| commit | 1711ebd4559313555e89d0f56294842779c7e900 | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Joshua Haberman <haberman@google.com> | Wed Nov 01 10:33:11 2023 -0700 |
| committer | Joshua Haberman <jhaberman@gmail.com> | Wed Nov 01 17:36:05 2023 +0000 |
| tree | 58eaf92fdcde04410294fa9bcf8c5ef5e34a0932 | |
| parent | 8defef58f4367d3a968b44000698e308a035ab9e [diff] |
Fixed Python memory leak in map lookup. Previously we were allocating memory on the message's arena every time we performed a `map[key]` or `map.get(key)` operation. This is unnecessary, as the key's data is only needed ephemerally, for the duration of the lookup, and we can therefore alias the Python object's string data instead of copying it. This required fixing a bug in the convert.c operation. Previously in the `arena==NULL` case, if the user passes a bytes object instead of a unicode string, the code would return a pointer to a temporary Python object that had already been freed, leading to use-after-free. I fixed this by referencing the bytes object's data directly, and using utf8_range to verify the UTF-8. Fixes: https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/issues/14571 PiperOrigin-RevId: 578563555
Copyright 2023 Google LLC
Protocol Buffers (a.k.a., protobuf) are Google's language-neutral, platform-neutral, extensible mechanism for serializing structured data. You can learn more about it in protobuf's documentation.
This README file contains protobuf installation instructions. To install protobuf, you need to install the protocol compiler (used to compile .proto files) and the protobuf runtime for your chosen programming language.
The protobuf compiler is written in C++. If you are using C++, please follow the C++ Installation Instructions to install protoc along with the C++ runtime.
For non-C++ users, the simplest way to install the protocol compiler is to download a pre-built binary from our GitHub release page.
In the downloads section of each release, you can find pre-built binaries in zip packages: protoc-$VERSION-$PLATFORM.zip. It contains the protoc binary as well as a set of standard .proto files distributed along with protobuf.
If you are looking for an old version that is not available in the release page, check out the Maven repository.
These pre-built binaries are only provided for released versions. If you want to use the github main version at HEAD, or you need to modify protobuf code, or you are using C++, it's recommended to build your own protoc binary from source.
If you would like to build protoc binary from source, see the C++ Installation Instructions.
Protobuf supports several different programming languages. For each programming language, you can find instructions in the corresponding source directory about how to install protobuf runtime for that specific language:
| Language | Source |
|---|---|
| C++ (include C++ runtime and protoc) | src |
| Java | java |
| Python | python |
| Objective-C | objectivec |
| C# | csharp |
| Ruby | ruby |
| Go | protocolbuffers/protobuf-go |
| PHP | php |
| Dart | dart-lang/protobuf |
| JavaScript | protocolbuffers/protobuf-javascript |
The best way to learn how to use protobuf is to follow the tutorials in our developer guide.
If you want to learn from code examples, take a look at the examples in the examples directory.
The complete documentation is available at the Protocol Buffers doc site.
Read about our version support policy to stay current on support timeframes for the language libraries.
To be alerted to upcoming changes in Protocol Buffers and connect with protobuf developers and users, join the Google Group.