Track your .proto files and prevent changes to messages and services which impact API compatibility.
Ever accidentally break your API compatibility while you're busy fixing problems? You may have forgotten to reserve the field number of a message or you re-ordered fields after removing a property. Maybe a new team member was not familiar with the backward-compatibility of Protocol Buffers and made an easy mistake.
protolock
attempts to help prevent this from happening.
-
Initialize your repository:
$ protolock init # creates a `proto.lock` file
-
Add changes to .proto messages or services, verify no breaking changes made:
$ protolock status CONFLICT: "Channel" is missing ID: 108, which had been reserved [path/to/file.proto] CONFLICT: "Channel" is missing ID: 109, which had been reserved [path/to/file.proto]
-
Commit a new state of your .protos (rewrites
proto.lock
if no warnings):$ protolock commit # optionally provide --force flag to disregard warnings
-
Integrate into your protobuf compilation step:
$ protolock status && protoc -I ...
In all, prevent yourself from compiling your protobufs and generating code if breaking changes have been made.
Recommended: commit the output proto.lock
file into your version control system
If you have Go installed, you can install protolock
by
running:
go get -u github.com/nilslice/protolock/...
Otherwise, download a pre-built binary for Windows, macOS, or Linux from the latest release page.
protolock <command> [options]
Commands:
-h, --help, help display the usage information for protolock
init initialize a proto.lock file from current tree
status check for breaking changes and report conflicts
commit rewrite proto.lock file with current tree if no conflicts (--force to override)
Options:
--strict [true] enable strict mode and enforce all built-in rules
--debug [false] enable debug mode and output debug messages
--ignore comma-separated list of filepaths to ignore
--force [false] forces commit to rewrite proto.lock file and disregards warnings
--plugins comma-separated list of executable protolock plugin names
--lockdir [.] directory of proto.lock file
--protoroot [.] root of directory tree containing proto files
--uptodate [false] enforce that proto.lock file is up-to-date with proto files
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any message's previously reserved fields or IDs are now being used as part of the same message.
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any reserved field has been removed.
Note: This rule is not enforced when strict mode is disabled.
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any field ID number has been changed.
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any field type has been changed.
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any message's previous fields have been renamed.
Note: This rule is not enforced when strict mode is disabled.
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any field has been removed without a corresponding reservation of that field name or ID.
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any RPCs provided by a Service have been removed.
Note: This rule is not enforced when strict mode is disabled.
Compares the current vs. updated Protolock definitions and will return a list of warnings if any RPC signature has been changed while using the same name.
docker pull nilslice/protolock:latest
docker run -v $(pwd):/protolock -w /protolock nilslice/protolock init
The default rules enforced by protolock
may not cover everything you want to
do. If you have custom checks you'd like run on your .proto files, create a
plugin, and have protolock
run it and report your warnings. Read the wiki to
learn more about creating and using plugins.
Please feel free to make pull requests with better support for various rules, optimized code and overall tests. Filing an issue when you encounter a bug or any unexpected behavior is very much appreciated.
For current issues, see: open issues
Thank you to Ernest Micklei for his work on the excellent parser heavily relied upon by this tool and many more: https://github.com/emicklei/proto