ScalaPB is a protocol buffer compiler (protoc
) plugin for Scala. It will
generate Scala case classes, parsers and serializers for your protocol
buffers.
ScalaPB generates case classes that can co-exist in the same project alongside the Java-generated code for ProtocolBuffer. This makes it easy to gradually migrate an existing project from the Java version of protocol buffers to Scala. This is acheived by having the ScalaPB generated code use the proto file as part of the package name (in contrast to Java which uses the file name in CamelCase as an outer class)
Each top-level message and enum is written to a separate Scala file. This results in a significant improvement in incremental compilations.
Another cool feature of ScalaPB is that it can optionally generate methods
that convert a Java protocol buffer to a Scala protocol buffer and vice versa.
This is useful if you are gradually migrating a large code base from Java
protocol buffers to Scala. The optional Java conversion is required if you
want to use fromAscii
(parsing ASCII representation of a protocol buffer).
The current implementation delegates to the Java version.
-
Supports proto2 and proto3
-
Easily update nested structure in functinal way using lenses.
-
Scala.js integration
-
GRPC integration
Version | Description |
---|---|
0.4.x | Stable, works with Protobuf 2.6.x |
0.5.x | Unstable development version. |
0.6.x | To be released. Supports Protobuf 2.6.x and Protobuf 3.0.x |
To automatically generate Scala case classes for your messages add ScalaPB's
sbt plugin to your project. Create a file named project/scalapb.sbt
containing the following line:
addSbtPlugin("com.trueaccord.scalapb" % "sbt-scalapb" % "0.4.20")
Add the following line to your build.sbt
:
import com.trueaccord.scalapb.{ScalaPbPlugin => PB}
PB.protobufSettings
For additional configuration options, see ScalaPB SBT Settings documentation
Documentation is available at ScalaPB website.
ScalaPB uses ScalaCheck to aggressively test the generated code. The test generates many different sets of proto files. The sets are growing in complexity: number of files, references to messages from other protos, message nesting and so on. Then, test data is generated to populate this protocol schema, then we check that the ScalaPB generated code behaves exactly like the reference implementation in Java.
Running the tests:
$ sbt test
The tests take a few minutes to run. There is a smaller test suite called
e2e
that uses the sbt plugin to compile the protos and runs a series of
ScalaChecks on the outputs. To run it:
$ ./e2e.sh