* [TS/JS] Entry point per namespace
* Fix handling of outputpath and array_test
* Attempt to fix generate_code
* Fix cwd for ts in generate_code
* Attempt to fixup bazel and some docs
* Add --ts-flat-files to bazel build to get bundle
* Move to DEFAULT_FLATC_TS_ARGS
* Attempt to add esbuild
* Attempt to use npm instead
* Remove futile attempt to add esbuild
* Attempt to as bazel esbuild
* Shuffle
* Upgrade bazel deps
* Revert failed attempts to get bazel working
* Ignore flatc tests for now
* Add esbuild dependency
* `package.json` Include esbuild
* `WORKSPACE` Add fetching esbuild binary
* Update WORKSPACE
* Unfreeze Lockfile
* Update WORKSPACE
* Update BUILD.bazel
* Rework to suggest instead of running external bundler
* Add esbuild generation to test script
* Prelim bundle test
* Run test JavaScriptTest from flatbuffers 1.x
* Deps upgrade
* Clang format fix
* Revert bazel changes
* Fix newline
* Generate with type declarations
* Handle "empty" root namespace
* Adjust tests for typescript_keywords.ts
* Separate test procedure for old node resolution module output
* Fix rel path for root level re-exports
* Bazel support for esbuild-based flatc
Unfortunately, we lose typing information because the new esbuild method
of generating single files does not generate type information.
The method used here is a bit hack-ish because it relies on parsing the
console output of flatc to figure out what to do.
* Try to fix bazel build for when node isn't present on host
* Auto formatting fixes
* Fix missing generated code
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
Co-authored-by: James Kuszmaul <jabukuszmaul+collab@gmail.com>
* Fix binary output different in different platform, due to the nan serialization
* Add check generated code on windows ci
* Remove resdundant script
* Fix eof, and check script
* Minor bug in gen code script
* Fix windows script, remove redundant scripts
* Undelete redundante codes
* Fix github action
* Ignore eof generate grpc
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
Add the --no-minmax-values flag to prevent flatc from generating C++
enums with MIN and MAX enumerated values that otherwise would be set
to the inclusive lower and upper bound respectively of the enum.
This command-line flag is needed to avoid collisions when an enum that
is being ported to FlatBuffers already has a MIN or MAX enumerated
value.
It is also needed to work around a long-standing problem with
magic_enum that causes magic_enum to not see enumerated values that
are not unique. For example, if FlatBuffers sets MIN = FOO and MAX =
BAR, MIN and FOO share the same underlying value so they are not
unique. The same is true of MAX and BAR. This prevents magic_enum
from converting FOO and BAR to and from strings as well as causing
magic_enum to return a count of enumerated values that is two fewer
than it should be.
Co-authored-by: Paul Serice <paul@serice.net>
To make it simple to map between a union field and its union type
field we are adding a pointer to FieldDef to point to each other. For
all other types the pointer will be nullptr.
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
* Add --go-module-name flag to support generating code for go modules
* Rename echo example folder
* Grammar
* Update readme for go-echo example
* Update readme for go-echo example
* Re-enable go modules after test is done
The BytesConsumed function uses the `cursor_` to determine how many
bytes have been consumed by the parser, in case the user of the Parser
object wants to step over the parsed flatbuffer that is embedded in some
larger string. However, the `cursor_` is always one token ahead, so that
it can determine how to consume it. It points at the token that is about
to be consumed, which is ahead of the last byte consumed.
For example, if you had a string containing these two json objects and
parsed them...
"{\"key\":\"value\"},{\"key\":\"value\"}"
...then the `cursor_` would be pointing at the comma between the two
tables. If you were to hold a pointer to the beginning of the string and
add `BytesConsumed()` to it like so:
const char* json = // ...
parser.ParseJson(json);
json += parser.BytesConsumed();
then the pointer would skip over the comma, which is not the expected
behavior. It should only consume the table itself.
The solution is simple: Just hold onto a previous cursor location and
use that for the `BytesConsumed()` call. The previous cursor location
just needs to be set to the cursor_ location each time the cursor_ is
about to be updated. This will result in `BytesConsumed()` returning
the correct number of bytes without the off-by-one-token error.
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
* add support for using array of scalar as key field
* update cmakelist and test.cpp to include the tests
* update bazel rule
* address comments
* clang format
* delete comment
* delete comment
* address the rest of the commnets
* address comments
* update naming in test file
* format build file
* buildifier
* make keycomparelessthan call keycomparewithvalue
* update to use flatbuffer array instead of raw pointer
* clang
* format
* revert format
* revert format
* update
* run generate_code.py
* run code generator
* revert changes by generate_code.py
* fist run make flatc and then run generate_code.py
Co-authored-by: Wen Sun <sunwen@google.com>
+/-inf were not being handled, and so invalid typescript was being
generated when a float/double had an infinite default value. NaN was
being handled correctly.
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Casper <casperneo@uchicago.edu>
* Add support for proto 3 map to fbs gen
* Run clang-format
* Update proto golden test
* Rename variables
* Remove iostream
* Remove iostream
* Run clang format
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
Previously when parsing a JSON representation of a Flatbuffer, the
parser required that the input string contain one and only one root
table. This change adds a flag that removes that requirement, so that
if a Flatbuffer table is embedded in some larger string the parser will
simply stop parsing once it reaches the end of the root table, and does
not validate that it has reached the end of the string.
This change also adds a BytesConsumed function, which returns the number
of bytes the parser consumed. This is useful if the table embedded in
some larger string that is being parsed, and that outer parser needs to
know how many bytes the table was so that it can step over it.
* Bfbs Nim Generator
* Remove commented out tests
* add missing line to idl.h
* Commit python reflection changes
* Commit python reflection changes and move tests
* Remove default string addition
* Move tests to python file
* Fix element size check when element is table
* remove whitespace changes
* add element_type docs and commit further to namer and remove kkeep
* Bfbs Nim Generator
* Remove commented out tests
* add missing line to idl.h
* Commit python reflection changes
* Commit python reflection changes and move tests
* Remove default string addition
* Move tests to python file
* Fix element size check when element is table
* remove whitespace changes
* add element_type docs and commit further to namer and remove kkeep
* remove unused variables
* added tests to ci
* added tests to ci
* fixes
* Added reflection type Field, Variable to namer
* Moved reflection namer impl to bfbsnamer
* Remove whitespace at end of line
* Added nim to generated code
* Revert whitespace removal
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
* Add support for metadata attributes for enum values (#7567)
* Fix path lookup in flatc test
* Try a fix for Windows paths
* Convert path to string to fix Windows error
* [C++] Add a failing unit test for #7516 (Rare bad buffer content alignment if sizeof(T) != alignof(T))
* [C++] Fix final buffer alignment when using an array of structs
* A struct can have an arbitrary size and therefore sizeof(struct) == alignof(struct)
does not hold anymore as for value primitives.
* This patch fixes this by introducing alignment parameters to various
CreateVector*/StartVector calls.
* Closes#7516
* C++: Add option to skip verifying nested flatbuffers
Additionally, add an options struct to the verifier for those
who prefer designated initializers to default arguments. The former
constructor is defined in terms of the latter because in old c++,
having default values for members removes list initialization, making
defining constructors in the other way a lot more challenging to write.
* fixes
* fmt
* formatting, and remove an argument
* fix
Co-authored-by: Casper Neo <cneo@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>