Book Image

Protocol Buffers Handbook

By : Clément Jean
Book Image

Protocol Buffers Handbook

By: Clément Jean

Overview of this book

Explore how Protocol Buffers (Protobuf) serialize structured data and provides a language-neutral, platform-neutral, and extensible solution. With this guide to mastering Protobuf, you'll build your skills to effectively serialize, transmit, and manage data across diverse platforms and languages. This book will help you enter the world of Protocol Buffers by unraveling the intricate nuances of Protobuf syntax and showing you how to define complex data structures. As you progress, you’ll learn schema evolution, ensuring seamless compatibility as your projects evolve. The book also covers advanced topics such as custom options and plugins, allowing you to tailor validation processes to your specific requirements. You’ll understand how to automate project builds using cutting-edge tools such as Buf and Bazel, streamlining your development workflow. With hands-on projects in Go and Python programming, you’ll learn how to practically apply Protobuf concepts. Later chapters will show you how to integrate data interchange capabilities across different programming languages, enabling efficient collaboration and system interoperability. By the end of this book, you’ll have a solid understanding of Protobuf internals, enabling you to discern when and how to use and redefine your approach to data serialization.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, we learned what Protobuf text format is and why we can use it. We saw that we could describe data as text, and Protobuf is able to read it to create a binary representation of it. This is useful for use cases where the main reader and editor of the data is a human. It lets us edit data and make sure that the data provided is valid by checking types. Finally, it lets us document the txtpb files by adding headers and comments. This helps future readers understand where they can find the proto file, the message definition for the data, and what some less descriptive parts of the data mean.

In the next chapter, we will see how to use the knowledge we have on proto files to generate code and decode binary, as well as the knowledge we have about txtpb to encode text to binary. This will be the last skill we need to be able to study the internals of serialization.