This repository contains the original interface definitions of all APIs that support both REST and gRPC protocols. Reading the original interface definitions can provide a better understanding of APIs and help you to utilize them more efficiently. You can also use these definitions with open source tools to generate client libraries, documentation, and other artifacts.
The APIs are typically deployed as API services that are hosted under different DNS names. One API service may implement multiple APIs and multiple versions of the same API.
The APIs use Protocol Buffers version 3 (proto3) as their Interface Definition Language (IDL) to define the API interface and the structure of the payload messages. The same interface definition is used for both REST and RPC versions of the API, which can be accessed over different wire protocols.
There are several ways of accessing the APIs:
- JSON over HTTP: You can access all APIs directly using JSON over HTTP, using any API client libraries.
- Protocol Buffers over gRPC: You can access APIs published in this repository through GRPC, which is a high-performance binary RPC protocol over HTTP/2. It offers many useful features, including request/response multiplex and full-duplex streaming.
This repository uses a directory hierarchy that reflects the API product structure. In general, every API has its own root directory, and each major version of the API has its own subdirectory. The proto package names exactly match the directory: this makes it easy to locate the proto definitions and ensures that the generated client libraries have idiomatic namespaces in most programming languages.
Proton does not provide compiled language specific proto files or the descriptor sets for the respective protos. It is upto the users to pull these protos and use protoc
or buf
for language specific compiled files and have dependencies/imports in their code.
To generate gRPC source code for Google APIs in this repository, you first need to install buf on your local machine.
This guide is last tried on buf version 1.5.0
.
Add this buf.gen.yaml
at the root folder.
version: v1beta1
plugins:
- name: go
out: dst
opt: paths=source_relative
Run below command to generate your proto to /dst
folder.
$ buf generate
Use below command if you just want to target specific package/folder
$ buf generate --path gotocompany/assets
You can run following command for linting protobuf files
$ buf lint
You can add proto files when you need to introduce proto for all projects. If you need to modify proto files, you need to ensure backward compatibility. To ensure the backward compatibility of your changes, you can run
$ buf breaking --against '.git#branch=master'
Proton is Apache 2.0 licensed.