# Generated by the protocol buffer compiler. DO NOT EDIT! # sources: google/protobuf/any.proto, google/protobuf/source_context.proto, google/protobuf/type.proto, google/protobuf/api.proto, google/protobuf/descriptor.proto, google/protobuf/duration.proto, google/protobuf/empty.proto, google/protobuf/field_mask.proto, google/protobuf/struct.proto, google/protobuf/timestamp.proto, google/protobuf/wrappers.proto # plugin: python-betterproto from dataclasses import dataclass from typing import Dict, List import betterproto class Syntax(betterproto.Enum): """The syntax in which a protocol buffer element is defined.""" # Syntax `proto2`. SYNTAX_PROTO2 = 0 # Syntax `proto3`. SYNTAX_PROTO3 = 1 class FieldKind(betterproto.Enum): TYPE_UNKNOWN = 0 TYPE_DOUBLE = 1 TYPE_FLOAT = 2 TYPE_INT64 = 3 TYPE_UINT64 = 4 TYPE_INT32 = 5 TYPE_FIXED64 = 6 TYPE_FIXED32 = 7 TYPE_BOOL = 8 TYPE_STRING = 9 TYPE_GROUP = 10 TYPE_MESSAGE = 11 TYPE_BYTES = 12 TYPE_UINT32 = 13 TYPE_ENUM = 14 TYPE_SFIXED32 = 15 TYPE_SFIXED64 = 16 TYPE_SINT32 = 17 TYPE_SINT64 = 18 class FieldCardinality(betterproto.Enum): CARDINALITY_UNKNOWN = 0 CARDINALITY_OPTIONAL = 1 CARDINALITY_REQUIRED = 2 CARDINALITY_REPEATED = 3 class FieldDescriptorProtoType(betterproto.Enum): TYPE_DOUBLE = 1 TYPE_FLOAT = 2 TYPE_INT64 = 3 TYPE_UINT64 = 4 TYPE_INT32 = 5 TYPE_FIXED64 = 6 TYPE_FIXED32 = 7 TYPE_BOOL = 8 TYPE_STRING = 9 TYPE_GROUP = 10 TYPE_MESSAGE = 11 TYPE_BYTES = 12 TYPE_UINT32 = 13 TYPE_ENUM = 14 TYPE_SFIXED32 = 15 TYPE_SFIXED64 = 16 TYPE_SINT32 = 17 TYPE_SINT64 = 18 class FieldDescriptorProtoLabel(betterproto.Enum): LABEL_OPTIONAL = 1 LABEL_REQUIRED = 2 LABEL_REPEATED = 3 class FileOptionsOptimizeMode(betterproto.Enum): SPEED = 1 CODE_SIZE = 2 LITE_RUNTIME = 3 class FieldOptionsCType(betterproto.Enum): STRING = 0 CORD = 1 STRING_PIECE = 2 class FieldOptionsJSType(betterproto.Enum): JS_NORMAL = 0 JS_STRING = 1 JS_NUMBER = 2 class MethodOptionsIdempotencyLevel(betterproto.Enum): IDEMPOTENCY_UNKNOWN = 0 NO_SIDE_EFFECTS = 1 IDEMPOTENT = 2 class NullValue(betterproto.Enum): """ `NullValue` is a singleton enumeration to represent the null value for the `Value` type union. The JSON representation for `NullValue` is JSON `null`. """ # Null value. NULL_VALUE = 0 @dataclass class Any(betterproto.Message): """ `Any` contains an arbitrary serialized protocol buffer message along with a URL that describes the type of the serialized message. Protobuf library provides support to pack/unpack Any values in the form of utility functions or additional generated methods of the Any type. Example 1: Pack and unpack a message in C++. Foo foo = ...; Any any; any.PackFrom(foo); ... if (any.UnpackTo(&foo)) { ... } Example 2: Pack and unpack a message in Java. Foo foo = ...; Any any = Any.pack(foo); ... if (any.is(Foo.class)) { foo = any.unpack(Foo.class); } Example 3: Pack and unpack a message in Python. foo = Foo(...) any = Any() any.Pack(foo) ... if any.Is(Foo.DESCRIPTOR): any.Unpack(foo) ... Example 4: Pack and unpack a message in Go foo := &pb.Foo{...} any, err := ptypes.MarshalAny(foo) ... foo := &pb.Foo{} if err := ptypes.UnmarshalAny(any, foo); err != nil { ... } The pack methods provided by protobuf library will by default use 'type.googleapis.com/full.type.name' as the type URL and the unpack methods only use the fully qualified type name after the last '/' in the type URL, for example "foo.bar.com/x/y.z" will yield type name "y.z". JSON ==== The JSON representation of an `Any` value uses the regular representation of the deserialized, embedded message, with an additional field `@type` which contains the type URL. Example: package google.profile; message Person { string first_name = 1; string last_name = 2; } { "@type": "type.googleapis.com/google.profile.Person", "firstName": , "lastName": } If the embedded message type is well-known and has a custom JSON representation, that representation will be embedded adding a field `value` which holds the custom JSON in addition to the `@type` field. Example (for message [google.protobuf.Duration][]): { "@type": "type.googleapis.com/google.protobuf.Duration", "value": "1.212s" } """ # A URL/resource name that uniquely identifies the type of the serialized # protocol buffer message. This string must contain at least one "/" # character. The last segment of the URL's path must represent the fully # qualified name of the type (as in `path/google.protobuf.Duration`). The # name should be in a canonical form (e.g., leading "." is not accepted). In # practice, teams usually precompile into the binary all types that they # expect it to use in the context of Any. However, for URLs which use the # scheme `http`, `https`, or no scheme, one can optionally set up a type # server that maps type URLs to message definitions as follows: * If no # scheme is provided, `https` is assumed. * An HTTP GET on the URL must yield # a [google.protobuf.Type][] value in binary format, or produce an error. * # Applications are allowed to cache lookup results based on the URL, or # have them precompiled into a binary to avoid any lookup. Therefore, # binary compatibility needs to be preserved on changes to types. (Use # versioned type names to manage breaking changes.) Note: this # functionality is not currently available in the official protobuf release, # and it is not used for type URLs beginning with type.googleapis.com. # Schemes other than `http`, `https` (or the empty scheme) might be used with # implementation specific semantics. type_url: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # Must be a valid serialized protocol buffer of the above specified type. value: bytes = betterproto.bytes_field(2) @dataclass class SourceContext(betterproto.Message): """ `SourceContext` represents information about the source of a protobuf element, like the file in which it is defined. """ # The path-qualified name of the .proto file that contained the associated # protobuf element. For example: `"google/protobuf/source_context.proto"`. file_name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) @dataclass class Type(betterproto.Message): """A protocol buffer message type.""" # The fully qualified message name. name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # The list of fields. fields: List["Field"] = betterproto.message_field(2) # The list of types appearing in `oneof` definitions in this type. oneofs: List[str] = betterproto.string_field(3) # The protocol buffer options. options: List["Option"] = betterproto.message_field(4) # The source context. source_context: "SourceContext" = betterproto.message_field(5) # The source syntax. syntax: "Syntax" = betterproto.enum_field(6) @dataclass class Field(betterproto.Message): """A single field of a message type.""" # The field type. kind: "FieldKind" = betterproto.enum_field(1) # The field cardinality. cardinality: "FieldCardinality" = betterproto.enum_field(2) # The field number. number: int = betterproto.int32_field(3) # The field name. name: str = betterproto.string_field(4) # The field type URL, without the scheme, for message or enumeration types. # Example: `"type.googleapis.com/google.protobuf.Timestamp"`. type_url: str = betterproto.string_field(6) # The index of the field type in `Type.oneofs`, for message or enumeration # types. The first type has index 1; zero means the type is not in the list. oneof_index: int = betterproto.int32_field(7) # Whether to use alternative packed wire representation. packed: bool = betterproto.bool_field(8) # The protocol buffer options. options: List["Option"] = betterproto.message_field(9) # The field JSON name. json_name: str = betterproto.string_field(10) # The string value of the default value of this field. Proto2 syntax only. default_value: str = betterproto.string_field(11) @dataclass class Enum(betterproto.Message): """Enum type definition.""" # Enum type name. name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # Enum value definitions. enumvalue: List["EnumValue"] = betterproto.message_field( 2, wraps=betterproto.TYPE_ENUM ) # Protocol buffer options. options: List["Option"] = betterproto.message_field(3) # The source context. source_context: "SourceContext" = betterproto.message_field(4) # The source syntax. syntax: "Syntax" = betterproto.enum_field(5) @dataclass class EnumValue(betterproto.Message): """Enum value definition.""" # Enum value name. name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # Enum value number. number: int = betterproto.int32_field(2) # Protocol buffer options. options: List["Option"] = betterproto.message_field(3) @dataclass class Option(betterproto.Message): """ A protocol buffer option, which can be attached to a message, field, enumeration, etc. """ # The option's name. For protobuf built-in options (options defined in # descriptor.proto), this is the short name. For example, `"map_entry"`. For # custom options, it should be the fully-qualified name. For example, # `"google.api.http"`. name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # The option's value packed in an Any message. If the value is a primitive, # the corresponding wrapper type defined in google/protobuf/wrappers.proto # should be used. If the value is an enum, it should be stored as an int32 # value using the google.protobuf.Int32Value type. value: "Any" = betterproto.message_field(2) @dataclass class Api(betterproto.Message): """ Api is a light-weight descriptor for an API Interface. Interfaces are also described as "protocol buffer services" in some contexts, such as by the "service" keyword in a .proto file, but they are different from API Services, which represent a concrete implementation of an interface as opposed to simply a description of methods and bindings. They are also sometimes simply referred to as "APIs" in other contexts, such as the name of this message itself. See https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/glossary for detailed terminology. """ # The fully qualified name of this interface, including package name followed # by the interface's simple name. name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # The methods of this interface, in unspecified order. methods: List["Method"] = betterproto.message_field(2) # Any metadata attached to the interface. options: List["Option"] = betterproto.message_field(3) # A version string for this interface. If specified, must have the form # `major-version.minor-version`, as in `1.10`. If the minor version is # omitted, it defaults to zero. If the entire version field is empty, the # major version is derived from the package name, as outlined below. If the # field is not empty, the version in the package name will be verified to be # consistent with what is provided here. The versioning schema uses [semantic # versioning](http://semver.org) where the major version number indicates a # breaking change and the minor version an additive, non-breaking change. # Both version numbers are signals to users what to expect from different # versions, and should be carefully chosen based on the product plan. The # major version is also reflected in the package name of the interface, which # must end in `v`, as in `google.feature.v1`. For major # versions 0 and 1, the suffix can be omitted. Zero major versions must only # be used for experimental, non-GA interfaces. version: str = betterproto.string_field(4) # Source context for the protocol buffer service represented by this message. source_context: "SourceContext" = betterproto.message_field(5) # Included interfaces. See [Mixin][]. mixins: List["Mixin"] = betterproto.message_field(6) # The source syntax of the service. syntax: "Syntax" = betterproto.enum_field(7) @dataclass class Method(betterproto.Message): """Method represents a method of an API interface.""" # The simple name of this method. name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # A URL of the input message type. request_type_url: str = betterproto.string_field(2) # If true, the request is streamed. request_streaming: bool = betterproto.bool_field(3) # The URL of the output message type. response_type_url: str = betterproto.string_field(4) # If true, the response is streamed. response_streaming: bool = betterproto.bool_field(5) # Any metadata attached to the method. options: List["Option"] = betterproto.message_field(6) # The source syntax of this method. syntax: "Syntax" = betterproto.enum_field(7) @dataclass class Mixin(betterproto.Message): """ Declares an API Interface to be included in this interface. The including interface must redeclare all the methods from the included interface, but documentation and options are inherited as follows: - If after comment and whitespace stripping, the documentation string of the redeclared method is empty, it will be inherited from the original method. - Each annotation belonging to the service config (http, visibility) which is not set in the redeclared method will be inherited. - If an http annotation is inherited, the path pattern will be modified as follows. Any version prefix will be replaced by the version of the including interface plus the [root][] path if specified. Example of a simple mixin: package google.acl.v1; service AccessControl { // Get the underlying ACL object. rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { option (google.api.http).get = "/v1/{resource=**}:getAcl"; } } package google.storage.v2; service Storage { rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl); // Get a data record. rpc GetData(GetDataRequest) returns (Data) { option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}"; } } Example of a mixin configuration: apis: - name: google.storage.v2.Storage mixins: - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl The mixin construct implies that all methods in `AccessControl` are also declared with same name and request/response types in `Storage`. A documentation generator or annotation processor will see the effective `Storage.GetAcl` method after inherting documentation and annotations as follows: service Storage { // Get the underlying ACL object. rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/{resource=**}:getAcl"; } ... } Note how the version in the path pattern changed from `v1` to `v2`. If the `root` field in the mixin is specified, it should be a relative path under which inherited HTTP paths are placed. Example: apis: - name: google.storage.v2.Storage mixins: - name: google.acl.v1.AccessControl root: acls This implies the following inherited HTTP annotation: service Storage { // Get the underlying ACL object. rpc GetAcl(GetAclRequest) returns (Acl) { option (google.api.http).get = "/v2/acls/{resource=**}:getAcl"; } ... } """ # The fully qualified name of the interface which is included. name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # If non-empty specifies a path under which inherited HTTP paths are rooted. root: str = betterproto.string_field(2) @dataclass class FileDescriptorSet(betterproto.Message): """ The protocol compiler can output a FileDescriptorSet containing the .proto files it parses. """ file: List["FileDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(1) @dataclass class FileDescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes a complete .proto file.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) package: str = betterproto.string_field(2) # Names of files imported by this file. dependency: List[str] = betterproto.string_field(3) # Indexes of the public imported files in the dependency list above. public_dependency: List[int] = betterproto.int32_field(10) # Indexes of the weak imported files in the dependency list. For Google- # internal migration only. Do not use. weak_dependency: List[int] = betterproto.int32_field(11) # All top-level definitions in this file. message_type: List["DescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(4) enum_type: List["EnumDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(5) service: List["ServiceDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(6) extension: List["FieldDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(7) options: "FileOptions" = betterproto.message_field(8) # This field contains optional information about the original source code. # You may safely remove this entire field without harming runtime # functionality of the descriptors -- the information is needed only by # development tools. source_code_info: "SourceCodeInfo" = betterproto.message_field(9) # The syntax of the proto file. The supported values are "proto2" and # "proto3". syntax: str = betterproto.string_field(12) @dataclass class DescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes a message type.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) field: List["FieldDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(2) extension: List["FieldDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(6) nested_type: List["DescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(3) enum_type: List["EnumDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(4) extension_range: List["DescriptorProtoExtensionRange"] = betterproto.message_field( 5 ) oneof_decl: List["OneofDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(8) options: "MessageOptions" = betterproto.message_field(7) reserved_range: List["DescriptorProtoReservedRange"] = betterproto.message_field(9) # Reserved field names, which may not be used by fields in the same message. # A given name may only be reserved once. reserved_name: List[str] = betterproto.string_field(10) @dataclass class DescriptorProtoExtensionRange(betterproto.Message): start: int = betterproto.int32_field(1) end: int = betterproto.int32_field(2) options: "ExtensionRangeOptions" = betterproto.message_field(3) @dataclass class DescriptorProtoReservedRange(betterproto.Message): """ Range of reserved tag numbers. Reserved tag numbers may not be used by fields or extension ranges in the same message. Reserved ranges may not overlap. """ start: int = betterproto.int32_field(1) end: int = betterproto.int32_field(2) @dataclass class ExtensionRangeOptions(betterproto.Message): # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class FieldDescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes a field within a message.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) number: int = betterproto.int32_field(3) label: "FieldDescriptorProtoLabel" = betterproto.enum_field(4) # If type_name is set, this need not be set. If both this and type_name are # set, this must be one of TYPE_ENUM, TYPE_MESSAGE or TYPE_GROUP. type: "FieldDescriptorProtoType" = betterproto.enum_field(5) # For message and enum types, this is the name of the type. If the name # starts with a '.', it is fully-qualified. Otherwise, C++-like scoping # rules are used to find the type (i.e. first the nested types within this # message are searched, then within the parent, on up to the root namespace). type_name: str = betterproto.string_field(6) # For extensions, this is the name of the type being extended. It is # resolved in the same manner as type_name. extendee: str = betterproto.string_field(2) # For numeric types, contains the original text representation of the value. # For booleans, "true" or "false". For strings, contains the default text # contents (not escaped in any way). For bytes, contains the C escaped value. # All bytes >= 128 are escaped. TODO(kenton): Base-64 encode? default_value: str = betterproto.string_field(7) # If set, gives the index of a oneof in the containing type's oneof_decl # list. This field is a member of that oneof. oneof_index: int = betterproto.int32_field(9) # JSON name of this field. The value is set by protocol compiler. If the user # has set a "json_name" option on this field, that option's value will be # used. Otherwise, it's deduced from the field's name by converting it to # camelCase. json_name: str = betterproto.string_field(10) options: "FieldOptions" = betterproto.message_field(8) @dataclass class OneofDescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes a oneof.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) options: "OneofOptions" = betterproto.message_field(2) @dataclass class EnumDescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes an enum type.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) value: List["EnumValueDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field( 2, wraps=betterproto.TYPE_ENUM ) options: "EnumOptions" = betterproto.message_field(3) # Range of reserved numeric values. Reserved numeric values may not be used # by enum values in the same enum declaration. Reserved ranges may not # overlap. reserved_range: List[ "EnumDescriptorProtoEnumReservedRange" ] = betterproto.message_field(4) # Reserved enum value names, which may not be reused. A given name may only # be reserved once. reserved_name: List[str] = betterproto.string_field(5) @dataclass class EnumDescriptorProtoEnumReservedRange(betterproto.Message): """ Range of reserved numeric values. Reserved values may not be used by entries in the same enum. Reserved ranges may not overlap. Note that this is distinct from DescriptorProto.ReservedRange in that it is inclusive such that it can appropriately represent the entire int32 domain. """ start: int = betterproto.int32_field(1) end: int = betterproto.int32_field(2) @dataclass class EnumValueDescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes a value within an enum.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) number: int = betterproto.int32_field(2) options: "EnumValueOptions" = betterproto.message_field( 3, wraps=betterproto.TYPE_ENUM ) @dataclass class ServiceDescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes a service.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) method: List["MethodDescriptorProto"] = betterproto.message_field(2) options: "ServiceOptions" = betterproto.message_field(3) @dataclass class MethodDescriptorProto(betterproto.Message): """Describes a method of a service.""" name: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # Input and output type names. These are resolved in the same way as # FieldDescriptorProto.type_name, but must refer to a message type. input_type: str = betterproto.string_field(2) output_type: str = betterproto.string_field(3) options: "MethodOptions" = betterproto.message_field(4) # Identifies if client streams multiple client messages client_streaming: bool = betterproto.bool_field(5) # Identifies if server streams multiple server messages server_streaming: bool = betterproto.bool_field(6) @dataclass class FileOptions(betterproto.Message): # Sets the Java package where classes generated from this .proto will be # placed. By default, the proto package is used, but this is often # inappropriate because proto packages do not normally start with backwards # domain names. java_package: str = betterproto.string_field(1) # If set, all the classes from the .proto file are wrapped in a single outer # class with the given name. This applies to both Proto1 (equivalent to the # old "--one_java_file" option) and Proto2 (where a .proto always translates # to a single class, but you may want to explicitly choose the class name). java_outer_classname: str = betterproto.string_field(8) # If set true, then the Java code generator will generate a separate .java # file for each top-level message, enum, and service defined in the .proto # file. Thus, these types will *not* be nested inside the outer class named # by java_outer_classname. However, the outer class will still be generated # to contain the file's getDescriptor() method as well as any top-level # extensions defined in the file. java_multiple_files: bool = betterproto.bool_field(10) # This option does nothing. java_generate_equals_and_hash: bool = betterproto.bool_field(20) # If set true, then the Java2 code generator will generate code that throws # an exception whenever an attempt is made to assign a non-UTF-8 byte # sequence to a string field. Message reflection will do the same. However, # an extension field still accepts non-UTF-8 byte sequences. This option has # no effect on when used with the lite runtime. java_string_check_utf8: bool = betterproto.bool_field(27) optimize_for: "FileOptionsOptimizeMode" = betterproto.enum_field(9) # Sets the Go package where structs generated from this .proto will be # placed. If omitted, the Go package will be derived from the following: - # The basename of the package import path, if provided. - Otherwise, the # package statement in the .proto file, if present. - Otherwise, the # basename of the .proto file, without extension. go_package: str = betterproto.string_field(11) # Should generic services be generated in each language? "Generic" services # are not specific to any particular RPC system. They are generated by the # main code generators in each language (without additional plugins). Generic # services were the only kind of service generation supported by early # versions of google.protobuf. Generic services are now considered deprecated # in favor of using plugins that generate code specific to your particular # RPC system. Therefore, these default to false. Old code which depends on # generic services should explicitly set them to true. cc_generic_services: bool = betterproto.bool_field(16) java_generic_services: bool = betterproto.bool_field(17) py_generic_services: bool = betterproto.bool_field(18) php_generic_services: bool = betterproto.bool_field(42) # Is this file deprecated? Depending on the target platform, this can emit # Deprecated annotations for everything in the file, or it will be completely # ignored; in the very least, this is a formalization for deprecating files. deprecated: bool = betterproto.bool_field(23) # Enables the use of arenas for the proto messages in this file. This applies # only to generated classes for C++. cc_enable_arenas: bool = betterproto.bool_field(31) # Sets the objective c class prefix which is prepended to all objective c # generated classes from this .proto. There is no default. objc_class_prefix: str = betterproto.string_field(36) # Namespace for generated classes; defaults to the package. csharp_namespace: str = betterproto.string_field(37) # By default Swift generators will take the proto package and CamelCase it # replacing '.' with underscore and use that to prefix the types/symbols # defined. When this options is provided, they will use this value instead to # prefix the types/symbols defined. swift_prefix: str = betterproto.string_field(39) # Sets the php class prefix which is prepended to all php generated classes # from this .proto. Default is empty. php_class_prefix: str = betterproto.string_field(40) # Use this option to change the namespace of php generated classes. Default # is empty. When this option is empty, the package name will be used for # determining the namespace. php_namespace: str = betterproto.string_field(41) # Use this option to change the namespace of php generated metadata classes. # Default is empty. When this option is empty, the proto file name will be # used for determining the namespace. php_metadata_namespace: str = betterproto.string_field(44) # Use this option to change the package of ruby generated classes. Default is # empty. When this option is not set, the package name will be used for # determining the ruby package. ruby_package: str = betterproto.string_field(45) # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See the documentation # for the "Options" section above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class MessageOptions(betterproto.Message): # Set true to use the old proto1 MessageSet wire format for extensions. This # is provided for backwards-compatibility with the MessageSet wire format. # You should not use this for any other reason: It's less efficient, has # fewer features, and is more complicated. The message must be defined # exactly as follows: message Foo { option message_set_wire_format = # true; extensions 4 to max; } Note that the message cannot have any # defined fields; MessageSets only have extensions. All extensions of your # type must be singular messages; e.g. they cannot be int32s, enums, or # repeated messages. Because this is an option, the above two restrictions # are not enforced by the protocol compiler. message_set_wire_format: bool = betterproto.bool_field(1) # Disables the generation of the standard "descriptor()" accessor, which can # conflict with a field of the same name. This is meant to make migration # from proto1 easier; new code should avoid fields named "descriptor". no_standard_descriptor_accessor: bool = betterproto.bool_field(2) # Is this message deprecated? Depending on the target platform, this can emit # Deprecated annotations for the message, or it will be completely ignored; # in the very least, this is a formalization for deprecating messages. deprecated: bool = betterproto.bool_field(3) # Whether the message is an automatically generated map entry type for the # maps field. For maps fields: map map_field = 1; The # parsed descriptor looks like: message MapFieldEntry { option # map_entry = true; optional KeyType key = 1; optional # ValueType value = 2; } repeated MapFieldEntry map_field = 1; # Implementations may choose not to generate the map_entry=true message, but # use a native map in the target language to hold the keys and values. The # reflection APIs in such implementations still need to work as if the field # is a repeated message field. NOTE: Do not set the option in .proto files. # Always use the maps syntax instead. The option should only be implicitly # set by the proto compiler parser. map_entry: bool = betterproto.bool_field(7) # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class FieldOptions(betterproto.Message): # The ctype option instructs the C++ code generator to use a different # representation of the field than it normally would. See the specific # options below. This option is not yet implemented in the open source # release -- sorry, we'll try to include it in a future version! ctype: "FieldOptionsCType" = betterproto.enum_field(1) # The packed option can be enabled for repeated primitive fields to enable a # more efficient representation on the wire. Rather than repeatedly writing # the tag and type for each element, the entire array is encoded as a single # length-delimited blob. In proto3, only explicit setting it to false will # avoid using packed encoding. packed: bool = betterproto.bool_field(2) # The jstype option determines the JavaScript type used for values of the # field. The option is permitted only for 64 bit integral and fixed types # (int64, uint64, sint64, fixed64, sfixed64). A field with jstype JS_STRING # is represented as JavaScript string, which avoids loss of precision that # can happen when a large value is converted to a floating point JavaScript. # Specifying JS_NUMBER for the jstype causes the generated JavaScript code to # use the JavaScript "number" type. The behavior of the default option # JS_NORMAL is implementation dependent. This option is an enum to permit # additional types to be added, e.g. goog.math.Integer. jstype: "FieldOptionsJSType" = betterproto.enum_field(6) # Should this field be parsed lazily? Lazy applies only to message-type # fields. It means that when the outer message is initially parsed, the # inner message's contents will not be parsed but instead stored in encoded # form. The inner message will actually be parsed when it is first accessed. # This is only a hint. Implementations are free to choose whether to use # eager or lazy parsing regardless of the value of this option. However, # setting this option true suggests that the protocol author believes that # using lazy parsing on this field is worth the additional bookkeeping # overhead typically needed to implement it. This option does not affect the # public interface of any generated code; all method signatures remain the # same. Furthermore, thread-safety of the interface is not affected by this # option; const methods remain safe to call from multiple threads # concurrently, while non-const methods continue to require exclusive access. # Note that implementations may choose not to check required fields within a # lazy sub-message. That is, calling IsInitialized() on the outer message # may return true even if the inner message has missing required fields. This # is necessary because otherwise the inner message would have to be parsed in # order to perform the check, defeating the purpose of lazy parsing. An # implementation which chooses not to check required fields must be # consistent about it. That is, for any particular sub-message, the # implementation must either *always* check its required fields, or *never* # check its required fields, regardless of whether or not the message has # been parsed. lazy: bool = betterproto.bool_field(5) # Is this field deprecated? Depending on the target platform, this can emit # Deprecated annotations for accessors, or it will be completely ignored; in # the very least, this is a formalization for deprecating fields. deprecated: bool = betterproto.bool_field(3) # For Google-internal migration only. Do not use. weak: bool = betterproto.bool_field(10) # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class OneofOptions(betterproto.Message): # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class EnumOptions(betterproto.Message): # Set this option to true to allow mapping different tag names to the same # value. allow_alias: bool = betterproto.bool_field(2) # Is this enum deprecated? Depending on the target platform, this can emit # Deprecated annotations for the enum, or it will be completely ignored; in # the very least, this is a formalization for deprecating enums. deprecated: bool = betterproto.bool_field(3) # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class EnumValueOptions(betterproto.Message): # Is this enum value deprecated? Depending on the target platform, this can # emit Deprecated annotations for the enum value, or it will be completely # ignored; in the very least, this is a formalization for deprecating enum # values. deprecated: bool = betterproto.bool_field(1) # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class ServiceOptions(betterproto.Message): # Is this service deprecated? Depending on the target platform, this can emit # Deprecated annotations for the service, or it will be completely ignored; # in the very least, this is a formalization for deprecating services. deprecated: bool = betterproto.bool_field(33) # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class MethodOptions(betterproto.Message): # Is this method deprecated? Depending on the target platform, this can emit # Deprecated annotations for the method, or it will be completely ignored; in # the very least, this is a formalization for deprecating methods. deprecated: bool = betterproto.bool_field(33) idempotency_level: "MethodOptionsIdempotencyLevel" = betterproto.enum_field(34) # The parser stores options it doesn't recognize here. See above. uninterpreted_option: List["UninterpretedOption"] = betterproto.message_field(999) @dataclass class UninterpretedOption(betterproto.Message): """ A message representing a option the parser does not recognize. This only appears in options protos created by the compiler::Parser class. DescriptorPool resolves these when building Descriptor objects. Therefore, options protos in descriptor objects (e.g. returned by Descriptor::options(), or produced by Descriptor::CopyTo()) will never have UninterpretedOptions in them. """ name: List["UninterpretedOptionNamePart"] = betterproto.message_field(2) # The value of the uninterpreted option, in whatever type the tokenizer # identified it as during parsing. Exactly one of these should be set. identifier_value: str = betterproto.string_field(3) positive_int_value: int = betterproto.uint64_field(4) negative_int_value: int = betterproto.int64_field(5) double_value: float = betterproto.double_field(6) string_value: bytes = betterproto.bytes_field(7) aggregate_value: str = betterproto.string_field(8) @dataclass class UninterpretedOptionNamePart(betterproto.Message): """ The name of the uninterpreted option. Each string represents a segment in a dot-separated name. is_extension is true iff a segment represents an extension (denoted with parentheses in options specs in .proto files). E.g.,{ ["foo", false], ["bar.baz", true], ["qux", false] } represents "foo.(bar.baz).qux". """ name_part: str = betterproto.string_field(1) is_extension: bool = betterproto.bool_field(2) @dataclass class SourceCodeInfo(betterproto.Message): """ Encapsulates information about the original source file from which a FileDescriptorProto was generated. """ # A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which # corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended to be # useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar tools. # For example, say we have a file like: message Foo { optional string # foo = 1; } Let's look at just the field definition: optional string foo # = 1; ^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^ a bc de f ghi We have the # following locations: span path represents [a,i) [ 4, # 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition. [a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The # label (optional). [c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string). [e,f) [ # 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo). [g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number # (1). Notes: - A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to # any particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements # are logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire # extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will # have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated # field without an index. - Multiple locations may have the same path. This # happens when a single logical declaration is spread out across multiple # places. The most obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there # may be multiple extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have # the same path. - A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's # span. For example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at # the beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions # within the block. - Just because a location's span is a subset of some # other location's span does not mean that it is a descendant. For # example, a "group" defines both a type and a field in a single # declaration. Thus, the locations corresponding to the type and field and # their components will overlap. - Code which tries to interpret locations # should probably be designed to ignore those that it doesn't understand, # as more types of locations could be recorded in the future. location: List["SourceCodeInfoLocation"] = betterproto.message_field(1) @dataclass class SourceCodeInfoLocation(betterproto.Message): # Identifies which part of the FileDescriptorProto was defined at this # location. Each element is a field number or an index. They form a path # from the root FileDescriptorProto to the place where the definition. For # example, this path: [ 4, 3, 2, 7, 1 ] refers to: file.message_type(3) # // 4, 3 .field(7) // 2, 7 .name() // 1 This # is because FileDescriptorProto.message_type has field number 4: repeated # DescriptorProto message_type = 4; and DescriptorProto.field has field # number 2: repeated FieldDescriptorProto field = 2; and # FieldDescriptorProto.name has field number 1: optional string name = 1; # Thus, the above path gives the location of a field name. If we removed the # last element: [ 4, 3, 2, 7 ] this path refers to the whole field # declaration (from the beginning of the label to the terminating semicolon). path: List[int] = betterproto.int32_field(1) # Always has exactly three or four elements: start line, start column, end # line (optional, otherwise assumed same as start line), end column. These # are packed into a single field for efficiency. Note that line and column # numbers are zero-based -- typically you will want to add 1 to each before # displaying to a user. span: List[int] = betterproto.int32_field(2) # If this SourceCodeInfo represents a complete declaration, these are any # comments appearing before and after the declaration which appear to be # attached to the declaration. A series of line comments appearing on # consecutive lines, with no other tokens appearing on those lines, will be # treated as a single comment. leading_detached_comments will keep paragraphs # of comments that appear before (but not connected to) the current element. # Each paragraph, separated by empty lines, will be one comment element in # the repeated field. Only the comment content is provided; comment markers # (e.g. //) are stripped out. For block comments, leading whitespace and an # asterisk will be stripped from the beginning of each line other than the # first. Newlines are included in the output. Examples: optional int32 foo # = 1; // Comment attached to foo. // Comment attached to bar. optional # int32 bar = 2; optional string baz = 3; // Comment attached to baz. # // Another line attached to baz. // Comment attached to qux. // // # Another line attached to qux. optional double qux = 4; // Detached # comment for corge. This is not leading or trailing comments // to qux or # corge because there are blank lines separating it from // both. // # Detached comment for corge paragraph 2. optional string corge = 5; /* # Block comment attached * to corge. Leading asterisks * will be # removed. */ /* Block comment attached to * grault. */ optional int32 # grault = 6; // ignored detached comments. leading_comments: str = betterproto.string_field(3) trailing_comments: str = betterproto.string_field(4) leading_detached_comments: List[str] = betterproto.string_field(6) @dataclass class GeneratedCodeInfo(betterproto.Message): """ Describes the relationship between generated code and its original source file. A GeneratedCodeInfo message is associated with only one generated source file, but may contain references to different source .proto files. """ # An Annotation connects some span of text in generated code to an element of # its generating .proto file. annotation: List["GeneratedCodeInfoAnnotation"] = betterproto.message_field(1) @dataclass class GeneratedCodeInfoAnnotation(betterproto.Message): # Identifies the element in the original source .proto file. This field is # formatted the same as SourceCodeInfo.Location.path. path: List[int] = betterproto.int32_field(1) # Identifies the filesystem path to the original source .proto. source_file: str = betterproto.string_field(2) # Identifies the starting offset in bytes in the generated code that relates # to the identified object. begin: int = betterproto.int32_field(3) # Identifies the ending offset in bytes in the generated code that relates to # the identified offset. The end offset should be one past the last relevant # byte (so the length of the text = end - begin). end: int = betterproto.int32_field(4) @dataclass class Duration(betterproto.Message): """ A Duration represents a signed, fixed-length span of time represented as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. It is independent of any calendar and concepts like "day" or "month". It is related to Timestamp in that the difference between two Timestamp values is a Duration and it can be added or subtracted from a Timestamp. Range is approximately +-10,000 years. # Examples Example 1: Compute Duration from two Timestamps in pseudo code. Timestamp start = ...; Timestamp end = ...; Duration duration = ...; duration.seconds = end.seconds - start.seconds; duration.nanos = end.nanos - start.nanos; if (duration.seconds < 0 && duration.nanos > 0) { duration.seconds += 1; duration.nanos -= 1000000000; } else if (duration.seconds > 0 && duration.nanos < 0) { duration.seconds -= 1; duration.nanos += 1000000000; } Example 2: Compute Timestamp from Timestamp + Duration in pseudo code. Timestamp start = ...; Duration duration = ...; Timestamp end = ...; end.seconds = start.seconds + duration.seconds; end.nanos = start.nanos + duration.nanos; if (end.nanos < 0) { end.seconds -= 1; end.nanos += 1000000000; } else if (end.nanos >= 1000000000) { end.seconds += 1; end.nanos -= 1000000000; } Example 3: Compute Duration from datetime.timedelta in Python. td = datetime.timedelta(days=3, minutes=10) duration = Duration() duration.FromTimedelta(td) # JSON Mapping In JSON format, the Duration type is encoded as a string rather than an object, where the string ends in the suffix "s" (indicating seconds) and is preceded by the number of seconds, with nanoseconds expressed as fractional seconds. For example, 3 seconds with 0 nanoseconds should be encoded in JSON format as "3s", while 3 seconds and 1 nanosecond should be expressed in JSON format as "3.000000001s", and 3 seconds and 1 microsecond should be expressed in JSON format as "3.000001s". """ # Signed seconds of the span of time. Must be from -315,576,000,000 to # +315,576,000,000 inclusive. Note: these bounds are computed from: 60 # sec/min * 60 min/hr * 24 hr/day * 365.25 days/year * 10000 years seconds: int = betterproto.int64_field(1) # Signed fractions of a second at nanosecond resolution of the span of time. # Durations less than one second are represented with a 0 `seconds` field and # a positive or negative `nanos` field. For durations of one second or more, # a non-zero value for the `nanos` field must be of the same sign as the # `seconds` field. Must be from -999,999,999 to +999,999,999 inclusive. nanos: int = betterproto.int32_field(2) @dataclass class Empty(betterproto.Message): """ A generic empty message that you can re-use to avoid defining duplicated empty messages in your APIs. A typical example is to use it as the request or the response type of an API method. For instance: service Foo { rpc Bar(google.protobuf.Empty) returns (google.protobuf.Empty); } The JSON representation for `Empty` is empty JSON object `{}`. """ pass @dataclass class FieldMask(betterproto.Message): """ `FieldMask` represents a set of symbolic field paths, for example: paths: "f.a" paths: "f.b.d" Here `f` represents a field in some root message, `a` and `b` fields in the message found in `f`, and `d` a field found in the message in `f.b`. Field masks are used to specify a subset of fields that should be returned by a get operation or modified by an update operation. Field masks also have a custom JSON encoding (see below). # Field Masks in Projections When used in the context of a projection, a response message or sub-message is filtered by the API to only contain those fields as specified in the mask. For example, if the mask in the previous example is applied to a response message as follows: f { a : 22 b { d : 1 x : 2 } y : 13 } z: 8 The result will not contain specific values for fields x,y and z (their value will be set to the default, and omitted in proto text output): f { a : 22 b { d : 1 } } A repeated field is not allowed except at the last position of a paths string. If a FieldMask object is not present in a get operation, the operation applies to all fields (as if a FieldMask of all fields had been specified). Note that a field mask does not necessarily apply to the top-level response message. In case of a REST get operation, the field mask applies directly to the response, but in case of a REST list operation, the mask instead applies to each individual message in the returned resource list. In case of a REST custom method, other definitions may be used. Where the mask applies will be clearly documented together with its declaration in the API. In any case, the effect on the returned resource/resources is required behavior for APIs. # Field Masks in Update Operations A field mask in update operations specifies which fields of the targeted resource are going to be updated. The API is required to only change the values of the fields as specified in the mask and leave the others untouched. If a resource is passed in to describe the updated values, the API ignores the values of all fields not covered by the mask. If a repeated field is specified for an update operation, new values will be appended to the existing repeated field in the target resource. Note that a repeated field is only allowed in the last position of a `paths` string. If a sub-message is specified in the last position of the field mask for an update operation, then new value will be merged into the existing sub-message in the target resource. For example, given the target message: f { b { d: 1 x: 2 } c: [1] } And an update message: f { b { d: 10 } c: [2] } then if the field mask is: paths: ["f.b", "f.c"] then the result will be: f { b { d: 10 x: 2 } c: [1, 2] } An implementation may provide options to override this default behavior for repeated and message fields. In order to reset a field's value to the default, the field must be in the mask and set to the default value in the provided resource. Hence, in order to reset all fields of a resource, provide a default instance of the resource and set all fields in the mask, or do not provide a mask as described below. If a field mask is not present on update, the operation applies to all fields (as if a field mask of all fields has been specified). Note that in the presence of schema evolution, this may mean that fields the client does not know and has therefore not filled into the request will be reset to their default. If this is unwanted behavior, a specific service may require a client to always specify a field mask, producing an error if not. As with get operations, the location of the resource which describes the updated values in the request message depends on the operation kind. In any case, the effect of the field mask is required to be honored by the API. ## Considerations for HTTP REST The HTTP kind of an update operation which uses a field mask must be set to PATCH instead of PUT in order to satisfy HTTP semantics (PUT must only be used for full updates). # JSON Encoding of Field Masks In JSON, a field mask is encoded as a single string where paths are separated by a comma. Fields name in each path are converted to/from lower-camel naming conventions. As an example, consider the following message declarations: message Profile { User user = 1; Photo photo = 2; } message User { string display_name = 1; string address = 2; } In proto a field mask for `Profile` may look as such: mask { paths: "user.display_name" paths: "photo" } In JSON, the same mask is represented as below: { mask: "user.displayName,photo" } # Field Masks and Oneof Fields Field masks treat fields in oneofs just as regular fields. Consider the following message: message SampleMessage { oneof test_oneof { string name = 4; SubMessage sub_message = 9; } } The field mask can be: mask { paths: "name" } Or: mask { paths: "sub_message" } Note that oneof type names ("test_oneof" in this case) cannot be used in paths. ## Field Mask Verification The implementation of any API method which has a FieldMask type field in the request should verify the included field paths, and return an `INVALID_ARGUMENT` error if any path is unmappable. """ # The set of field mask paths. paths: List[str] = betterproto.string_field(1) @dataclass class Struct(betterproto.Message): """ `Struct` represents a structured data value, consisting of fields which map to dynamically typed values. In some languages, `Struct` might be supported by a native representation. For example, in scripting languages like JS a struct is represented as an object. The details of that representation are described together with the proto support for the language. The JSON representation for `Struct` is JSON object. """ # Unordered map of dynamically typed values. fields: Dict[str, "Value"] = betterproto.map_field( 1, betterproto.TYPE_STRING, betterproto.TYPE_MESSAGE ) @dataclass class Value(betterproto.Message): """ `Value` represents a dynamically typed value which can be either null, a number, a string, a boolean, a recursive struct value, or a list of values. A producer of value is expected to set one of that variants, absence of any variant indicates an error. The JSON representation for `Value` is JSON value. """ # Represents a null value. null_value: "NullValue" = betterproto.enum_field(1, group="kind") # Represents a double value. number_value: float = betterproto.double_field(2, group="kind") # Represents a string value. string_value: str = betterproto.string_field(3, group="kind") # Represents a boolean value. bool_value: bool = betterproto.bool_field(4, group="kind") # Represents a structured value. struct_value: "Struct" = betterproto.message_field(5, group="kind") # Represents a repeated `Value`. list_value: "ListValue" = betterproto.message_field(6, group="kind") @dataclass class ListValue(betterproto.Message): """ `ListValue` is a wrapper around a repeated field of values. The JSON representation for `ListValue` is JSON array. """ # Repeated field of dynamically typed values. values: List["Value"] = betterproto.message_field(1) @dataclass class Timestamp(betterproto.Message): """ A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the Gregorian calendar backwards to year one. All minutes are 60 seconds long. Leap seconds are "smeared" so that no leap second table is needed for interpretation, using a [24-hour linear smear](https://developers.google.com/time/smear). The range is from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z. By restricting to that range, we ensure that we can convert to and from [RFC 3339](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3339.txt) date strings. # Examples Example 1: Compute Timestamp from POSIX `time()`. Timestamp timestamp; timestamp.set_seconds(time(NULL)); timestamp.set_nanos(0); Example 2: Compute Timestamp from POSIX `gettimeofday()`. struct timeval tv; gettimeofday(&tv, NULL); Timestamp timestamp; timestamp.set_seconds(tv.tv_sec); timestamp.set_nanos(tv.tv_usec * 1000); Example 3: Compute Timestamp from Win32 `GetSystemTimeAsFileTime()`. FILETIME ft; GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft); UINT64 ticks = (((UINT64)ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | ft.dwLowDateTime; // A Windows tick is 100 nanoseconds. Windows epoch 1601-01-01T00:00:00Z // is 11644473600 seconds before Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. Timestamp timestamp; timestamp.set_seconds((INT64) ((ticks / 10000000) - 11644473600LL)); timestamp.set_nanos((INT32) ((ticks % 10000000) * 100)); Example 4: Compute Timestamp from Java `System.currentTimeMillis()`. long millis = System.currentTimeMillis(); Timestamp timestamp = Timestamp.newBuilder().setSeconds(millis / 1000) .setNanos((int) ((millis % 1000) * 1000000)).build(); Example 5: Compute Timestamp from current time in Python. timestamp = Timestamp() timestamp.GetCurrentTime() # JSON Mapping In JSON format, the Timestamp type is encoded as a string in the [RFC 3339](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3339.txt) format. That is, the format is "{year}-{month}-{day}T{hour}:{min}:{sec}[.{frac_sec}]Z" where {year} is always expressed using four digits while {month}, {day}, {hour}, {min}, and {sec} are zero-padded to two digits each. The fractional seconds, which can go up to 9 digits (i.e. up to 1 nanosecond resolution), are optional. The "Z" suffix indicates the timezone ("UTC"); the timezone is required. A proto3 JSON serializer should always use UTC (as indicated by "Z") when printing the Timestamp type and a proto3 JSON parser should be able to accept both UTC and other timezones (as indicated by an offset). For example, "2017-01-15T01:30:15.01Z" encodes 15.01 seconds past 01:30 UTC on January 15, 2017. In JavaScript, one can convert a Date object to this format using the standard [toISOString()](https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/toISOString) method. In Python, a standard `datetime.datetime` object can be converted to this format using [`strftime`](https://docs.python.org/2/library/time.html#time.strftime) with the time format spec '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ'. Likewise, in Java, one can use the Joda Time's [`ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime()`]( http://www.joda.org/joda- time/apidocs/org/joda/time/format/ISODateTimeFormat.html#dateTime%2D%2D ) to obtain a formatter capable of generating timestamps in this format. """ # Represents seconds of UTC time since Unix epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. Must # be from 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59Z inclusive. seconds: int = betterproto.int64_field(1) # Non-negative fractions of a second at nanosecond resolution. Negative # second values with fractions must still have non-negative nanos values that # count forward in time. Must be from 0 to 999,999,999 inclusive. nanos: int = betterproto.int32_field(2) @dataclass class DoubleValue(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `double`. The JSON representation for `DoubleValue` is JSON number. """ # The double value. value: float = betterproto.double_field(1) @dataclass class FloatValue(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `float`. The JSON representation for `FloatValue` is JSON number. """ # The float value. value: float = betterproto.float_field(1) @dataclass class Int64Value(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `int64`. The JSON representation for `Int64Value` is JSON string. """ # The int64 value. value: int = betterproto.int64_field(1) @dataclass class UInt64Value(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `uint64`. The JSON representation for `UInt64Value` is JSON string. """ # The uint64 value. value: int = betterproto.uint64_field(1) @dataclass class Int32Value(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `int32`. The JSON representation for `Int32Value` is JSON number. """ # The int32 value. value: int = betterproto.int32_field(1) @dataclass class UInt32Value(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `uint32`. The JSON representation for `UInt32Value` is JSON number. """ # The uint32 value. value: int = betterproto.uint32_field(1) @dataclass class BoolValue(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `bool`. The JSON representation for `BoolValue` is JSON `true` and `false`. """ # The bool value. value: bool = betterproto.bool_field(1) @dataclass class StringValue(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `string`. The JSON representation for `StringValue` is JSON string. """ # The string value. value: str = betterproto.string_field(1) @dataclass class BytesValue(betterproto.Message): """ Wrapper message for `bytes`. The JSON representation for `BytesValue` is JSON string. """ # The bytes value. value: bytes = betterproto.bytes_field(1)