protobuf/examples
Jon Skeet 734393d0f9 Make generate_protos.sh Windows-friendly.
To my surprise, executing generate_protos.sh used the version of Bash installed with Git for Windows by default.
After a few modifications to detect the most appropriate protoc to use, this worked pretty simply.
This change also:
- adds generation of the address book tutorial proto,
- fixes the addressbook.proto to specify proto2 explicitly (to avoid a warning from protoc; I don't think we want warnings...)
- fixes the addressbook.proto C# namespace (which I thought I'd done before, but apparently hadn't)
- includes the regenerated UnittestCustomOptions.cs apart from the DescriptorProtoFIle => Descriptor change
2015-05-14 09:11:57 +01:00
..
add_person.cc Down-integrate some code from an internal branch. (More to come.) 2009-07-24 01:00:35 +00:00
add_person.py Don't hard-code the python path 2015-05-06 17:02:57 -04:00
AddPerson.java Close resources properly for java tests and examples. 2011-06-07 03:51:33 +00:00
addressbook.proto Make generate_protos.sh Windows-friendly. 2015-05-14 09:11:57 +01:00
list_people.cc Down-integrate from internal branch. 2014-10-03 11:14:13 -07:00
list_people.py Don't hard-code the python path 2015-05-06 17:02:57 -04:00
ListPeople.java Initial checkin. 2008-07-10 02:12:20 +00:00
Makefile change java compiler to only produce one java file 2014-08-07 19:03:12 +00:00
README.txt Replace links to code.google.com/protobuf with developers.google.com/protocol-buffers 2014-10-01 16:26:23 -07:00

This directory contains example code that uses Protocol Buffers to manage an
address book.  Two programs are provided, each with three different
implementations, one written in each of C++, Java, and Python.  The add_person
example adds a new person to an address book, prompting the user to input
the person's information.  The list_people example lists people already in the
address book.  The examples use the exact same format in all three languages,
so you can, for example, use add_person_java to create an address book and then
use list_people_python to read it.

You must install the protobuf package before you can build these.

To build all the examples (on a unix-like system), simply run "make".  This
creates the following executable files in the current directory:
  add_person_cpp     list_people_cpp
  add_person_java    list_people_java
  add_person_python  list_people_python

If you only want to compile examples in one language, use "make cpp"*,
"make java", or "make python".

All of these programs simply take an address book file as their parameter.
The add_person programs will create the file if it doesn't already exist.

These examples are part of the Protocol Buffers tutorial, located at:
  https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/tutorials

* Note that on some platforms you may have to edit the Makefile and remove
"-lpthread" from the linker commands (perhaps replacing it with something else).
We didn't do this automatically because we wanted to keep the example simple.