1===================== 2Nanopb: API reference 3===================== 4 5.. include :: menu.rst 6 7.. contents :: 8 9 10 11 12Compilation options 13=================== 14The following options can be specified in one of two ways: 15 161. Using the -D switch on the C compiler command line. 172. By #defining them at the top of pb.h. 18 19You must have the same settings for the nanopb library and all code that 20includes pb.h. 21 22============================ ================================================ 23PB_NO_PACKED_STRUCTS Disable packed structs. Increases RAM usage but 24 is necessary on some platforms that do not 25 support unaligned memory access. 26PB_ENABLE_MALLOC Set this to enable dynamic allocation support 27 in the decoder. 28PB_MAX_REQUIRED_FIELDS Maximum number of required fields to check for 29 presence. Default value is 64. Increases stack 30 usage 1 byte per every 8 fields. Compiler 31 warning will tell if you need this. 32PB_FIELD_16BIT Add support for tag numbers > 255 and fields 33 larger than 255 bytes or 255 array entries. 34 Increases code size 3 bytes per each field. 35 Compiler error will tell if you need this. 36PB_FIELD_32BIT Add support for tag numbers > 65535 and fields 37 larger than 65535 bytes or 65535 array entries. 38 Increases code size 9 bytes per each field. 39 Compiler error will tell if you need this. 40PB_NO_ERRMSG Disables the support for error messages; only 41 error information is the true/false return 42 value. Decreases the code size by a few hundred 43 bytes. 44PB_BUFFER_ONLY Disables the support for custom streams. Only 45 supports encoding and decoding with memory 46 buffers. Speeds up execution and decreases code 47 size slightly. 48PB_OLD_CALLBACK_STYLE Use the old function signature (void\* instead 49 of void\*\*) for callback fields. This was the 50 default until nanopb-0.2.1. 51PB_SYSTEM_HEADER Replace the standard header files with a single 52 header file. It should define all the required 53 functions and typedefs listed on the 54 `overview page`_. Value must include quotes, 55 for example *#define PB_SYSTEM_HEADER "foo.h"*. 56============================ ================================================ 57 58The PB_MAX_REQUIRED_FIELDS, PB_FIELD_16BIT and PB_FIELD_32BIT settings allow 59raising some datatype limits to suit larger messages. Their need is recognized 60automatically by C-preprocessor #if-directives in the generated .pb.h files. 61The default setting is to use the smallest datatypes (least resources used). 62 63.. _`overview page`: index.html#compiler-requirements 64 65 66Proto file options 67================== 68The generator behaviour can be adjusted using these options, defined in the 69'nanopb.proto' file in the generator folder: 70 71============================ ================================================ 72max_size Allocated size for *bytes* and *string* fields. 73max_count Allocated number of entries in arrays 74 (*repeated* fields). 75int_size Override the integer type of a field. 76 (To use e.g. uint8_t to save RAM.) 77type Type of the generated field. Default value 78 is *FT_DEFAULT*, which selects automatically. 79 You can use *FT_CALLBACK*, *FT_POINTER*, 80 *FT_STATIC*, *FT_IGNORE*, or *FT_INLINE* to 81 force a callback field, a dynamically 82 allocated field, a static field, to 83 completely ignore the field or to 84 generate an inline bytes field. 85long_names Prefix the enum name to the enum value in 86 definitions, i.e. *EnumName_EnumValue*. Enabled 87 by default. 88packed_struct Make the generated structures packed. 89 NOTE: This cannot be used on CPUs that break 90 on unaligned accesses to variables. 91skip_message Skip the whole message from generation. 92no_unions Generate 'oneof' fields as optional fields 93 instead of C unions. 94msgid Specifies a unique id for this message type. 95 Can be used by user code as an identifier. 96anonymous_oneof Generate 'oneof' fields as anonymous unions. 97============================ ================================================ 98 99These options can be defined for the .proto files before they are converted 100using the nanopb-generatory.py. There are three ways to define the options: 101 1021. Using a separate .options file. 103 This is the preferred way as of nanopb-0.2.1, because it has the best 104 compatibility with other protobuf libraries. 1052. Defining the options on the command line of nanopb_generator.py. 106 This only makes sense for settings that apply to a whole file. 1073. Defining the options in the .proto file using the nanopb extensions. 108 This is the way used in nanopb-0.1, and will remain supported in the 109 future. It however sometimes causes trouble when using the .proto file 110 with other protobuf libraries. 111 112The effect of the options is the same no matter how they are given. The most 113common purpose is to define maximum size for string fields in order to 114statically allocate them. 115 116Defining the options in a .options file 117--------------------------------------- 118The preferred way to define options is to have a separate file 119'myproto.options' in the same directory as the 'myproto.proto'. :: 120 121 # myproto.proto 122 message MyMessage { 123 required string name = 1; 124 repeated int32 ids = 4; 125 } 126 127:: 128 129 # myproto.options 130 MyMessage.name max_size:40 131 MyMessage.ids max_count:5 132 133The generator will automatically search for this file and read the 134options from it. The file format is as follows: 135 136* Lines starting with '#' or '//' are regarded as comments. 137* Blank lines are ignored. 138* All other lines should start with a field name pattern, followed by one or 139 more options. For example: *"MyMessage.myfield max_size:5 max_count:10"*. 140* The field name pattern is matched against a string of form *'Message.field'*. 141 For nested messages, the string is *'Message.SubMessage.field'*. 142* The field name pattern may use the notation recognized by Python fnmatch(): 143 144 - *\** matches any part of string, like 'Message.\*' for all fields 145 - *\?* matches any single character 146 - *[seq]* matches any of characters 's', 'e' and 'q' 147 - *[!seq]* matches any other character 148 149* The options are written as *'option_name:option_value'* and several options 150 can be defined on same line, separated by whitespace. 151* Options defined later in the file override the ones specified earlier, so 152 it makes sense to define wildcard options first in the file and more specific 153 ones later. 154 155If preferred, the name of the options file can be set using the command line 156switch *-f* to nanopb_generator.py. 157 158Defining the options on command line 159------------------------------------ 160The nanopb_generator.py has a simple command line option *-s OPTION:VALUE*. 161The setting applies to the whole file that is being processed. 162 163Defining the options in the .proto file 164--------------------------------------- 165The .proto file format allows defining custom options for the fields. 166The nanopb library comes with *nanopb.proto* which does exactly that, allowing 167you do define the options directly in the .proto file:: 168 169 import "nanopb.proto"; 170 171 message MyMessage { 172 required string name = 1 [(nanopb).max_size = 40]; 173 repeated int32 ids = 4 [(nanopb).max_count = 5]; 174 } 175 176A small complication is that you have to set the include path of protoc so that 177nanopb.proto can be found. This file, in turn, requires the file 178*google/protobuf/descriptor.proto*. This is usually installed under 179*/usr/include*. Therefore, to compile a .proto file which uses options, use a 180protoc command similar to:: 181 182 protoc -I/usr/include -Inanopb/generator -I. -omessage.pb message.proto 183 184The options can be defined in file, message and field scopes:: 185 186 option (nanopb_fileopt).max_size = 20; // File scope 187 message Message 188 { 189 option (nanopb_msgopt).max_size = 30; // Message scope 190 required string fieldsize = 1 [(nanopb).max_size = 40]; // Field scope 191 } 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201pb.h 202==== 203 204pb_byte_t 205--------- 206Type used for storing byte-sized data, such as raw binary input and bytes-type fields. :: 207 208 typedef uint_least8_t pb_byte_t; 209 210For most platforms this is equivalent to `uint8_t`. Some platforms however do not support 2118-bit variables, and on those platforms 16 or 32 bits need to be used for each byte. 212 213pb_type_t 214--------- 215Type used to store the type of each field, to control the encoder/decoder behaviour. :: 216 217 typedef uint_least8_t pb_type_t; 218 219The low-order nibble of the enumeration values defines the function that can be used for encoding and decoding the field data: 220 221=========================== ===== ================================================ 222LTYPE identifier Value Storage format 223=========================== ===== ================================================ 224PB_LTYPE_VARINT 0x00 Integer. 225PB_LTYPE_UVARINT 0x01 Unsigned integer. 226PB_LTYPE_SVARINT 0x02 Integer, zigzag encoded. 227PB_LTYPE_FIXED32 0x03 32-bit integer or floating point. 228PB_LTYPE_FIXED64 0x04 64-bit integer or floating point. 229PB_LTYPE_BYTES 0x05 Structure with *size_t* field and byte array. 230PB_LTYPE_STRING 0x06 Null-terminated string. 231PB_LTYPE_SUBMESSAGE 0x07 Submessage structure. 232PB_LTYPE_EXTENSION 0x08 Point to *pb_extension_t*. 233PB_LTYPE_FIXED_LENGTH_BYTES 0x09 Inline *pb_byte_t* array of fixed size. 234=========================== ===== ================================================ 235 236The bits 4-5 define whether the field is required, optional or repeated: 237 238==================== ===== ================================================ 239HTYPE identifier Value Field handling 240==================== ===== ================================================ 241PB_HTYPE_REQUIRED 0x00 Verify that field exists in decoded message. 242PB_HTYPE_OPTIONAL 0x10 Use separate *has_<field>* boolean to specify 243 whether the field is present. 244 (Unless it is a callback) 245PB_HTYPE_REPEATED 0x20 A repeated field with preallocated array. 246 Separate *<field>_count* for number of items. 247 (Unless it is a callback) 248==================== ===== ================================================ 249 250The bits 6-7 define the how the storage for the field is allocated: 251 252==================== ===== ================================================ 253ATYPE identifier Value Allocation method 254==================== ===== ================================================ 255PB_ATYPE_STATIC 0x00 Statically allocated storage in the structure. 256PB_ATYPE_CALLBACK 0x40 A field with dynamic storage size. Struct field 257 actually contains a pointer to a callback 258 function. 259==================== ===== ================================================ 260 261 262pb_field_t 263---------- 264Describes a single structure field with memory position in relation to others. The descriptions are usually autogenerated. :: 265 266 typedef struct pb_field_s pb_field_t; 267 struct pb_field_s { 268 pb_size_t tag; 269 pb_type_t type; 270 pb_size_t data_offset; 271 pb_ssize_t size_offset; 272 pb_size_t data_size; 273 pb_size_t array_size; 274 const void *ptr; 275 } pb_packed; 276 277:tag: Tag number of the field or 0 to terminate a list of fields. 278:type: LTYPE, HTYPE and ATYPE of the field. 279:data_offset: Offset of field data, relative to the end of the previous field. 280:size_offset: Offset of *bool* flag for optional fields or *size_t* count for arrays, relative to field data. 281: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. 282:array_size: Maximum number of entries in an array, if it is an array type. 283:ptr: Pointer to default value for optional fields, or to submessage description for PB_LTYPE_SUBMESSAGE. 284 285The *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*. 286 287pb_bytes_array_t 288---------------- 289An byte array with a field for storing the length:: 290 291 typedef struct { 292 pb_size_t size; 293 pb_byte_t bytes[1]; 294 } pb_bytes_array_t; 295 296In an actual array, the length of *bytes* may be different. 297 298pb_callback_t 299------------- 300Part of a message structure, for fields with type PB_HTYPE_CALLBACK:: 301 302 typedef struct _pb_callback_t pb_callback_t; 303 struct _pb_callback_t { 304 union { 305 bool (*decode)(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void **arg); 306 bool (*encode)(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void * const *arg); 307 } funcs; 308 309 void *arg; 310 }; 311 312A pointer to the *arg* is passed to the callback when calling. It can be used to store any information that the callback might need. 313 314Previously 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*. 315 316When 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. 317 318pb_wire_type_t 319-------------- 320Protocol Buffers wire types. These are used with `pb_encode_tag`_. :: 321 322 typedef enum { 323 PB_WT_VARINT = 0, 324 PB_WT_64BIT = 1, 325 PB_WT_STRING = 2, 326 PB_WT_32BIT = 5 327 } pb_wire_type_t; 328 329pb_extension_type_t 330------------------- 331Defines the handler functions and auxiliary data for a field that extends 332another message. Usually autogenerated by *nanopb_generator.py*:: 333 334 typedef struct { 335 bool (*decode)(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_extension_t *extension, 336 uint32_t tag, pb_wire_type_t wire_type); 337 bool (*encode)(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_extension_t *extension); 338 const void *arg; 339 } pb_extension_type_t; 340 341In the normal case, the function pointers are *NULL* and the decoder and 342encoder use their internal implementations. The internal implementations 343assume that *arg* points to a *pb_field_t* that describes the field in question. 344 345To implement custom processing of unknown fields, you can provide pointers 346to your own functions. Their functionality is mostly the same as for normal 347callback fields, except that they get called for any unknown field when decoding. 348 349pb_extension_t 350-------------- 351Ties together the extension field type and the storage for the field value:: 352 353 typedef struct { 354 const pb_extension_type_t *type; 355 void *dest; 356 pb_extension_t *next; 357 bool found; 358 } pb_extension_t; 359 360:type: Pointer to the structure that defines the callback functions. 361:dest: Pointer to the variable that stores the field value 362 (as used by the default extension callback functions.) 363:next: Pointer to the next extension handler, or *NULL*. 364:found: Decoder sets this to true if the extension was found. 365 366PB_GET_ERROR 367------------ 368Get the current error message from a stream, or a placeholder string if 369there is no error message:: 370 371 #define PB_GET_ERROR(stream) (string expression) 372 373This should be used for printing errors, for example:: 374 375 if (!pb_decode(...)) 376 { 377 printf("Decode failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(stream)); 378 } 379 380The macro only returns pointers to constant strings (in code memory), 381so that there is no need to release the returned pointer. 382 383PB_RETURN_ERROR 384--------------- 385Set the error message and return false:: 386 387 #define PB_RETURN_ERROR(stream,msg) (sets error and returns false) 388 389This should be used to handle error conditions inside nanopb functions 390and user callback functions:: 391 392 if (error_condition) 393 { 394 PB_RETURN_ERROR(stream, "something went wrong"); 395 } 396 397The *msg* parameter must be a constant string. 398 399 400 401pb_encode.h 402=========== 403 404pb_ostream_from_buffer 405---------------------- 406Constructs 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. :: 407 408 pb_ostream_t pb_ostream_from_buffer(pb_byte_t *buf, size_t bufsize); 409 410:buf: Memory buffer to write into. 411:bufsize: Maximum number of bytes to write. 412:returns: An output stream. 413 414After writing, you can check *stream.bytes_written* to find out how much valid data there is in the buffer. 415 416pb_write 417-------- 418Writes data to an output stream. Always use this function, instead of trying to call stream callback manually. :: 419 420 bool pb_write(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_byte_t *buf, size_t count); 421 422:stream: Output stream to write to. 423:buf: Pointer to buffer with the data to be written. 424:count: Number of bytes to write. 425:returns: True on success, false if maximum length is exceeded or an IO error happens. 426 427If 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. 428 429pb_encode 430--------- 431Encodes the contents of a structure as a protocol buffers message and writes it to output stream. :: 432 433 bool pb_encode(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct); 434 435:stream: Output stream to write to. 436:fields: A field description array, usually autogenerated. 437:src_struct: Pointer to the data that will be serialized. 438:returns: True on success, false on IO error, on detectable errors in field description, or if a field encoder returns false. 439 440Normally 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. 441 442pb_encode_delimited 443------------------- 444Calculates the length of the message, encodes it as varint and then encodes the message. :: 445 446 bool pb_encode_delimited(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct); 447 448(parameters are the same as for `pb_encode`_.) 449 450A common way to indicate the message length in Protocol Buffers is to prefix it with a varint. 451This function does this, and it is compatible with *parseDelimitedFrom* in Google's protobuf library. 452 453.. sidebar:: Encoding fields manually 454 455 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. 456 457 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. 458 459 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. 460 461pb_get_encoded_size 462------------------- 463Calculates the length of the encoded message. :: 464 465 bool pb_get_encoded_size(size_t *size, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct); 466 467:size: Calculated size of the encoded message. 468:fields: A field description array, usually autogenerated. 469:src_struct: Pointer to the data that will be serialized. 470:returns: True on success, false on detectable errors in field description or if a field encoder returns false. 471 472pb_encode_tag 473------------- 474Starts a field in the Protocol Buffers binary format: encodes the field number and the wire type of the data. :: 475 476 bool pb_encode_tag(pb_ostream_t *stream, pb_wire_type_t wiretype, uint32_t field_number); 477 478:stream: Output stream to write to. 1-5 bytes will be written. 479:wiretype: PB_WT_VARINT, PB_WT_64BIT, PB_WT_STRING or PB_WT_32BIT 480:field_number: Identifier for the field, defined in the .proto file. You can get it from field->tag. 481:returns: True on success, false on IO error. 482 483pb_encode_tag_for_field 484----------------------- 485Same as `pb_encode_tag`_, except takes the parameters from a *pb_field_t* structure. :: 486 487 bool pb_encode_tag_for_field(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field); 488 489:stream: Output stream to write to. 1-5 bytes will be written. 490:field: Field description structure. Usually autogenerated. 491:returns: True on success, false on IO error or unknown field type. 492 493This 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. 494 495Wire type mapping is as follows: 496 497============================================= ============ 498LTYPEs Wire type 499============================================= ============ 500VARINT, UVARINT, SVARINT PB_WT_VARINT 501FIXED64 PB_WT_64BIT 502STRING, BYTES, SUBMESSAGE, FIXED_LENGTH_BYTES PB_WT_STRING 503FIXED32 PB_WT_32BIT 504============================================= ============ 505 506pb_encode_varint 507---------------- 508Encodes a signed or unsigned integer in the varint_ format. Works for fields of type `bool`, `enum`, `int32`, `int64`, `uint32` and `uint64`:: 509 510 bool pb_encode_varint(pb_ostream_t *stream, uint64_t value); 511 512:stream: Output stream to write to. 1-10 bytes will be written. 513:value: Value to encode. Just cast e.g. int32_t directly to uint64_t. 514:returns: True on success, false on IO error. 515 516.. _varint: http://code.google.com/apis/protocolbuffers/docs/encoding.html#varints 517 518pb_encode_svarint 519----------------- 520Encodes a signed integer in the 'zig-zagged' format. Works for fields of type `sint32` and `sint64`:: 521 522 bool pb_encode_svarint(pb_ostream_t *stream, int64_t value); 523 524(parameters are the same as for `pb_encode_varint`_ 525 526pb_encode_string 527---------------- 528Writes the length of a string as varint and then contents of the string. Works for fields of type `bytes` and `string`:: 529 530 bool pb_encode_string(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_byte_t *buffer, size_t size); 531 532:stream: Output stream to write to. 533:buffer: Pointer to string data. 534:size: Number of bytes in the string. Pass `strlen(s)` for strings. 535:returns: True on success, false on IO error. 536 537pb_encode_fixed32 538----------------- 539Writes 4 bytes to stream and swaps bytes on big-endian architectures. Works for fields of type `fixed32`, `sfixed32` and `float`:: 540 541 bool pb_encode_fixed32(pb_ostream_t *stream, const void *value); 542 543:stream: Output stream to write to. 544:value: Pointer to a 4-bytes large C variable, for example `uint32_t foo;`. 545:returns: True on success, false on IO error. 546 547pb_encode_fixed64 548----------------- 549Writes 8 bytes to stream and swaps bytes on big-endian architecture. Works for fields of type `fixed64`, `sfixed64` and `double`:: 550 551 bool pb_encode_fixed64(pb_ostream_t *stream, const void *value); 552 553:stream: Output stream to write to. 554:value: Pointer to a 8-bytes large C variable, for example `uint64_t foo;`. 555:returns: True on success, false on IO error. 556 557pb_encode_submessage 558-------------------- 559Encodes a submessage field, including the size header for it. Works for fields of any message type:: 560 561 bool pb_encode_submessage(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], const void *src_struct); 562 563:stream: Output stream to write to. 564:fields: Pointer to the autogenerated field description array for the submessage type, e.g. `MyMessage_fields`. 565:src: Pointer to the structure where submessage data is. 566:returns: True on success, false on IO errors, pb_encode errors or if submessage size changes between calls. 567 568In 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. 569 570If 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. 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583pb_decode.h 584=========== 585 586pb_istream_from_buffer 587---------------------- 588Helper function for creating an input stream that reads data from a memory buffer. :: 589 590 pb_istream_t pb_istream_from_buffer(const pb_byte_t *buf, size_t bufsize); 591 592:buf: Pointer to byte array to read from. 593:bufsize: Size of the byte array. 594:returns: An input stream ready to use. 595 596pb_read 597------- 598Read data from input stream. Always use this function, don't try to call the stream callback directly. :: 599 600 bool pb_read(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_byte_t *buf, size_t count); 601 602:stream: Input stream to read from. 603:buf: Buffer to store the data to, or NULL to just read data without storing it anywhere. 604:count: Number of bytes to read. 605:returns: True on success, false if *stream->bytes_left* is less than *count* or if an IO error occurs. 606 607End of file is signalled by *stream->bytes_left* being zero after pb_read returns false. 608 609pb_decode 610--------- 611Read and decode all fields of a structure. Reads until EOF on input stream. :: 612 613 bool pb_decode(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct); 614 615:stream: Input stream to read from. 616:fields: A field description array. Usually autogenerated. 617:dest_struct: Pointer to structure where data will be stored. 618: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. 619 620In 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. 621 622In 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. 623 624For optional fields, this function applies the default value and sets *has_<field>* to false if the field is not present. 625 626If *PB_ENABLE_MALLOC* is defined, this function may allocate storage for any pointer type fields. 627In this case, you have to call `pb_release`_ to release the memory after you are done with the message. 628On error return `pb_decode` will release the memory itself. 629 630pb_decode_noinit 631---------------- 632Same as `pb_decode`_, except does not apply the default values to fields. :: 633 634 bool pb_decode_noinit(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct); 635 636(parameters are the same as for `pb_decode`_.) 637 638The 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. 639 640In addition to decoding a single message, this function can be used to merge two messages, so that 641values from previous message will remain if the new message does not contain a field. 642 643This function *will not* release the message even on error return. If you use *PB_ENABLE_MALLOC*, 644you will need to call `pb_release`_ yourself. 645 646pb_decode_delimited 647------------------- 648Same as `pb_decode`_, except that it first reads a varint with the length of the message. :: 649 650 bool pb_decode_delimited(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct); 651 652(parameters are the same as for `pb_decode`_.) 653 654A common method to indicate message size in Protocol Buffers is to prefix it with a varint. 655This function is compatible with *writeDelimitedTo* in the Google's Protocol Buffers library. 656 657pb_release 658---------- 659Releases any dynamically allocated fields:: 660 661 void pb_release(const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct); 662 663:fields: A field description array. Usually autogenerated. 664:dest_struct: Pointer to structure where data is stored. If NULL, function does nothing. 665 666This function is only available if *PB_ENABLE_MALLOC* is defined. It will release any 667pointer type fields in the structure and set the pointers to NULL. 668 669pb_decode_tag 670------------- 671Decode the tag that comes before field in the protobuf encoding:: 672 673 bool pb_decode_tag(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_wire_type_t *wire_type, uint32_t *tag, bool *eof); 674 675:stream: Input stream to read from. 676:wire_type: Pointer to variable where to store the wire type of the field. 677:tag: Pointer to variable where to store the tag of the field. 678:eof: Pointer to variable where to store end-of-file status. 679:returns: True on success, false on error or EOF. 680 681When the message (stream) ends, this function will return false and set *eof* to true. On other 682errors, *eof* will be set to false. 683 684pb_skip_field 685------------- 686Remove the data for a field from the stream, without actually decoding it:: 687 688 bool pb_skip_field(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_wire_type_t wire_type); 689 690:stream: Input stream to read from. 691:wire_type: Type of field to skip. 692:returns: True on success, false on IO error. 693 694.. sidebar:: Decoding fields manually 695 696 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. 697 698 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. 699 700 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`_. 701 702 Finally, for decoding submessages in a callback, simply use `pb_decode`_ and pass it the *SubMessage_fields* descriptor array. 703 704pb_decode_varint 705---------------- 706Read and decode a varint_ encoded integer. :: 707 708 bool pb_decode_varint(pb_istream_t *stream, uint64_t *dest); 709 710:stream: Input stream to read from. 1-10 bytes will be read. 711:dest: Storage for the decoded integer. Value is undefined on error. 712:returns: True on success, false if value exceeds uint64_t range or an IO error happens. 713 714pb_decode_svarint 715----------------- 716Similar to `pb_decode_varint`_, except that it performs zigzag-decoding on the value. This corresponds to the Protocol Buffers *sint32* and *sint64* datatypes. :: 717 718 bool pb_decode_svarint(pb_istream_t *stream, int64_t *dest); 719 720(parameters are the same as `pb_decode_varint`_) 721 722pb_decode_fixed32 723----------------- 724Decode a *fixed32*, *sfixed32* or *float* value. :: 725 726 bool pb_decode_fixed32(pb_istream_t *stream, void *dest); 727 728:stream: Input stream to read from. 4 bytes will be read. 729:dest: Pointer to destination *int32_t*, *uint32_t* or *float*. 730:returns: True on success, false on IO errors. 731 732This function reads 4 bytes from the input stream. 733On big endian architectures, it then reverses the order of the bytes. 734Finally, it writes the bytes to *dest*. 735 736pb_decode_fixed64 737----------------- 738Decode a *fixed64*, *sfixed64* or *double* value. :: 739 740 bool pb_decode_fixed64(pb_istream_t *stream, void *dest); 741 742:stream: Input stream to read from. 8 bytes will be read. 743:dest: Pointer to destination *int64_t*, *uint64_t* or *double*. 744:returns: True on success, false on IO errors. 745 746Same as `pb_decode_fixed32`_, except this reads 8 bytes. 747 748pb_make_string_substream 749------------------------ 750Decode the length for a field with wire type *PB_WT_STRING* and create a substream for reading the data. :: 751 752 bool pb_make_string_substream(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_istream_t *substream); 753 754:stream: Original input stream to read the length and data from. 755:substream: New substream that has limited length. Filled in by the function. 756:returns: True on success, false if reading the length fails. 757 758This 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. 759 760pb_close_string_substream 761------------------------- 762Close the substream created with `pb_make_string_substream`_. :: 763 764 void pb_close_string_substream(pb_istream_t *stream, pb_istream_t *substream); 765 766:stream: Original input stream to read the length and data from. 767:substream: Substream to close 768 769This function copies back the state from the substream to the parent stream. 770It must be called after done with the substream. 771