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Provide support for top-level exports #455
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I've just been exploring this kind of issue, it doesn't look like it's received much attention. We currently have a package generation process for both protobuf.js and the protoc-gen versions that, post generation, walks the directory tree and generates index files that look similar to:
the 'leaf' index.js look like module.exports = {
bar_pb: require("./bar_pb"),
}; and the module.exports = {
foo: require("./foo"),
bar: require("./bar"),
}; (or some mix inbetween, plus their corresponding d.ts files). This results in being able to do import { foo, bar } from 'package';
something(foo.foo_pb.Foo);
something(bar.bar_pb.Bar); The addition of the 'filename+_pb' here always kind of bugged me (I thought it would be nice to be able to use In any case, so far, a post-process script that walks the structure seems to be the answer right now. For what its worth, I haven't found any other language generator that does produce the packaging artifacts or provide 'meta' like this, either. |
Hi, Without going into the detail and depth of the original proposal, and only referring to the issue we are having, my vote is to:
I'll give a simple example where we were forced to change message names, in order to avoid import clashes. package valueobjects;
// Message representing postal address value object
message PostalAddress {
string street = 1;
string city = 2;
...
} package resources;
import "valueobjects.proto";
// Message representing postal address entity
message PostalAddress {
string id= 1;
valueobjects.PostalAddress postal_address = 2;
...
} when complied we get import { PostalAddress } from "../../../../valueobjects_pb.js";
/**
* Postal address message.
*
* @generated from message resources.v1.PostalAddress
*/
export const PostalAddress = proto3.makeMessageType(
"resources.v1.PostalAddress",
() => [
{ no: 1, name: "id", kind: "scalar", T: 9 /* ScalarType.STRING */ },
{ no: 2, name: "postal_address", kind: "message", T: PostalAddress },
],
); which fails with error Identifier 'PostalAddress' has already been declared The above messages compile just fine in Having to change message names to avoid import/export name clashes for JS feels penalising. Thank you for opening this conversation. |
The |
@SpareShade, echoing what jcready said: This sounds like a bug, regardless of top-level exports. Can you open an issue? |
@SpareShade, the collision is fixed by #688 in v1.7.2. |
Thanks for the fix @timostamm ! Back to the original ask, I have the start of a protoc plugin (using the bufbuild toolkit) that can generate the indexes with exports. I'm working through corporate approval to move it to our opensource org, and will follow up here. It does require adding |
thank you @timostamm & @jcready ... my apologies for being slow/polluting the thread |
This is to open discussion about the implementation of top-level exports when generating JS/TS code via the plugin framework.
Problem
Specifically, what we're exploring is that given the following:
We would provide the option of generating:
. ├── index.js ├── package.json └── proto ├── foo │ ├── foo_pb.d.ts │ └── foo_pb.js └── bar ├── bar_pb.d.ts └── bar_pb.js
where
index.js
looks something like:This functionality would ostensibly be opt-in through a plugin option of something like
generateIndex
or something similar.Benefits
This would provide a few benefits (note that below benefits would also require associated changes to / creation of a
package.json
file.When using remote packages, it would allow users to write the following import:
instead of
It could help facilitate auto-imports in IDEs like VSCode.
It would make it a lot easier for users to use tools like Intellisense to see exports.
Difficulties
There are difficulties associated with this however. The biggest being how we handle name clashes with exported symbols.
Since Protobuf has namespaces, it is perfectly acceptable to have two messages (or services or enums) with the same name in different namespaces. For example, consider:
Now the generation of the
index.js
file becomes much more complicated because this wouldn't work:So we would have to somehow alias one of these exports to something like:
Even this solution is not straightforward and is further complicated by the following:
strategy
is set toall
, which is not a great developer experience.Foo
from their package may not give them the intendedFoo
.index.js
file and preventing the conflicts / collisions that would ensue will not be easy.package proto.orders.clients.foo.bar.v1;
. This could cause the alias to be something likeproto_orders_client_foo_bar_v1_FooClient
.package.json
to declaretypes
andmain
/exports
.Potential Solutions
Note that all of these solutions only apply when the option to generate top-level exports is
true
.Alias all the things all the time, using the fully-qualified package name as the alias.
Only alias when a conflict occurs and further, only alias the conflict using the smallest possible package path (see example above with
v2_Foo
.Throw an error at generation time if a conflict is detected, alerting the user which types conflict. (this is probably not a great idea, but listed here for visibility).
Only generate top-level exports within a package. This would eliminate the conflict issue altogether as exported symbols within a package are guaranteed not to clash. However, as one might have guessed, this also has its problems:
package.json
, not just a plainexports
field since we would end up with multiple entrypoints per path. We would also most likely have to specifytypes
fields as well in this subpath export map.protocolbuffers/js
andgrpc/web
plugins generate.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: