791 lines
29 KiB
Markdown
791 lines
29 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: page
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title: Schema Language
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---
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# Schema Language
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Like Protocol Buffers and Thrift (but unlike JSON or MessagePack), Cap'n Proto messages are
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strongly-typed and not self-describing. You must define your message structure in a special
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language, then invoke the Cap'n Proto compiler (`capnp compile`) to generate source code to
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manipulate that message type in your desired language.
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For example:
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{% highlight capnp %}
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@0xdbb9ad1f14bf0b36; # unique file ID, generated by `capnp id`
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struct Person {
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name @0 :Text;
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birthdate @3 :Date;
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email @1 :Text;
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phones @2 :List(PhoneNumber);
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struct PhoneNumber {
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number @0 :Text;
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type @1 :Type;
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enum Type {
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mobile @0;
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home @1;
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work @2;
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}
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}
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}
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struct Date {
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year @0 :Int16;
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month @1 :UInt8;
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day @2 :UInt8;
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Some notes:
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* Types come after names. The name is by far the most important thing to see, especially when
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quickly skimming, so we put it up front where it is most visible. Sorry, C got it wrong.
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* The `@N` annotations show how the protocol evolved over time, so that the system can make sure
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to maintain compatibility with older versions. Fields (and enumerants, and interface methods)
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must be numbered consecutively starting from zero in the order in which they were added. In this
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example, it looks like the `birthdate` field was added to the `Person` structure recently -- its
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number is higher than the `email` and `phones` fields. Unlike Protobufs, you cannot skip numbers
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when defining fields -- but there was never any reason to do so anyway.
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## Language Reference
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### Comments
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Comments are indicated by hash signs and extend to the end of the line:
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{% highlight capnp %}
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# This is a comment.
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{% endhighlight %}
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Comments meant as documentation should appear _after_ the declaration, either on the same line, or
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on a subsequent line. Doc comments for aggregate definitions should appear on the line after the
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opening brace.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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struct Date {
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# A standard Gregorian calendar date.
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year @0 :Int16;
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# The year. Must include the century.
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# Negative value indicates BC.
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month @1 :UInt8; # Month number, 1-12.
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day @2 :UInt8; # Day number, 1-30.
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Placing the comment _after_ the declaration rather than before makes the code more readable,
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especially when doc comments grow long. You almost always need to see the declaration before you
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can start reading the comment.
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### Built-in Types
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The following types are automatically defined:
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* **Void:** `Void`
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* **Boolean:** `Bool`
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* **Integers:** `Int8`, `Int16`, `Int32`, `Int64`
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* **Unsigned integers:** `UInt8`, `UInt16`, `UInt32`, `UInt64`
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* **Floating-point:** `Float32`, `Float64`
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* **Blobs:** `Text`, `Data`
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* **Lists:** `List(T)`
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Notes:
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* The `Void` type has exactly one possible value, and thus can be encoded in zero bits. It is
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rarely used, but can be useful as a union member.
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* `Text` is always UTF-8 encoded and NUL-terminated.
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* `Data` is a completely arbitrary sequence of bytes.
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* `List` is a parameterized type, where the parameter is the element type. For example,
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`List(Int32)`, `List(Person)`, and `List(List(Text))` are all valid.
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### Structs
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A struct has a set of named, typed fields, numbered consecutively starting from zero.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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struct Person {
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name @0 :Text;
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email @1 :Text;
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Fields can have default values:
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{% highlight capnp %}
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foo @0 :Int32 = 123;
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bar @1 :Text = "blah";
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baz @2 :List(Bool) = [ true, false, false, true ];
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qux @3 :Person = (name = "Bob", email = "bob@example.com");
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corge @4 :Void = void;
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grault @5 :Data = 0x"a1 40 33";
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{% endhighlight %}
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### Unions
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A union is two or more fields of a struct which are stored in the same location. Only one of
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these fields can be set at a time, and a separate tag is maintained to track which one is
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currently set. Unlike in C, unions are not types, they are simply properties of fields, therefore
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union declarations do not look like types.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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struct Person {
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# ...
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employment :union {
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# We assume that a person is only one of these.
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unemployed @4 :Void;
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employer @5 :Company;
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school @6 :School;
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selfEmployed @7 :Void;
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}
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Additionally, unions can be unnamed. Each struct can contain no more than one unnamed union. Use
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unnamed unions in cases where you would struggle to think of an appropriate name for the union,
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because the union represents the main body of the struct.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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struct Shape {
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area @0 :Float64;
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union {
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circle @1 :Float64; # radius
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square @2 :Float64; # width
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}
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Notes:
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* Unions members are numbered in the same number space as fields of the containing struct.
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Remember that the purpose of the numbers is to indicate the evolution order of the
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struct. The system needs to know when the union fields were declared relative to the non-union
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fields.
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* Notice that we used the "useless" `Void` type here. We don't have any extra information to store
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for the `unemployed` or `selfEmployed` cases, but we still want the union to distinguish these
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states from others.
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* By default, when a struct is initialized, the lowest-numbered field in the union is "set". If
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you do not want any field set by default, simply declare a field called "unset" and make it the
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lowest-numbered field.
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* You can move an existing field into a new union without breaking compatibility with existing
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data, as long as all of the other fields in the union are new. Since the existing field is
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necessarily the lowest-numbered in the union, it will be the union's default field.
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**Wait, why aren't unions first-class types?**
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Requiring unions to be declared inside a struct, rather than living as free-standing types, has
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some important advantages:
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* If unions were first-class types, then union members would clearly have to be numbered separately
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from the containing type's fields. This means that the compiler, when deciding how to position
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the union in its containing struct, would have to conservatively assume that any kind of new
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field might be added to the union in the future. To support this, all unions would have to
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be allocated as separate objects embedded by pointer, wasting space.
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* A free-standing union would be a liability for protocol evolution, because no additional data
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can be attached to it later on. Consider, for example, a type which represents a parser token.
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This type is naturally a union: it may be a keyword, identifier, numeric literal, quoted string,
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etc. So the author defines it as a union, and the type is used widely. Later on, the developer
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wants to attach information to the token indicating its line and column number in the source
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file. Unfortunately, this is impossible without updating all users of the type, because the new
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information ought to apply to _all_ token instances, not just specific members of the union. On
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the other hand, if unions must be embedded within structs, it is always possible to add new
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fields to the struct later on.
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* When evolving a protocol it is common to discover that some existing field really should have
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been enclosed in a union, because new fields being added are mutually exclusive with it. With
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Cap'n Proto's unions, it is actually possible to "retroactively unionize" such a field without
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changing its layout. This allows you to continue being able to read old data without wasting
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space when writing new data. This is only possible when unions are declared within their
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containing struct.
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Cap'n Proto's unconventional approach to unions provides these advantages without any real down
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side: where you would conventionally define a free-standing union type, in Cap'n Proto you
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may simply define a struct type that contains only that union (probably unnamed), and you have
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achieved the same effect. Thus, aside from being slightly unintuitive, it is strictly superior.
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### Groups
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A group is a set of fields that are encapsulated in their own scope.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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struct Person {
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# ...
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address :group {
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# Note: This is a terrible way to use groups, and meant
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# only to demonstrate the syntax.
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houseNumber @8 :UInt32;
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street @9 :Text;
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city @10 :Text;
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country @11 :Text;
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}
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Interface-wise, the above group behaves as if you had defined a nested struct called `Address` and
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then a field `address :Address`. However, a group is _not_ a separate object from its containing
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struct: the fields are numbered in the same space as the containing struct's fields, and are laid
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out exactly the same as if they hadn't been grouped at all. Essentially, a group is just a
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namespace.
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Groups on their own (as in the above example) are useless, almost as much so as the `Void` type.
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They become interesting when used together with unions.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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struct Shape {
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area @0 :Float64;
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union {
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circle :group {
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radius @1 :Float64;
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}
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rectangle :group {
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width @2 :Float64;
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height @3 :Float64;
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}
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}
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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There are two main reason to use groups with unions:
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1. They are often more self-documenting. Notice that `radius` is now a member of `circle`, so
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we don't need a comment to explain that the value of `circle` is its radius.
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2. You can add additional members later on, without breaking compatibility. Notice how we upgraded
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`square` to `rectangle` above, adding a `height` field. This definition is actually
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wire-compatible with the previous version of the `Shape` example from the "union" section
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(aside from the fact that `height` will always be zero when reading old data -- hey, it's not
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a perfect example). In real-world use, it is common to realize after the fact that you need to
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add some information to a struct that only applies when one particular union field is set.
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Without the ability to upgrade to a group, you would have to define the new field separately,
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and have it waste space when not relevant.
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Note that a named union is actually exactly equivalent to a named group containing an unnamed
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union.
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**Wait, weren't groups considered a misfeature in Protobufs? Why did you do this again?**
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They are useful in unions, which Protobufs did not have. Meanwhile, you cannot have a "repeated
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group" in Cap'n Proto, which was the case that got into the most trouble with Protobufs.
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### Dynamically-typed Fields
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A struct may have a field with type `AnyPointer`. This field's value can be of any pointer type --
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i.e. any struct, interface, list, or blob. This is essentially like a `void*` in C.
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See also [generics](#generic-types).
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### Enums
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An enum is a type with a small finite set of symbolic values.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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enum Rfc3092Variable {
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foo @0;
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bar @1;
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baz @2;
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qux @3;
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# ...
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Like fields, enumerants must be numbered sequentially starting from zero. In languages where
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enums have numeric values, these numbers will be used, but in general Cap'n Proto enums should not
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be considered numeric.
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### Interfaces
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An interface has a collection of methods, each of which takes some parameters and return some
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results. Like struct fields, methods are numbered. Interfaces support inheritance, including
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multiple inheritance.
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{% highlight capnp %}
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interface Node {
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isDirectory @0 () -> (result :Bool);
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}
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interface Directory extends(Node) {
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list @0 () -> (list :List(Entry));
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struct Entry {
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name @0 :Text;
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node @1 :Node;
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}
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create @1 (name :Text) -> (file :File);
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mkdir @2 (name :Text) -> (directory :Directory);
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open @3 (name :Text) -> (node :Node);
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delete @4 (name :Text);
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link @5 (name :Text, node :Node);
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}
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interface File extends(Node) {
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size @0 () -> (size :UInt64);
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read @1 (startAt :UInt64 = 0, amount :UInt64 = 0xffffffffffffffff)
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-> (data :Data);
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# Default params = read entire file.
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write @2 (startAt :UInt64, data :Data);
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truncate @3 (size :UInt64);
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Notice something interesting here: `Node`, `Directory`, and `File` are interfaces, but several
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methods take these types as parameters or return them as results. `Directory.Entry` is a struct,
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but it contains a `Node`, which is an interface. Structs (and primitive types) are passed over RPC
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by value, but interfaces are passed by reference. So when `Directory.list` is called remotely, the
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content of a `List(Entry)` (including the text of each `name`) is transmitted back, but for the
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`node` field, only a reference to some remote `Node` object is sent.
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When an address of an object is transmitted, the RPC system automatically manages making sure that
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the recipient gets permission to call the addressed object -- because if the recipient wasn't
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meant to have access, the sender shouldn't have sent the reference in the first place. This makes
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it very easy to develop secure protocols with Cap'n Proto -- you almost don't need to think about
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access control at all. This feature is what makes Cap'n Proto a "capability-based" RPC system -- a
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reference to an object inherently represents a "capability" to access it.
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### Generic Types
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A struct or interface type may be parameterized, making it "generic". For example, this is useful
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for defining type-safe containers:
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{% highlight capnp %}
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struct Map(Key, Value) {
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entries @0 :List(Entry);
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struct Entry {
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key @0 :Key;
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value @1 :Value;
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}
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}
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struct People {
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byName @0 :Map(Text, Person);
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# Maps names to Person instances.
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Cap'n Proto generics work very similarly to Java generics or C++ templates. Some notes:
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* Only pointer types (structs, lists, blobs, and interfaces) can be used as generic parameters,
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much like in Java. This is a pragmatic limitation: allowing parameters to have non-pointer types
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would mean that different parameterizations of a struct could have completely different layouts,
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which would excessively complicate the Cap'n Proto implementation.
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* A type declaration nested inside a generic type may use the type parameters of the outer type,
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as you can see in the example above. This differs from Java, but matches C++. If you want to
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refer to a nested type from outside the outer type, you must specify the parameters on the outer
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type, not the inner. For example, `Map(Text, Person).Entry` is a valid type;
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`Map.Entry(Text, Person)` is NOT valid. (Of course, an inner type may declare additional generic
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parameters.)
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* If you refer to a generic type but omit its parameters (e.g. declare a field of type `Map` rather
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than `Map(T, U)`), it is as if you specified `AnyPointer` for each parameter. Note that such
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a type is wire-compatible with any specific parameterization, so long as you interpret the
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`AnyPointer`s as the correct type at runtime.
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* Relatedly, it is safe to cast an generic interface of a specific parameterization to a generic
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interface where all parameters are `AnyPointer` and vice versa, as long as the `AnyPointer`s are
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treated as the correct type at runtime. This means that e.g. you can implement a server in a
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generic way that is correct for all parameterizations but call it from clients using a specific
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parameterization.
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* The encoding of a generic type is exactly the same as the encoding of a type produced by
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substituting the type parameters manually. For example, `Map(Text, Person)` is encoded exactly
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the same as:
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<div>{% highlight capnp %}
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struct PersonMap {
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# Encoded the same as Map(Text, Person).
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entries @0 :List(Entry);
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struct Entry {
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key @0 :Text;
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value @1 :Person;
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}
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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</div>
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Therefore, it is possible to upgrade non-generic types to generic types while retaining
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backwards-compatibility.
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* Similarly, a generic interface's protocol is exactly the same as the interface obtained by
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manually substituting the generic parameters.
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### Generic Methods
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Interface methods may also have "implicit" generic parameters that apply to a particular method
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call. This commonly applies to "factory" methods. For example:
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{% highlight capnp %}
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interface Assignable(T) {
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# A generic interface, with non-generic methods.
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get @0 () -> (value :T);
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set @1 (value :T) -> ();
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}
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interface AssignableFactory {
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newAssignable @0 [T] (initialValue :T)
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-> (assignable :Assignable(T));
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# A generic method.
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}
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{% endhighlight %}
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Here, the method `newAssignable()` is generic. The return type of the method depends on the input
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type.
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Ideally, calls to a generic method should not have to explicitly specify the method's type
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parameters, because they should be inferred from the types of the method's regular parameters.
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However, this may not always be possible; it depends on the programming language and API details.
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Note that if a method's generic parameter is used only in its returns, not its parameters, then
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this implies that the returned value is appropriate for any parameterization. For example:
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{% highlight capnp %}
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newUnsetAssignable @1 [T] () -> (assignable :Assignable(T));
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# Create a new assignable. `get()` on the returned object will
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# throw an exception until `set()` has been called at least once.
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{% endhighlight %}
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Because of the way this method is designed, the returned `Assignable` is initially valid for any
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`T`. Effectively, it doesn't take on a type until the first time `set()` is called, and then `T`
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retroactively becomes the type of value passed to `set()`.
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In contrast, if it's the case that the returned type is unknown, then you should NOT declare it
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as generic. Instead, use `AnyPointer`, or omit a type's parameters (since they default to
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`AnyPointer`). For example:
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{% highlight capnp %}
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getNamedAssignable @2 (name :Text) -> (assignable :Assignable);
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# Get the `Assignable` with the given name. It is the
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# responsibility of the caller to keep track of the type of each
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# named `Assignable` and cast the returned object appropriately.
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{% endhighlight %}
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Here, we omitted the parameters to `Assignable` in the return type, because the returned object
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has a specific type parameterization but it is not locally knowable.
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### Constants
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You can define constants in Cap'n Proto. These don't affect what is sent on the wire, but they
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will be included in the generated code, and can be [evaluated using the `capnp`
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tool](capnp-tool.html#evaluating-constants).
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{% highlight capnp %}
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const pi :Float32 = 3.14159;
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const bob :Person = (name = "Bob", email = "bob@example.com");
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const secret :Data = 0x"9f98739c2b53835e 6720a00907abd42f";
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{% endhighlight %}
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Additionally, you may refer to a constant inside another value (e.g. another constant, or a default
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value of a field).
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{% highlight capnp %}
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const foo :Int32 = 123;
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const bar :Text = "Hello";
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const baz :SomeStruct = (id = .foo, message = .bar);
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{% endhighlight %}
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Note that when substituting a constant into another value, the constant's name must be qualified
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with its scope. E.g. if a constant `qux` is declared nested in a type `Corge`, it would need to
|
|
be referenced as `Corge.qux` rather than just `qux`, even when used within the `Corge` scope.
|
|
Constants declared at the top-level scope are prefixed just with `.`. This rule helps to make it
|
|
clear that the name refers to a user-defined constant, rather than a literal value (like `true` or
|
|
`inf`) or an enum value.
|
|
|
|
### Nesting, Scope, and Aliases
|
|
|
|
You can nest constant, alias, and type definitions inside structs and interfaces (but not enums).
|
|
This has no effect on any definition involved except to define the scope of its name. So in Java
|
|
terms, inner classes are always "static". To name a nested type from another scope, separate the
|
|
path with `.`s.
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
struct Foo {
|
|
struct Bar {
|
|
#...
|
|
}
|
|
bar @0 :Bar;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
struct Baz {
|
|
bar @0 :Foo.Bar;
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
If typing long scopes becomes cumbersome, you can use `using` to declare an alias.
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
struct Qux {
|
|
using Foo.Bar;
|
|
bar @0 :Bar;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
struct Corge {
|
|
using T = Foo.Bar;
|
|
bar @0 :T;
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
### Imports
|
|
|
|
An `import` expression names the scope of some other file:
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
struct Foo {
|
|
baz @0 :import "bar.capnp".Baz;
|
|
# Use type "Baz" defined in bar.capnp.
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
Of course, typically it's more readable to define an alias:
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
using Bar = import "bar.capnp";
|
|
|
|
struct Foo {
|
|
baz @0 :Bar.Baz;
|
|
# Use type "Baz" defined in bar.capnp.
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
Or even:
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
using import "bar.capnp".Baz;
|
|
|
|
struct Foo {
|
|
baz @0 :Baz;
|
|
# Use type "Baz" defined in bar.capnp.
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
The above imports specify relative paths. If the path begins with a `/`, it is absolute -- in
|
|
this case, the `capnp` tool searches for the file in each of the search path directories specified
|
|
with `-I`.
|
|
|
|
### Annotations
|
|
|
|
Sometimes you want to attach extra information to parts of your protocol that isn't part of the
|
|
Cap'n Proto language. This information might control details of a particular code generator, or
|
|
you might even read it at run time to assist in some kind of dynamic message processing. For
|
|
example, you might create a field annotation which means "hide from the public", and when you send
|
|
a message to an external user, you might invoke some code first that iterates over your message and
|
|
removes all of these hidden fields.
|
|
|
|
You may declare annotations and use them like so:
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
annotation foo(struct, enum) :Text;
|
|
# Declare an annotation 'foo' which applies to struct and enum types.
|
|
|
|
struct MyType $foo("bar") {
|
|
# Apply 'foo' to to MyType.
|
|
|
|
# ...
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
The possible targets for an annotation are: `file`, `struct`, `field`, `union`, `enum`, `enumerant`,
|
|
`interface`, `method`, `parameter`, `annotation`, `const`. You may also specify `*` to cover them
|
|
all.
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
annotation baz(*) :Int32;
|
|
# 'baz' can annotate anything!
|
|
|
|
$baz(1); # Annotate the file.
|
|
|
|
struct MyStruct $baz(2) {
|
|
myField @0 :Text = "default" $baz(3);
|
|
myUnion :union $baz(4) {
|
|
# ...
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
enum MyEnum $baz(5) {
|
|
myEnumerant @0 $baz(6);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
interface MyInterface $baz(7) {
|
|
myMethod @0 (myParam :Text $baz(9)) -> () $baz(8);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
annotation myAnnotation(struct) :Int32 $baz(10);
|
|
const myConst :Int32 = 123 $baz(11);
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
`Void` annotations can omit the value. Struct-typed annotations are also allowed. Tip: If
|
|
you want an annotation to have a default value, declare it as a struct with a single field with
|
|
a default value.
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
annotation qux(struct, field) :Void;
|
|
|
|
struct MyStruct $qux {
|
|
string @0 :Text $qux;
|
|
number @1 :Int32 $qux;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
annotation corge(file) :MyStruct;
|
|
|
|
$corge(string = "hello", number = 123);
|
|
|
|
struct Grault {
|
|
value @0 :Int32 = 123;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
annotation grault(file) :Grault;
|
|
|
|
$grault(); # value defaults to 123
|
|
$grault(value = 456);
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
### Unique IDs
|
|
|
|
A Cap'n Proto file must have a unique 64-bit ID, and each type and annotation defined therein may
|
|
also have an ID. Use `capnp id` to generate a new ID randomly. ID specifications begin with `@`:
|
|
|
|
{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
@0xdbb9ad1f14bf0b36;
|
|
# file ID
|
|
|
|
struct Foo @0x8db435604d0d3723 {
|
|
# ...
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
enum Bar @0xb400f69b5334aab3 {
|
|
# ...
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
interface Baz @0xf7141baba3c12691 {
|
|
# ...
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
annotation qux @0xf8a1bedf44c89f00 (field) :Text;
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
|
If you omit the ID for a type or annotation, one will be assigned automatically. This default
|
|
ID is derived by taking the first 8 bytes of the MD5 hash of the parent scope's ID concatenated
|
|
with the declaration's name (where the "parent scope" is the file for top-level declarations, or
|
|
the outer type for nested declarations). You can see the automatically-generated IDs by "compiling"
|
|
your file with the `-ocapnp` flag, which echos the schema back to the terminal annotated with
|
|
extra information, e.g. `capnp compile -ocapnp myschema.capnp`. In general, you would only specify
|
|
an explicit ID for a declaration if that declaration has been renamed or moved and you want the ID
|
|
to stay the same for backwards-compatibility.
|
|
|
|
IDs exist to provide a relatively short yet unambiguous way to refer to a type or annotation from
|
|
another context. They may be used for representing schemas, for tagging dynamically-typed fields,
|
|
etc. Most languages prefer instead to define a symbolic global namespace e.g. full of "packages",
|
|
but this would have some important disadvantages in the context of Cap'n Proto:
|
|
|
|
* Programmers often feel the need to change symbolic names and organization in order to make their
|
|
code cleaner, but the renamed code should still work with existing encoded data.
|
|
* It's easy for symbolic names to collide, and these collisions could be hard to detect in a large
|
|
distributed system with many different binaries using different versions of protocols.
|
|
* Fully-qualified type names may be large and waste space when transmitted on the wire.
|
|
|
|
Note that IDs are 64-bit (actually, 63-bit, as the first bit is always 1). Random collisions
|
|
are possible, but unlikely -- there would have to be on the order of a billion types before this
|
|
becomes a real concern. Collisions from misuse (e.g. copying an example without changing the ID)
|
|
are much more likely.
|
|
|
|
## Evolving Your Protocol
|
|
|
|
A protocol can be changed in the following ways without breaking backwards-compatibility, and
|
|
without changing the [canonical](encoding.html#canonicalization) encoding of a message:
|
|
|
|
* New types, constants, and aliases can be added anywhere, since they obviously don't affect the
|
|
encoding of any existing type.
|
|
|
|
* New fields, enumerants, and methods may be added to structs, enums, and interfaces, respectively,
|
|
as long as each new member's number is larger than all previous members. Similarly, new fields
|
|
may be added to existing groups and unions.
|
|
|
|
* New parameters may be added to a method. The new parameters must be added to the end of the
|
|
parameter list and must have default values.
|
|
|
|
* Members can be re-arranged in the source code, so long as their numbers stay the same.
|
|
|
|
* Any symbolic name can be changed, as long as the type ID / ordinal numbers stay the same. Note
|
|
that type declarations have an implicit ID generated based on their name and parent's ID, but
|
|
you can use `capnp compile -ocapnp myschema.capnp` to find out what that number is, and then
|
|
declare it explicitly after your rename.
|
|
|
|
* Type definitions can be moved to different scopes, as long as the type ID is declared
|
|
explicitly.
|
|
|
|
* A field can be moved into a group or a union, as long as the group/union and all other fields
|
|
within it are new. In other words, a field can be replaced with a group or union containing an
|
|
equivalent field and some new fields.
|
|
|
|
* A non-generic type can be made [generic](#generic-types), and new generic parameters may be
|
|
added to an existing generic type. Other types used inside the body of the newly-generic type can
|
|
be replaced with the new generic parameter so long as all existing users of the type are updated
|
|
to bind that generic parameter to the type it replaced. For example:
|
|
|
|
<div>{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
struct Map {
|
|
entries @0 :List(Entry);
|
|
struct Entry {
|
|
key @0 :Text;
|
|
value @1 :Text;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
</div>
|
|
|
|
Can change to:
|
|
|
|
<div>{% highlight capnp %}
|
|
struct Map(Key, Value) {
|
|
entries @0 :List(Entry);
|
|
struct Entry {
|
|
key @0 :Key;
|
|
value @1 :Value;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
{% endhighlight %}
|
|
</div>
|
|
|
|
As long as all existing uses of `Map` are replaced with `Map(Text, Text)` (and any uses of
|
|
`Map.Entry` are replaced with `Map(Text, Text).Entry`).
|
|
|
|
(This rule applies analogously to generic methods.)
|
|
|
|
The following changes are backwards-compatible but may change the canonical encoding of a message.
|
|
Apps that rely on canonicalization (such as some cryptographic protocols) should avoid changes in
|
|
this list, but most apps can safely use them:
|
|
|
|
* A field of type `List(T)`, where `T` is a primitive type, blob, or list, may be changed to type
|
|
`List(U)`, where `U` is a struct type whose `@0` field is of type `T`. This rule is useful when
|
|
you realize too late that you need to attach some extra data to each element of your list.
|
|
Without this rule, you would be stuck defining parallel lists, which are ugly and error-prone.
|
|
As a special exception to this rule, `List(Bool)` may **not** be upgraded to a list of structs,
|
|
because implementing this for bit lists has proven unreasonably expensive.
|
|
|
|
Any change not listed above should be assumed NOT to be safe. In particular:
|
|
|
|
* You cannot change a field, method, or enumerant's number.
|
|
* You cannot change a field or method parameter's type or default value.
|
|
* You cannot change a type's ID.
|
|
* You cannot change the name of a type that doesn't have an explicit ID, as the implicit ID is
|
|
generated based in part on the type name.
|
|
* You cannot move a type to a different scope or file unless it has an explicit ID, as the implicit
|
|
ID is based in part on the scope's ID.
|
|
* You cannot move an existing field into or out of an existing union, nor can you form a new union
|
|
containing more than one existing field.
|
|
|
|
Also, these rules only apply to the Cap'n Proto native encoding. It is sometimes useful to
|
|
transcode Cap'n Proto types to other formats, like JSON, which may have different rules (e.g.,
|
|
field names cannot change in JSON).
|