Protocol Buffers support in Parcel via Pbf with Typescript
Inspired by parcel-plugin-pbf with some diferencies
- Declares missing types
- Generates types for your
.proto
on bundle - Imports
.protos
as a string and compile them in runtime - Adds extra functionality to the proto
factories
- Lets you extend your
messages
to add custommethods
orconstructor
(init)
yarn add parcel-plugin-pbf-ts
# or
npm install parcel-plugin-pbf-ts
Parcel will detect parcel-plugin-pbf-ts
and bundle your .proto
files.
You can import
the .proto
files from different .ts
files but you need to compile them somewhere.
You can have multiple roots
but the bundler will define everything under the namespace Proto.Root
, be aware of that.
project/
|-protos/
|-Some.proto
|-Other.proto
|-Moar.proto
|-index.ts <-- Root
|-index.d.ts <-- extension definitions
/// <reference types='parcel-plugin-pbf-ts' />
/// <reference types='./' />
import { makeRoot, extend } from "parcel-plugin-pbf-ts/utils";
import Some from "./Some.proto";
import Other from "./Other.proto";
const root = makeRoot(Some, Other);
root.Some.init = (o) => (o.magicNumber = 42);
extend(root.Some, {
print() {
console.log({ text: this.text });
return this.text;
},
});
export = root;
namespace Proto.Root {
interface Some {
magicNumber: number;
print(): string;
}
}
syntax = "proto3";
message Some {
string text = 1;
}
Types are under @types/
folder in the module.
The compiled objects from makeRoot
are a little different from the ones in Pbf
. In fact they are factory
functions.
Thanks to that you can do the following:
import { ok, strictEqual, deepStrictEqual } from "assert";
import Protos from "./protos";
const { Some } = Protos;
const text = Math.random().toString(16).slice(2);
const some = new Some({ text });
ok(some instanceof Some);
strictEqual(some.magicNumber, 42);
strictEqual(some.print(), text); // logs text
const bin = some.encode();
ok(bin instanceof Uint8Array);
deepStrictEqual(bin, Some.encode(some));
deepStrictEqual(some, Some.decode(bin));
deepStrictEqual(some, Some(bin));
Internally encode
reuses the same Pbf
instance for better performance.