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Protobuf-ES

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A complete implementation of Protocol Buffers in TypeScript, suitable for web browsers and Node.js, created by Buf.

Protobuf-ES is the only fully-compliant JavaScript Protobuf library that passes the Protobuf conformance tests—read more on our blog.

Protobuf-ES's companion RPC library is Connect-ES, which supports the Connect, gRPC, and gRPC-Web protocols.

What is Protocol Buffers?

In a nutshell, Protocol Buffers (aka Protobuf) has two main functions:

These two independent traits work together to allow your project and everyone who interacts with it to define messages, fields, and service APIs in the exact same way. In a practical sense as it relates to Protobuf-ES, this means no more disparate JSON types all over the place. Instead, you define a common schema in a Protobuf file, such as:

syntax = "proto3";

message User {
  string first_name = 1;
  string last_name = 2;
  bool active = 3;
  User manager = 4;
  repeated string locations = 5;
  map<string, string> projects = 6;
}

You can then compile it to ECMAScript with buf or protoc, and use it like this:

import { UserSchema } from "./gen/user_pb.js";
import { create, toBinary, toJson } from "@bufbuild/protobuf";

let user = create(UserSchema, {
  firstName: "Homer",
  lastName: "Simpson",
  active: true,
  locations: ["Springfield"],
  projects: { SPP: "Springfield Power Plant" },
  manager: {
    firstName: "Montgomery",
    lastName: "Burns",
  },
});

const bytes = toBinary(UserSchema, user);
const json = toJson(UserSchema, user);

The benefits of using Protobuf extend to any application that interacts with yours, because the Protobuf file above can be used to generate types in many languages. The added bonus is that no one has to write any boilerplate code to make this happen. Code generators handle all of this for you.

Protobuf also allows you to serialize this structured data. Your application running in the browser can send a User object to a backend running an entirely different language, but using the exact same definition. Using an RPC framework like Connect-ES, your data is serialized into bytes on the wire and then deserialized at its destination using the defined schema.

Quickstart

  1. Install the code generator, the runtime library, and the Buf CLI:

    npm install @bufbuild/protobuf @bufbuild/protoc-gen-es @bufbuild/buf
    
  2. Create a buf.gen.yaml file that looks like this:

    # Learn more: https://buf.build/docs/configuration/v2/buf-gen-yaml
    version: v2
    inputs:
      - directory: proto
    plugins:
      - local: protoc-gen-es
        opt: target=ts
        out: src/gen
    
  3. Download the example.proto into a proto directory:

    mkdir proto
    curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bufbuild/protobuf-es/main/packages/protobuf-example/proto/example.proto > proto/example.proto
    
  4. Generate your code with buf or protoc:

    npx buf generate
    

You should now see a generated file at src/gen/example_pb.ts that contains a type User, and a schema UserSchema. From here, you can begin to work with your schema.

Documentation

Packages

Ecosystem

TypeScript compatibility

The generated code is compatible with TypeScript v4.9.5 or later, with the default compiler settings.

Copyright

The code to encode and decode varint is Copyright 2008 Google Inc., licensed under BSD-3-Clause. All other files are licensed under Apache-2.0, see LICENSE.