comparison src/capnproto-0.6.0/doc/otherlang.md @ 147:45360b968bf4

Cap'n Proto v0.6 + build for OSX
author Chris Cannam <cannam@all-day-breakfast.com>
date Mon, 22 May 2017 10:01:37 +0100
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1 ---
2 layout: page
3 title: Other Languages
4 ---
5
6 # Other Languages
7
8 Cap'n Proto's reference implementation is in C++. Implementations in other languages are
9 maintained by respective authors and have not been reviewed by me
10 ([@kentonv](https://github.com/kentonv)). Below are the implementations I'm aware
11 of. Some of these projects are more "ready" than others; please consult each
12 project's documentation for details.
13
14 ##### Serialization + RPC
15
16 * [C++](cxx.html) by [@kentonv](https://github.com/kentonv)
17 * [Erlang](http://ecapnp.astekk.se/) by [@kaos](https://github.com/kaos)
18 * [Go](https://github.com/zombiezen/go-capnproto2) by [@zombiezen](https://github.com/zombiezen) (forked from [@glycerine](https://github.com/glycerine)'s serialization-only version, below)
19 * [Javascript (Node.js only)](https://github.com/kentonv/node-capnp) by [@kentonv](https://github.com/kentonv)
20 * [Python](http://jparyani.github.io/pycapnp/) by [@jparyani](https://github.com/jparyani)
21 * [Rust](https://github.com/dwrensha/capnproto-rust) by [@dwrensha](https://github.com/dwrensha)
22
23 ##### Serialization only
24
25 * [C](https://github.com/opensourcerouting/c-capnproto) by [OpenSourceRouting](https://www.opensourcerouting.org/) / [@eqvinox](https://github.com/eqvinox) (originally by [@jmckaskill](https://github.com/jmckaskill))
26 * [C#](https://github.com/mgravell/capnproto-net) by [@mgravell](https://github.com/mgravell)
27 * [Go](https://github.com/glycerine/go-capnproto) by [@glycerine](https://github.com/glycerine) (originally by [@jmckaskill](https://github.com/jmckaskill))
28 * [Java](https://github.com/dwrensha/capnproto-java/) by [@dwrensha](https://github.com/dwrensha)
29 * [Javascript](https://github.com/popham/capnp-js-base) by [@popham](https://github.com/popham)
30 * [Javascript](https://github.com/jscheid/capnproto-js) (older, abandoned) by [@jscheid](https://github.com/jscheid)
31 * [Lua](https://github.com/cloudflare/lua-capnproto) by [CloudFlare](http://www.cloudflare.com/) / [@calio](https://github.com/calio)
32 * [Nim](https://github.com/zielmicha/capnp.nim) by [@zielmicha](https://github.com/zielmicha)
33 * [OCaml](https://github.com/pelzlpj/capnp-ocaml) by [@pelzlpj](https://github.com/pelzlpj)
34 * [Ruby](https://github.com/cstrahan/capnp-ruby) by [@cstrahan](https://github.com/cstrahan)
35 * [Scala](https://github.com/katis/capnp-scala) by [@katis](https://github.com/katis)
36
37 ##### Tools
38
39 These are other misc projects related to Cap'n Proto that are not actually implementations in
40 new languages.
41
42 * [Common Test Framework](https://github.com/kaos/capnp_test) by [@kaos](https://github.com/kaos)
43 * [Sublime Syntax Highlighting](https://github.com/joshuawarner32/capnproto-sublime) by
44 [@joshuawarner32](https://github.com/joshuawarner32)
45 * [Vim Syntax Highlighting](https://github.com/peter-edge/vim-capnp) by [@peter-edge](https://github.com/peter-edge)
46 (originally by [@cstrahan](https://github.com/cstrahan))
47 * [Wireshark Dissector Plugin](https://github.com/kaos/wireshark-plugins) by [@kaos](https://github.com/kaos)
48
49 ## Contribute Your Own!
50
51 We'd like to support many more languages in the future!
52
53 If you'd like to own the implementation of Cap'n Proto in some particular language,
54 [let us know](https://groups.google.com/group/capnproto)!
55
56 **You should e-mail the list _before_ you start hacking.** We don't bite, and we'll probably have
57 useful tips that will save you time. :)
58
59 **Do not implement your own schema parser.** The schema language is more complicated than it
60 looks, and the algorithm to determine offsets of fields is subtle. If you reuse the official
61 parser, you won't risk getting these wrong, and you won't have to spend time keeping your parser
62 up-to-date. In fact, you can still write your code generator in any language you want, using
63 compiler plugins!
64
65 ### How to Write Compiler Plugins
66
67 The Cap'n Proto tool, `capnp`, does not actually know how to generate code. It only parses schemas,
68 then hands the parse tree off to another binary -- known as a "plugin" -- which generates the code.
69 Plugins are independent executables (written in any language) which read a description of the
70 schema from standard input and then generate the necessary code. The description is itself a
71 Cap'n Proto message, defined by
72 [schema.capnp](https://github.com/sandstorm-io/capnproto/blob/master/c%2B%2B/src/capnp/schema.capnp).
73 Specifically, the plugin receives a `CodeGeneratorRequest`, using
74 [standard serialization](encoding.html#serialization-over-a-stream)
75 (not packed). (Note that installing the C++ runtime causes schema.capnp to be placed in
76 `$PREFIX/include/capnp` -- `/usr/local/include/capnp` by default).
77
78 Of course, because the input to a plugin is itself in Cap'n Proto format, if you write your
79 plugin directly in the language you wish to support, you may have a bootstrapping problem: you
80 somehow need to generate code for `schema.capnp` before you write your code generator. Luckily,
81 because of the simplicity of the Cap'n Proto format, it is generally not too hard to do this by
82 hand. Remember that you can use `capnp compile -ocapnp schema.capnp` to get a dump of the sizes
83 and offsets of all structs and fields defined in the file.
84
85 `capnp compile` normally looks for plugins in `$PATH` with the name `capnpc-[language]`, e.g.
86 `capnpc-c++` or `capnpc-capnp`. However, if the language name given on the command line contains
87 a slash character, `capnp` assumes that it is an exact path to the plugin executable, and does not
88 search `$PATH`. Examples:
89
90 # Searches $PATH for executable "capnpc-mylang".
91 capnp compile -o mylang addressbook.capnp
92
93 # Uses plugin executable "myplugin" from the current directory.
94 capnp compile -o ./myplugin addressbook.capnp
95
96 If the user specifies an output directory, the compiler will run the plugin with that directory
97 as the working directory, so you do not need to worry about this.
98
99 For examples of plugins, take a look at
100 [capnpc-capnp](https://github.com/sandstorm-io/capnproto/blob/master/c%2B%2B/src/capnp/compiler/capnpc-capnp.c%2B%2B)
101 or [capnpc-c++](https://github.com/sandstorm-io/capnproto/blob/master/c%2B%2B/src/capnp/compiler/capnpc-c%2B%2B.c%2B%2B).
102
103 ### Supporting Dynamic Languages
104
105 Dynamic languages have no compile step. This makes it difficult to work `capnp compile` into the
106 workflow for such languages. Additionally, dynamic languages are often scripting languages that do
107 not support pointer arithmetic or any reasonably-performant alternative.
108
109 Fortunately, dynamic languages usually have facilities for calling native code. The best way to
110 support Cap'n Proto in a dynamic language, then, is to wrap the C++ library, in particular the
111 [C++ dynamic API](cxx.html#dynamic-reflection). This way you get reasonable performance while
112 still avoiding the need to generate any code specific to each schema.
113
114 To parse the schema files, use the `capnp::SchemaParser` class (defined in `capnp/schema-parser.h`).
115 This way, schemas are loaded at the same time as all the rest of the program's code -- at startup.
116 An advanced implementation might consider caching the compiled schemas in binary format, then
117 loading the cached version using `capnp::SchemaLoader`, similar to the way e.g. Python caches
118 compiled source files as `.pyc` bytecode, but that's up to you.
119
120 ### Testing Your Implementation
121
122 The easiest way to test that you've implemented the spec correctly is to use the `capnp` tool
123 to [encode](capnp-tool.html#encoding-messages) test inputs and
124 [decode](capnp-tool.html#decoding-messages) outputs.