trait
PluginFrontend extends AnyRef
Type Members
-
abstract
type
InternalState
Abstract Value Members
-
abstract
def
cleanup(state: InternalState): Unit
-
Concrete Value Members
-
final
def
!=(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
-
final
def
!=(arg0: Any): Boolean
-
final
def
##(): Int
-
final
def
==(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
-
final
def
==(arg0: Any): Boolean
-
final
def
asInstanceOf[T0]: T0
-
def
clone(): AnyRef
-
final
def
eq(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
-
def
equals(arg0: Any): Boolean
-
def
finalize(): Unit
-
final
def
getClass(): Class[_]
-
def
hashCode(): Int
-
final
def
isInstanceOf[T0]: Boolean
-
final
def
ne(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
-
final
def
notify(): Unit
-
final
def
notifyAll(): Unit
-
final
def
synchronized[T0](arg0: ⇒ T0): T0
-
def
toString(): String
-
final
def
wait(): Unit
-
final
def
wait(arg0: Long, arg1: Int): Unit
-
final
def
wait(arg0: Long): Unit
Inherited from AnyRef
Inherited from Any
A PluginFrontend instance provides a platform-dependent way for protoc to communicate with a JVM based ProtocCodeGenerator.
protoc is able to launch plugins. Plugins are executables that take a serialized CodeGenerationRequest via stdin and serialize a CodeGenerationRequest to stdout. The idea in PluginFrontend is to create a minimal plugin that wires its stdin/stdout to this JVM.
The two-way communication always goes as follows:
1. protoc writes a request to the stdin of a plugin 2. plugin writes the data to the channel 3. this JVM reads it, interprets it as CodeGenerationRequest and process it. 4. this JVM writes a CodeGenerationResponse to the channel 5. this JVM closes the channel. 6. the plugin reads the data and writes it to standard out. 7. protoc handles the CodeGenerationResponse (creates Scala sources)