This repository provides the protoc-gen-go-vtproto plug-in for protoc, which is used by Vitess to generate optimized marshall & unmarshal code.
The code generated by this compiler is based on the optimized code generated by gogo/protobuf, although this package is not a fork of the original gogo compiler, as it has been implemented to support the new ProtoBuf APIv2 packages.
vtprotobuf is implemented as a helper plug-in that must be run alongside the upstream protoc-gen-go generator, as it generates fully-compatible auxiliary code to speed up (de)serialization of Protocol Buffer messages.
The following features can be generated:
-
size: generates afunc (p *YourProto) SizeVT() inthelper that behaves identically to callingproto.Size(p)on the message, except the size calculation is fully unrolled and does not use reflection. This helper function can be used directly, and it'll also be used by themarshalcodegen to ensure the destination buffer is properly sized before ProtoBuf objects are marshalled to it. -
equal: generates the following helper methods-
func (this *YourProto) EqualVT(that *YourProto) bool: this function behaves almost identically to callingproto.Equal(this, that)on messages, except the equality calculation is fully unrolled and does not use reflection. This helper function can be used directly. -
func (this *YourProto) EqualMessageVT(thatMsg proto.Message) bool: this function behaves like the abovethis.EqualVT(that), but allows comparing against arbitrary proto messages. IfthatMsgis not of type*YourProto, false is returned. The uniform signature provided by this method allows accessing this method via type assertions even if the message type is not known at compile time. This allows implementing a genericfunc EqualVT(proto.Message, proto.Message) boolwithout reflection.
-
-
marshal: generates the following helper methods-
func (p *YourProto) MarshalVT() ([]byte, error): this function behaves identically to callingproto.Marshal(p), except the actual marshalling has been fully unrolled and does not use reflection or allocate memory. This function simply allocates a properly sized buffer by callingSizeVTon the message and then usesMarshalToSizedBufferVTto marshal to it. -
func (p *YourProto) MarshalToVT(data []byte) (int, error): this function can be used to marshal a message to an existing buffer. The buffer must be large enough to hold the marshalled message, otherwise this function will panic. It returns the number of bytes marshalled. This function is useful e.g. when using memory pooling to re-use serialization buffers. -
func (p *YourProto) MarshalToSizedBufferVT(data []byte) (int, error): this function behaves likeMarshalTobut expects that the input buffer has the exact size required to hold the message, otherwise it will panic.
-
-
marshal_strict: generates the following helper methods-
func (p *YourProto) MarshalVTStrict() ([]byte, error): this function behaves likeMarshalVT, except fields are marshalled in a strict order by field's numbers they were declared in .proto file. -
func (p *YourProto) MarshalToVTStrict(data []byte) (int, error): this function behaves likeMarshalToVT, except fields are marshalled in a strict order by field's numbers they were declared in .proto file. -
func (p *YourProto) MarshalToSizedBufferVTStrict(data []byte) (int, error): this function behaves likeMarshalToSizedBufferVT, except fields are marshalled in a strict order by field's numbers they were declared in .proto file.
-
-
unmarshal: generates afunc (p *YourProto) UnmarshalVT(data []byte)that behaves similarly to callingproto.Unmarshal(data, p)on the message, except the unmarshalling is performed by unrolled codegen without using reflection and allocating as little memory as possible. If the receiverpis not fully zeroed-out, the unmarshal call will actually behave likeproto.Merge(data, p). This is because theproto.Unmarshalin the ProtoBuf API is implemented by resetting the destination message and then callingproto.Mergeon it. To ensure properUnmarshalsemantics, ensure you've calledproto.Reseton your message before callingUnmarshalVT, or that your message has been newly allocated.- The
ignoreUnknownFieldsoption can be used to ignore unknown fields in protobuf messages and further reduce memory allocations.
- The
-
unmarshal_unsafegenerates afunc (p *YourProto) UnmarshalVTUnsafe(data []byte)that behaves likeUnmarshalVT, except it unsafely casts slices of data tobytesandstringfields instead of copying them to newly allocated arrays, so that it performs less allocations. Data received from the wire has to be left untouched for the lifetime of the message. Otherwise, the message'sbytesandstringfields can be corrupted. -
pool: generates the following helper methods-
func (p *YourProto) ResetVT(): this function behaves similarly toproto.Reset(p), except it keeps as much memory as possible available on the message, so that further calls toUnmarshalVTon the same message will need to allocate less memory. This an API meant to be used with memory pools and does not need to be used directly. -
func (p *YourProto) ReturnToVTPool(): this function returns messagepto a local memory pool so it can be reused later. It clears the object properly withResetVTbefore storing it on the pool. This method should only be used on messages that were obtained from a memory pool by callingYourProtoFromVTPool. Usingpafter calling this method will lead to undefined behavior. -
func YourProtoFromVTPool() *YourProto: this function returns aYourProtomessage from a local memory pool, or allocates a new one if the pool is currently empty. The returned message is always empty and ready to be used (e.g. by callingUnmarshalVTon it). Once the message has been processed, it must be returned to the memory pool by callingReturnToVTPool()on it. Returning the message to the pool is not mandatory (it does not leak memory), but if you don't return it, that defeats the whole point of memory pooling.
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-
clone: generates the following helper methods-
func (p *YourProto) CloneVT() *YourProto: this function behaves similarly to callingproto.Clone(p)on the message, except the cloning is performed by unrolled codegen without using reflection. If the receiverpisnila typednilis returned. -
func (p *YourProto) CloneMessageVT() proto.Message: this function behaves like the abovep.CloneVT(), but provides a uniform signature in order to be accessible via type assertions even if the type is not known at compile time. This allows implementing a genericfunc CloneVT(proto.Message)without reflection. If the receiverpisnil, a typednilpointer of the message type will be returned inside aproto.Messageinterface.
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uniqueis a field option available on strings. If it is set totruethen all all strings are interned using unique.Make. Go 1.23+ is needed.unmarshal_unsafetakes precendence overunique. Example usage:
import "github.com/planetscale/vtprotobuf/vtproto/ext.proto";
message Label {
string name = 1 [(vtproto.options).unique = true];
string value = 2 [(vtproto.options).unique = true];
}
-
Install
protoc-gen-go-vtproto:go install github.com/planetscale/vtprotobuf/cmd/protoc-gen-go-vtproto@latest -
Ensure your project is already using the ProtoBuf v2 API (i.e.
google.golang.org/protobuf). Thevtprotobufcompiler is not compatible with APIv1 generated code. -
Update your
protocgenerator to use the new plug-in. Example from Vitess:for name in $(PROTO_SRC_NAMES); do \ $(VTROOT)/bin/protoc \ --go_out=. --plugin protoc-gen-go="${GOBIN}/protoc-gen-go" \ --go-grpc_out=. --plugin protoc-gen-go-grpc="${GOBIN}/protoc-gen-go-grpc" \ --go-vtproto_out=. --plugin protoc-gen-go-vtproto="${GOBIN}/protoc-gen-go-vtproto" \ --go-vtproto_opt=features=marshal+unmarshal+size \ proto/$${name}.proto; \ doneNote that the
vtprotocompiler runs like an auxiliary plug-in to theprotoc-gen-goin APIv2, just like the new GRPC compiler plug-in,protoc-gen-go-grpc. You need to run it alongside the upstream generator, not as a replacement. -
(Optional) Pass the features that you want to generate as
--go-vtproto_opt. If no features are given, all the codegen steps will be performed. -
(Optional) If you have enabled the
pooloption, you need to manually specify which ProtoBuf objects will be pooled.- You can tag messages explicitly in the
.protofiles withoption (vtproto.mempool):
syntax = "proto3"; package app; option go_package = "app"; import "github.com/planetscale/vtprotobuf/vtproto/ext.proto"; message SampleMessage { option (vtproto.mempool) = true; // Enable memory pooling string name = 1; optional string project_id = 2; // ... }
- Alternatively, you can enumerate the pooled objects with
--go-vtproto_opt=pool=<import>.<message>flags passed via the CLI:
$(VTROOT)/bin/protoc ... \ --go-vtproto_opt=features=marshal+unmarshal+size+pool \ --go-vtproto_opt=pool=vitess.io/vitess/go/vt/proto/query.Row \ --go-vtproto_opt=pool=vitess.io/vitess/go/vt/proto/binlogdata.VStreamRowsResponse \ - You can tag messages explicitly in the
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(Optional) If you are handling messages containing unknown fields and don't intend to forward these messages to a tool that might expect these fields, you can ignore them using the
ignoreUnknownFieldsoption.-
You can tag messages explicitly in the
.protofiles withoption (vtproto.ignore_unknown_fields). Take a look at the example usingoption (vtproto.mempool)above. -
Alternatively, you can enumerate the objects with
--go-vtproto_opt=ignoreUnknownFields=<import>.<message>flags passed via the CLI. Take a look at the example using--go-vtproto_opt=pool=...above.
-
-
(Optional) if you want to selectively compile the generate
vtprotobuffiles, the--vtproto_opt=buildTag=<tag>can be used.When using this option, the generated code will only be compiled in if a build tag is provided.
It is recommended, but not required, to use
vtprotobufas the build tag if this is desired, especially if your project is imported by others. This will reduce the number of build tags a user will need to configure if they are importing multiple libraries following this pattern.When using this option, it is strongly recommended to make your code compile with and without the build tag. This can be done with type assertions before using
vtprotobufgenerated methods. Thegrpc.Codec{}object (discussed below) shows an example. -
Compile the
.protofiles in your project. You should see_vtproto.pb.gofiles next to the.pb.goand_grpc.pb.gofiles that were already being generated. -
(Optional) Switch your RPC framework to use the optimized helpers (see following sections)
Your generated _vtproto.pb.go files will have a dependency on this Go package to access some helper functions as well as the optimized code for ProtoBuf well-known types. vtprotobuf will detect these types embedded in your own Messages and generate optimized code to marshal and unmarshal them.
The protoc-gen-go-vtproto compiler does not overwrite any of the default marshalling or unmarshalling code for your ProtoBuf objects. Instead, it generates helper methods that can be called explicitly to opt-in to faster (de)serialization.
To use vtprotobuf with the new versions of GRPC, you need to register the codec provided by the github.com/planetscale/vtprotobuf/codec/grpc package.
package servenv
import (
"github.com/planetscale/vtprotobuf/codec/grpc"
"google.golang.org/grpc/encoding"
_ "google.golang.org/grpc/encoding/proto"
)
func init() {
encoding.RegisterCodec(grpc.Codec{})
}Note that we perform a blank import _ "google.golang.org/grpc/encoding/proto" of the default proto coded that ships with GRPC to ensure it's being replaced by us afterwards. The provided Codec will serialize & deserialize all ProtoBuf messages using the optimized codegen.
If you're running a complex GRPC service, you may need to support serializing ProtoBuf messages from different sources, including from external packages that will not have optimized vtprotobuf marshalling code. This is perfectly doable by implementing a custom codec in your own project that serializes messages based on their type. The Vitess project implements a custom codec to support ProtoBuf messages from Vitess itself and those generated by the etcd API -- you can use it as a reference.
Twirp does not support customizing the Marshalling/Unmarshalling codec by default. In order to support vtprotobuf, you'll need to perform a search & replace on the generated Twirp files after running protoc. Here's an example:
for twirp in $${dir}/*.twirp.go; \
do \
echo 'Updating' $${twirp}; \
sed -i '' -e 's/respBytes, err := proto.Marshal(respContent)/respBytes, err := respContent.MarshalVT()/g' $${twirp}; \
sed -i '' -e 's/if err = proto.Unmarshal(buf, reqContent); err != nil {/if err = reqContent.UnmarshalVT(buf); err != nil {/g' $${twirp}; \
done; \To use vtprotobuf as a DRPC encoding, simply pass github.com/planetscale/vtprotobuf/codec/drpc as the protolib flag in your protoc-gen-go-drpc invocation.
Example:
protoc --go_out=. --go-vtproto_out=. --go-drpc_out=. --go-drpc_opt=protolib=github.com/planetscale/vtprotobuf/codec/drpc
To use vtprotobuf with Connect, first implement a custom codec in your own project that serializes messages based on their type (see Mixing ProtoBuf implementations with GRPC). This is required because Connect internally serializes some types such as Status that don't have vtprotobuf helpers. Then pass in connect.WithCodec(mygrpc.Codec{}) as a connect option to the client and handler constructors.
package main
import (
"net/http"
"github.com/bufbuild/connect-go"
"github.com/foo/bar/pingv1connect"
"github.com/myorg/myproject/codec/mygrpc"
)
func main() {
mux := http.NewServeMux()
mux.Handle(pingv1connect.NewPingServiceHandler(
&PingServer{},
connect.WithCodec(mygrpc.Codec{}), // Add connect option to handler.
))
// handler serving ...
client := pingv1connect.NewPingServiceClient(
http.DefaultClient,
"http://localhost:8080",
connect.WithCodec(mygrpc.Codec{}), // Add connect option to client.
)
/// client code here ...
}Integrating with buf
vtprotobuf generation can be easily automated if your project's Protocol Buffers are managed with buf.
Simply install protoc-gen-go-vtproto (see Usage section) and add it as a plug-in to your buf.gen.yaml configuration:
version: v1
managed:
enabled: true
# ...
plugins:
- plugin: buf.build/protocolbuffers/go
out: ./
opt: paths=source_relative
- plugin: go-vtproto
out: ./
opt: paths=source_relativeRunning buf generate will now also include the vtprotobuf optimized helpers.