This is a code generation tool and serialization library for MessagePack. You can read more about MessagePack in the wiki, or at msgpack.org.
- Use Go as your schema language
- Performance
- JSON interop
- User-defined extensions
- Type safety
- Encoding flexibility
In a source file, include the following directive:
//go:generate msgpThe msgp command will generate serialization methods for all exported type declarations in the file.
You can read more about the code generation options here.
Field names can be set in much the same way as the encoding/json package. For example:
type Person struct {
Name string `msg:"name"`
Address string `msg:"address"`
Age int `msg:"age"`
Hidden string `msg:"-"` // this field is ignored
unexported bool // this field is also ignored
}By default, the code generator will satisfy msgp.Sizer, msgp.Encodable, msgp.Decodable,
msgp.Marshaler, and msgp.Unmarshaler. Carefully-designed applications can use these methods to do
marshalling/unmarshalling with zero heap allocations.
While msgp.Marshaler and msgp.Unmarshaler are quite similar to the standard library's
json.Marshaler and json.Unmarshaler, msgp.Encodable and msgp.Decodable are useful for
stream serialization. (*msgp.Writer and *msgp.Reader are essentially protocol-aware versions
of *bufio.Writer and *bufio.Reader, respectively.)
- Extremely fast generated code
- Test and benchmark generation
- JSON interoperability (see
msgp.CopyToJSON() and msgp.UnmarshalAsJSON()) - Support for complex type declarations
- Native support for Go's
time.Time,complex64, andcomplex128types - Generation of both
[]byte-oriented andio.Reader/io.Writer-oriented methods - Support for arbitrary type system extensions
- Preprocessor directives
- File-based dependency model means fast codegen regardless of source tree size.
Consider the following:
const Eight = 8
type MyInt int
type Data []byte
type Struct struct {
Which map[string]*MyInt `msg:"which"`
Other Data `msg:"other"`
Nums [Eight]float64 `msg:"nums"`
}As long as the declarations of MyInt and Data are in the same file as Struct, the parser will determine that the type information for MyInt and Data can be passed into the definition of Struct before its methods are generated.
MessagePack supports defining your own types through "extensions," which are just a tuple of
the data "type" (int8) and the raw binary. You can see a worked example in the wiki.
Mostly stable, in that no breaking changes have been made to the /msgp library in more than a year. Newer versions
of the code may generate different code than older versions for performance reasons. I (@philhofer) am aware of a
number of stability-critical commercial applications that use this code with good results. But, caveat emptor.
You can read more about how msgp maps MessagePack types onto Go types in the wiki.
Here some of the known limitations/restrictions:
- Identifiers from outside the processed source file are assumed (optimistically) to satisfy the generator's interfaces. If this isn't the case, your code will fail to compile.
- Like most serializers,
chanandfuncfields are ignored, as well as non-exported fields. - Encoding of
interface{}is limited to built-ins or types that have explicit encoding methods. - Maps must have
stringkeys. This is intentional (as it preserves JSON interop.) Although non-string map keys are not forbidden by the MessagePack standard, many serializers impose this restriction. (It also means any well-formedstructcan be de-serialized into amap[string]interface{}.) The only exception to this rule is that the deserializers will allow you to read map keys encoded asbintypes, due to the fact that some legacy encodings permitted this. (However, those values will still be cast to Gostrings, and they will be converted tostrtypes when re-encoded. It is the responsibility of the user to ensure that map keys are UTF-8 safe in this case.) The same rules hold true for JSON translation.
If the output compiles, then there's a pretty good chance things are fine. (Plus, we generate tests for you.) Please, please, please file an issue if you think the generator is writing broken code.
If you like benchmarks, see here and here.
As one might expect, the generated methods that deal with []byte are faster for small objects, but the io.Reader/Writer methods are generally more memory-efficient (and, at some point, faster) for large (> 2KB) objects.