that break + on unaligned accesses to variables. +skip_message Skip the whole message from generation. +no_unions Generate 'oneof' fields as optional fields + instead of C unions. +msgid Specifies a unique id for this message type. + Can be used by user code as an identifier. +anonymous_oneof Generate 'oneof' fields as anonymous unions. +fixed_length Generate 'bytes' fields with constant length. +============================ ================================================ + +These options can be defined for the .proto files before they are converted +using the nanopb-generatory.py. There are three ways to define the options: + +1. Using a separate .options file. + This is the preferred way as of nanopb-0.2.1, because it has the best + compatibility with other protobuf libraries. +2. Defining the options on the command line of nanopb_generator.py. + This only makes sense for settings that apply to a whole file. +3. Defining the options in the .proto file using the nanopb extensions. + This is the way used in nanopb-0.1, and will remain supported in the + future. It however sometimes causes trouble when using the .proto file + with other protobuf libraries. + +The effect of the options is the same no matter how they are given. The most +common purpose is to define maximum size for string fields in order to +statically allocate them. + +Defining the options in a .options file +--------------------------------------- +The preferred way to define options is to have a separate file +'myproto.options' in the same directory as the 'myproto.proto'. :: + + # myproto.proto + message MyMessage { + required string name = 1; + repeated int32 ids = 4; + } + +:: + + # myproto.options + MyMessage.name max_size:40 + MyMessage.ids max_count:5 + +The generator will automatically search for this file and read the +options from it. The file format is as follows: + +* Lines starting with '#' or '//' are regarded as comments. +* Blank lines are ignored. +* All other lines should start with a field name pattern, followed by one or + more options. For example: *"MyMessage.myfield max_size:5 max_count:10"*. +* The field name pattern is matched against a string of form *'Message.field'*. + For nested messages, the string is *'Message.SubMessage.field'*. +* The field name pattern may use the notation recognized by Python fnmatch(): + + - *\** matches any part of string, like 'Message.\*' for all fields + - *\?* matches any single character + - *[seq]* matches any of characters 's', 'e' and 'q' + - *[!seq]* matches any other character + +* The options are written as *'option_name:option_value'* and several options + can be defined on same line, separated by whitespace. +* Options defined later in the file override the ones specified earlier, so + it makes sense to define wildcard options first in the file and more specific + ones later. + +If preferred, the name of the options file can be set using the command line +switch *-f* to nanopb_generator.py. + +Defining the options on command line +------------------------------------ +The nanopb_generator.py has a simple command line option *-s OPTION:VALUE*. +The setting applies to the whole file that is being processed. + +Defining the options in the .proto file +--------------------------------------- +The .proto file format allows defining custom options for the fields. +The nanopb library comes with *nanopb.proto* which does exactly that, allowing +you do define the options directly in the .proto file:: + + import "nanopb.proto"; + + message MyMessage { + required string name = 1 [(nanopb).max_size = 40]; + repeated int32 ids = 4 [(nanopb).max_count = 5]; + } + +A small complication is that you have to set the include path of protoc so that +nanopb.proto can be found. This file, in turn, requires the file +*google/protobuf/descriptor.proto*. This is usually installed under +*/usr/include*. Therefore, to compile a .proto file which uses options, use a +protoc command similar to:: + + protoc -I/usr/include -Inanopb/generator -I. -omessage.pb message.proto + +The options can be defined in file, message and field scopes:: + + option (nanopb_fileopt).max_size = 20; // File scope + message Message + { + option (nanopb_msgopt).max_size = 30; // Message scope + required string fieldsize = 1 [(nanopb).max_size = 40]; // Field scope + } + + + + + + + + + +pb.h +==== + +pb_byte_t +--------- +Type used for storing byte-sized data, such as raw binary input and bytes-type fields. :: + + typedef uint_least8_t pb_byte_t; + +For most platforms this is equivalent to `uint8_t`. Some platforms however do not support +8-bit variables, and on those platforms 16 or 32 bits need to be used for each byte. + +pb_type_t +--------- +Type used to store the type of each field, to control the encoder/decoder behaviour. :: + + typedef uint_least8_t pb_type_t; + +The low-order nibble 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_UVARINT 0x01 Unsigned integer. +PB_LTYPE_SVARINT 0x02 Integer, zigzag encoded. +PB_LTYPE_FIXED32 0x03 32-bit integer or floating point. +PB_LTYPE_FIXED64 0x04 64-bit integer or floating point. +PB_LTYPE_BYTES 0x05 Structure with *size_t* field and byte array. +PB_LTYPE_STRING 0x06 Null-terminated string. +PB_LTYPE_SUBMESSAGE 0x07 Submessage structure. +PB_LTYPE_EXTENSION 0x08 Point to *pb_extension_t*. +PB_LTYPE_FIXED_LENGTH_BYTES 0x09 Inline *pb_byte_t* array of fixed size. +=========================== ===== ================================================ + +The bits 4-5 define whether the field is required, optional or repeated: + +==================== ===== ================================================ +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. + (Unless it is a callback) +PB_HTYPE_REPEATED 0x20 A repeated field with preallocated array. + Separate *<field>_count* for number of items. + (Unless it is a callback) +==================== ===== ================================================ + +The bits 6-7 define the how the storage for the field is allocated: + +==================== ===== ================================================ +ATYPE identifier Value Allocation method +==================== ===== ================================================ +PB_ATYPE_STATIC 0x00 Statically allocated storage in the structure. +PB_ATYPE_CALLBACK 0x40 A field with dynamic storage size. Struct field + actually contains a pointer to 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_s pb_field_t; + struct pb_field_s { + pb_size_t tag; + pb_type_t type; + pb_size_t data_offset; + pb_ssize_t size_offset; + pb_size_t data_size; + pb_size_t array_size; + const void *ptr; + } pb_packed; + +:tag: Tag number of the field or 0 to terminate a list of fields. +:type: LTYPE, HTYPE and ATYPE 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 give error if the values are too large. The types can be changed to larger ones by defining *PB_FIELD_16BIT*. + +pb_bytes_array_t +---------------- +An byte array with a field for storing the length:: + + typedef struct { + pb_size_t size; + pb_byte_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, void * const *arg); + } funcs; + + void *arg; + }; + +A pointer to the *arg* is passed to the callback when calling. It can be used to store any information that the callback might need. + +Previously the function received just the value of *arg* instead of a pointer to it. This old behaviour can be enabled by defining *PB_OLD_CALLBACK_STYLE*. + +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_extension_type_t +------------------- +Defines the handler functions and auxiliary data for a field that extends +another message. Usually autogenerated by *nanopb_generator.py*:: + + typedef struct { + bool (*decode)(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_extension_t *extension, + uint32_t tag, pb_wire_type_t wire_type); + bool (*encode)(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_extension_t *extension); + const void *arg; + } pb_extension_type_t; + +In the normal case, the function pointers are *NULL* and the decoder and +encoder use their internal implementations. The internal implementations +assume that *arg* points to a *pb_field_t* that describes the field in question. + +To implement custom processing of unknown fields, you can provide pointers +to your own functions. Their functionality is mostly the same as for normal +callback fields, except that they get called for any unknown field when decoding. + +pb_extension_t +-------------- +Ties together the extension field type and the storage for the field value:: + + typedef struct { + const pb_extension_type_t *type; + void *dest; + pb_extension_t *next; + bool found; + } pb_extension_t; + +:type: Pointer to the structure that defines the callback functions. +:dest: Pointer to the variable that stores the field value + (as used by the default extension callback functions.) +:next: Pointer to the next extension handler, or *NULL*. +:found: Decoder sets this to true if the extension was found. + +PB_GET_ERROR +------------ +Get the current error message from a stream, or a placeholder string if +there is no error message:: + + #define PB_GET_ERROR(stream) (string expression) + +This should be used for printing errors, for example:: + + if (!pb_decode(...)) + { + printf("Decode failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(stream)); + } + +The macro only returns pointers to constant strings (in code memory), +so that there is no need to release the returned pointer. + +PB_RETURN_ERROR +--------------- +Set the error message and return false:: + + #define PB_RETURN_ERROR(stream,msg) (sets error and returns false) + +This should be used to handle error conditions inside nanopb functions +and user callback functions:: + + if (error_condition) + { + PB_RETURN_ERROR(stream, "something went wrong"); + } + +The *msg* parameter must be a constant string. + + + +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(pb_byte_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 pb_byte_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. + +pb_encode_delimited +------------------- +Calculates the length of the message, encodes it as varint and then encodes the message. :: + + bool pb_encode_delimited(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct); + +(parameters are the same as for `pb_encode`_.) + +A common way to indicate the message length in Protocol Buffers is to prefix it with a varint. +This function does this, and it is compatible with *parseDelimitedFrom* in Google's protobuf library. + +.. 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_get_encoded_size +------------------- +Calculates the length of the encoded message. :: + + bool pb_get_encoded_size(size_t *size, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct); + +:size: Calculated size of the encoded message. +:fields: A field description array, usually autogenerated. +:src_struct: Pointer to the data that will be serialized. +:returns: True on success, false on detectable errors in field description or if a field encoder returns false. + +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, uint32_t 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, UVARINT, SVARINT PB_WT_VARINT +FIXED64 PB_WT_64BIT +STRING, BYTES, SUBMESSAGE, FIXED_LENGTH_BYTES 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 pb_byte_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(const pb_byte_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, pb_byte_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. + +If *PB_ENABLE_MALLOC* is defined, this function may allocate storage for any pointer type fields. +In this case, you have to call `pb_release`_ to release the memory after you are done with the message. +On error return `pb_decode` will release the memory itself. + +pb_decode_noinit +---------------- +Same as `pb_decode`_, except does not apply the default values to fields. :: + + bool pb_decode_noinit(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct); + +(parameters are the same as for `pb_decode`_.) + +The destination structure should be filled with zeros before calling this function. Doing a *memset* manually can be slightly faster than using `pb_decode`_ if you don't need any default values. + +In addition to decoding a single message, this function can be used to merge two messages, so that +values from previous message will remain if the new message does not contain a field. + +This function *will not* release the message even on error return. If you use *PB_ENABLE_MALLOC*, +you will need to call `pb_release`_ yourself. + +pb_decode_delimited +------------------- +Same as `pb_decode`_, except that it first reads a varint with the length of the message. :: + + bool pb_decode_delimited(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct); + +(parameters are the same as for `pb_decode`_.) + +A common method to indicate message size in Protocol Buffers is to prefix it with a varint. +This function is compatible with *writeDelimitedTo* in the Google's Protocol Buffers library. + +pb_release +---------- +Releases any dynamically allocated fields:: + + void pb_release(const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct); + +:fields: A field description array. Usually autogenerated. +:dest_struct: Pointer to structure where data is stored. If NULL, function does nothing. + +This function is only available if *PB_ENABLE_MALLOC* is defined. It will release any +pointer type fields in the structure and set the pointers to NULL. + +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, uint32_t *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:: Decoding fields manually + + The functions with names beginning with *pb_decode_* 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_decode`_ will call your callback function repeatedly, which can then store the values into e.g. filesystem in the order received in. + + For decoding numeric (including enumerated and boolean) values, use `pb_decode_varint`_, `pb_decode_svarint`_, `pb_decode_fixed32`_ and `pb_decode_fixed64`_. They take a pointer to a 32- or 64-bit C variable, which you may then cast to smaller datatype for storage. + + For decoding strings and bytes fields, the length has already been decoded. You can therefore check the total length in *stream->bytes_left* and read the data using `pb_read`_. + + Finally, for decoding submessages in a callback, simply use `pb_decode`_ and pass it the *SubMessage_fields* descriptor array. + +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_decode_svarint +----------------- +Similar to `pb_decode_varint`_, except that it performs zigzag-decoding on the value. This corresponds to the Protocol Buffers *sint32* and *sint64* datatypes. :: + + bool pb_decode_svarint(pb_istream_t *stream, int64_t *dest); + +(parameters are the same as `pb_decode_varint`_) + +pb_decode_fixed32 +----------------- +Decode a *fixed32*, *sfixed32* or *float* value. :: + + bool pb_decode_fixed32(pb_istream_t *stream, void *dest); + +:stream: Input stream to read from. 4 bytes will be read. +: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_decode_fixed64 +----------------- +Decode a *fixed64*, *sfixed64* or *double* value. :: + + bool pb_decode_fixed64(pb_istream_t *stream, void *dest); + +:stream: Input stream to read from. 8 bytes will be read. +:dest: Pointer to destination *int64_t*, *uint64_t* or *double*. +:returns: True on success, false on IO errors. + +Same as `pb_decode_fixed32`_, except this reads 8 bytes. + +pb_make_string_substream +------------------------ +Decode the length for a field with wire type *PB_WT_STRING* and create a substream for reading the data. :: + + bool pb_make_string_substream(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_istream_t *substream); + +:stream: Original input stream to read the length and data from. +:substream: New substream that has limited length. Filled in by the function. +:returns: True on success, false if reading the length fails. + +This function uses `pb_decode_varint`_ to read an integer from the stream. This is interpreted as a number of bytes, and the substream is set up so that its `bytes_left` is initially the same as the length, and its callback function and state the same as the parent stream. + +pb_close_string_substream +------------------------- +Close the substream created with `pb_make_string_substream`_. :: + + void pb_close_string_substream(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_istream_t *substream); + +:stream: Original input stream to read the length and data from. +:substream: Substream to close + +This function copies back the state from the substream to the parent stream. +It must be called after done with the substream. |