Upgrade rust/crates/serde_test to 1.0.126

Test: make
Change-Id: I03bace757bb3a8b98b17917c052efcf07567aca2
6 files changed
tree: 37925ef6061b4daebc180cb1975c213f255335cf
  1. src/
  2. .cargo_vcs_info.json
  3. Android.bp
  4. Cargo.toml
  5. Cargo.toml.orig
  6. crates-io.md
  7. LICENSE
  8. LICENSE-APACHE
  9. LICENSE-MIT
  10. METADATA
  11. MODULE_LICENSE_MIT
  12. OWNERS
  13. README.md
  14. TEST_MAPPING
README.md

Serde   Build Status Latest Version serde: rustc 1.13+ serde_derive: rustc 1.31+

Serde is a framework for serializing and deserializing Rust data structures efficiently and generically.


You may be looking for:

Serde in action

[dependencies]

# The core APIs, including the Serialize and Deserialize traits. Always
# required when using Serde. The "derive" feature is only required when
# using #[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)] to make Serde work with structs
# and enums defined in your crate.
serde = { version = "1.0", features = ["derive"] }

# Each data format lives in its own crate; the sample code below uses JSON
# but you may be using a different one.
serde_json = "1.0"
use serde::{Serialize, Deserialize};

#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Debug)]
struct Point {
    x: i32,
    y: i32,
}

fn main() {
    let point = Point { x: 1, y: 2 };

    // Convert the Point to a JSON string.
    let serialized = serde_json::to_string(&point).unwrap();

    // Prints serialized = {"x":1,"y":2}
    println!("serialized = {}", serialized);

    // Convert the JSON string back to a Point.
    let deserialized: Point = serde_json::from_str(&serialized).unwrap();

    // Prints deserialized = Point { x: 1, y: 2 }
    println!("deserialized = {:?}", deserialized);
}

Getting help

Serde is one of the most widely used Rust libraries so any place that Rustaceans congregate will be able to help you out. For chat, consider trying the #general or #beginners channels of the unofficial community Discord, the #rust-usage channel of the official Rust Project Discord, or the #general stream in Zulip. For asynchronous, consider the [rust] tag on StackOverflow, the /r/rust subreddit which has a pinned weekly easy questions post, or the Rust Discourse forum. It's acceptable to file a support issue in this repo but they tend not to get as many eyes as any of the above and may get closed without a response after some time.

License