pbs

WebJar for pbs

License

License

MIT
GroupId

GroupId

org.webjars.npm
ArtifactId

ArtifactId

pbs
Last Version

Last Version

1.3.2
Release Date

Release Date

Type

Type

jar
Description

Description

pbs
WebJar for pbs
Project URL

Project URL

http://webjars.org
Source Code Management

Source Code Management

https://github.com/mafintosh/pbs

Download pbs

How to add to project

<!-- https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/org.webjars.npm/pbs/ -->
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.webjars.npm</groupId>
    <artifactId>pbs</artifactId>
    <version>1.3.2</version>
</dependency>
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/org.webjars.npm/pbs/
implementation 'org.webjars.npm:pbs:1.3.2'
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/org.webjars.npm/pbs/
implementation ("org.webjars.npm:pbs:1.3.2")
'org.webjars.npm:pbs:jar:1.3.2'
<dependency org="org.webjars.npm" name="pbs" rev="1.3.2">
  <artifact name="pbs" type="jar" />
</dependency>
@Grapes(
@Grab(group='org.webjars.npm', module='pbs', version='1.3.2')
)
libraryDependencies += "org.webjars.npm" % "pbs" % "1.3.2"
[org.webjars.npm/pbs "1.3.2"]

Dependencies

compile (4)

Group / Artifact Type Version
org.webjars.npm : generate-function jar [2.0.0,3)
org.webjars.npm : protocol-buffers jar [3.0.0,4)
org.webjars.npm : readable-stream jar [1.0.33,2)
org.webjars.npm : varint jar [4.0.0,5)

Project Modules

There are no modules declared in this project.

pbs

Streaming encoder/decoder for protocol buffers

npm install pbs

build status

Usage

var pbs = require('pbs')

var messages = pbs(`
  message Company {
    required string name = 1;
    repeated Employee employees = 2;
    optional string country = 3;

    message Employee {
      required string name = 1;
      required uint32 age = 2;
    }
  }
`)

// create a streaming encoder
var encoder = messages.Company.encode()

// create a streaming decoder
var decoder = messages.Company.decode()

Encoding

Use pbs to encode a protocol buffers message (no matter how large!) to a stream.

The encoder stream will expose all properties of the protobuf message as methods on the stream that you can pass the value you want to write to.

encoder.someProperty(aValue, [callback])

The callback is called when the stream has been flushed.

Here is an example using the above protobuf schema:

// all the properties of Company are exposed as methods
var encoder = messages.Company.encode()

// encoder is a readable stream containing the protobuf message.
// you can pipe it anywhere!
encoder.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('my-protobuf-message.pb'))

// write a name to the stream
encoder.name('my-company')

// write an employee to the stream
encoder.employees({
  name: 'mathias',
  age: 28
})

// write another one
encoder.employees({
  name: 'jane doe',
  age: 32
})

// no more data -  will end the readable stream
encoder.finalize()

The encoder stream produces a valid protobuf message that can be decoded with any other parser that follows the protobuf spec.

Decoding

Similar to encoding you can use pbs to decode a protobuf message.

The decoder stream also exposes the properties as methods, but instead of passing a value you pass a function that is called then that property is found in the stream.

decoder.someProperty(fn)

Here is an example using the above schema:

// all the properties of Company are exposes as methods
var decoder = messages.Company.decode()

decoder.name(function (name, cb) {
  console.log('message has name:', name)
  cb() // done processing
})

decoder.employees(function (employee, cb) {
  console.log('employee array member:', employee)
  cb() // done processing
})

decoder.country(function (country, cb) {
  console.log('message has country:', country)
  cb()
})

decoder.on('finish', function () {
  console.log('(no more data)')
})

fs.createReadStream('my-protobuf-message.pb').pipe(decoder)

Use cases

You can use this to parse large protobuf messages that might not fit in memory.

Another use case is to use this to implement a streaming binary protocol encoder/decoder. Let's say I wanted to implement a chat protocol. I could describe it using the following proto schema:

message ChatProtocol {
  repeated Message messages = 1;
  repeated string online = 2;

  message Message {
    required string from = 1;
    required string text = 2;
  }
}

and then just use pbs to parse it:

var fs = require('fs')
var pbs = require('pbs')

var messages = pbs(fs.readFileSync('schema.proto'))
var decoder = messages.ChatProtocol.decode()

// read messages

decoder.online(function (username, cb) {
  console.log(username + ' is online!')
  cb()
})

decoder.messages(function (message, cb) {
  console.log(message.from + ' says: ' + message.text)
})

// write messages

var encoder = messages.ChatProtocol.encode()

encoder.online('mafintosh')
encoder.messages({
  from: 'mafintosh',
  text: 'hello world!'
})

// setup the pipeline
encoder.pipe(someTransportStream).pipe(decoder)

Since the entire stream is valid protobuf, you could even save it to a file and parse it using another protobuf parser to debug an application.

License

MIT

Versions

Version
1.3.2