protobuf-php / protobuf-plugin
PHP Code generator plugin from Google's Protocol Buffers
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Requires
- php: >=5.5.0
- doctrine/inflector: ^1.0
- protobuf-php/google-protobuf-proto: >=0.1
- protobuf-php/protobuf: >=0.1
- psr/log: ^1.0
- symfony/console: ^2.5|^3.0
- symfony/process: ^2.5|^3.0
- zendframework/zend-code: ^2.6
Requires (Dev)
- instaclick/coding-standard: ~1.1
- instaclick/object-calisthenics-sniffs: dev-master
- instaclick/symfony2-coding-standard: dev-remaster
- mikey179/vfsstream: ~1
- php-mock/php-mock-phpunit: ^0.2
- phpunit/phpunit: ~4
- satooshi/php-coveralls: ~0.6
- squizlabs/php_codesniffer: ~1.5
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-12-07 12:41:41 UTC
README
Protobuf for PHP is an implementation of Google's Protocol Buffers for the PHP
language, supporting its binary data serialization and including a protoc
plugin to generate PHP classes from .proto
files.
Installation
If you wish to compile .proto
definitions to PHP,
you will need to install Google's Protocol Buffers from your favorite package manager or from source.
This plugin currently supports protobuf 2.3.0. or later.
Note: Google's Protocol Buffers and proto
is not a runtime requirement for protobuf-php/protobuf, It is only necessary if you wish to compile your definitions to PHP using protobuf-php/protobuf-plugin.
Installing Google's Protocol Buffers
- OSX Install
$ brew install protobuf
- Ubuntu
$ sudo apt-get install -y protobuf
Make sure you have protoc
available in the user's path:
$ protoc --version $ # libprotoc 2.6.1
Note: For more information on how to install/compile Google's Protocol Buffers see : https://github.com/google/protobuf
Composer install
To install the PHP plugin run the following composer
commands:
$ composer require "protobuf-php/protobuf-plugin"
Defining Your Protocol Format
To create your address book application, you'll need to start with a .proto
file. The definitions in a .proto
file are simple: you add a message for each data structure you want to serialize, then specify a name and a type for each field in the message. Here is the .proto
file that defines your messages, addressbook.proto
.
package tutorial; import "php.proto"; option (php.package) = "Tutorial.AddressBookProtos"; message Person { required string name = 1; required int32 id = 2; optional string email = 3; enum PhoneType { MOBILE = 0; HOME = 1; WORK = 2; } message PhoneNumber { required string number = 1; optional PhoneType type = 2 [default = HOME]; } repeated PhoneNumber phone = 4; } message AddressBook { repeated Person person = 1; }
As you can see, the syntax is similar to C++ or Java. Let's go through each part of the file and see what it does.
The .proto
file starts with a package declaration, which helps to prevent naming conflicts between different projects.
In PHP, the package name is used as the PHP namespace unless you have explicitly specified a (php.package)
, as we have here.
Even if you do provide a (php.package)
, you should still define a normal package as well to avoid name collisions in the Protocol Buffers name space as well as in non PHP languages.
You'll find a complete guide to writing .proto
files – including all the possible field types – in the Protocol Buffer Language Guide. Don't go looking for facilities similar to class inheritance, though – protocol buffers don't do that.
Compiling Your Protocol Buffers
Now that you have a .proto
, the next thing you need to do is generate the classes you'll need to read and write AddressBook
(and hence Person
and PhoneNumber
) messages. To do this, you need to run the protocol buffer plugin on your .proto
.
In this case:
php ./vendor/bin/protobuf --include-descriptors -i . -o ./src/ ./addressbook.proto
This generates the following PHP classes in your specified destination directory
src/ └── Tutorial └── AddressBookProtos ├── AddressBook.php ├── Person │ ├── PhoneNumber.php │ └── PhoneType.php └── Person.php
Note: For more information on how to use the generated code see : protobuf-php/protobuf