• Kenton Varda's avatar
    Change license to MIT. · 889204fe
    Kenton Varda authored
    For portions currently copyright by Kenton (most of it), transfer copyright to Sandstorm Development Group, Inc. (Kenton's company).
    
    The license change is practically meaningless, as MIT and BSD 2-clause are legally equivalent. However, the BSD 2-clause license is sometimes confused for its ugly siblings, BSD 3-clause and BSD 4-clause. The MIT license is more immediately recognizeable for what it is.
    
    Rémy Blank and Jason Choy (the two non-trivial contributors) are on record as approving this change:
    
    https://groups.google.com/d/msg/capnproto/xXDd2HUOCcc/gbe_COIuXKYJ
    889204fe
addressbook.c++ 8.91 KB
// Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Sandstorm Development Group, Inc. and contributors
// Licensed under the MIT License:
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.

// This sample code appears in the documentation for the C++ implementation.
//
// Compile with:
//   capnpc -oc++ addressbook.capnp
//   c++ -std=c++11 -Wall addressbook.c++ addressbook.capnp.c++ -lcapnp -o addressbook
//
// Run like:
//   ./addressbook write | ./addressbook read
// Use "dwrite" and "dread" to use dynamic code instead.

// TODO(test):  Needs cleanup.

#include "addressbook.capnp.h"
#include <capnp/message.h>
#include <capnp/serialize-packed.h>
#include <iostream>

using addressbook::Person;
using addressbook::AddressBook;

void writeAddressBook(int fd) {
  ::capnp::MallocMessageBuilder message;

  AddressBook::Builder addressBook = message.initRoot<AddressBook>();
  ::capnp::List<Person>::Builder people = addressBook.initPeople(2);

  Person::Builder alice = people[0];
  alice.setId(123);
  alice.setName("Alice");
  alice.setEmail("alice@example.com");
  // Type shown for explanation purposes; normally you'd use auto.
  ::capnp::List<Person::PhoneNumber>::Builder alicePhones =
      alice.initPhones(1);
  alicePhones[0].setNumber("555-1212");
  alicePhones[0].setType(Person::PhoneNumber::Type::MOBILE);
  alice.getEmployment().setSchool("MIT");

  Person::Builder bob = people[1];
  bob.setId(456);
  bob.setName("Bob");
  bob.setEmail("bob@example.com");
  auto bobPhones = bob.initPhones(2);
  bobPhones[0].setNumber("555-4567");
  bobPhones[0].setType(Person::PhoneNumber::Type::HOME);
  bobPhones[1].setNumber("555-7654");
  bobPhones[1].setType(Person::PhoneNumber::Type::WORK);
  bob.getEmployment().setUnemployed();

  writePackedMessageToFd(fd, message);
}

void printAddressBook(int fd) {
  ::capnp::PackedFdMessageReader message(fd);

  AddressBook::Reader addressBook = message.getRoot<AddressBook>();

  for (Person::Reader person : addressBook.getPeople()) {
    std::cout << person.getName().cStr() << ": "
              << person.getEmail().cStr() << std::endl;
    for (Person::PhoneNumber::Reader phone: person.getPhones()) {
      const char* typeName = "UNKNOWN";
      switch (phone.getType()) {
        case Person::PhoneNumber::Type::MOBILE: typeName = "mobile"; break;
        case Person::PhoneNumber::Type::HOME: typeName = "home"; break;
        case Person::PhoneNumber::Type::WORK: typeName = "work"; break;
      }
      std::cout << "  " << typeName << " phone: "
                << phone.getNumber().cStr() << std::endl;
    }
    Person::Employment::Reader employment = person.getEmployment();
    switch (employment.which()) {
      case Person::Employment::UNEMPLOYED:
        std::cout << "  unemployed" << std::endl;
        break;
      case Person::Employment::EMPLOYER:
        std::cout << "  employer: "
                  << employment.getEmployer().cStr() << std::endl;
        break;
      case Person::Employment::SCHOOL:
        std::cout << "  student at: "
                  << employment.getSchool().cStr() << std::endl;
        break;
      case Person::Employment::SELF_EMPLOYED:
        std::cout << "  self-employed" << std::endl;
        break;
    }
  }
}

#include "addressbook.capnp.h"
#include <capnp/message.h>
#include <capnp/serialize-packed.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <capnp/schema.h>
#include <capnp/dynamic.h>

using ::capnp::DynamicValue;
using ::capnp::DynamicStruct;
using ::capnp::DynamicEnum;
using ::capnp::DynamicList;
using ::capnp::List;
using ::capnp::Schema;
using ::capnp::StructSchema;
using ::capnp::EnumSchema;

using ::capnp::Void;
using ::capnp::Text;
using ::capnp::MallocMessageBuilder;
using ::capnp::PackedFdMessageReader;

void dynamicWriteAddressBook(int fd, StructSchema schema) {
  // Write a message using the dynamic API to set each
  // field by text name.  This isn't something you'd
  // normally want to do; it's just for illustration.

  MallocMessageBuilder message;

  // Types shown for explanation purposes; normally you'd
  // use auto.
  DynamicStruct::Builder addressBook =
      message.initRoot<DynamicStruct>(schema);

  DynamicList::Builder people =
      addressBook.init("people", 2).as<DynamicList>();

  DynamicStruct::Builder alice =
      people[0].as<DynamicStruct>();
  alice.set("id", 123);
  alice.set("name", "Alice");
  alice.set("email", "alice@example.com");
  auto alicePhones = alice.init("phones", 1).as<DynamicList>();
  auto phone0 = alicePhones[0].as<DynamicStruct>();
  phone0.set("number", "555-1212");
  phone0.set("type", "mobile");
  alice.get("employment").as<DynamicStruct>()
       .set("school", "MIT");

  auto bob = people[1].as<DynamicStruct>();
  bob.set("id", 456);
  bob.set("name", "Bob");
  bob.set("email", "bob@example.com");

  // Some magic:  We can convert a dynamic sub-value back to
  // the native type with as<T>()!
  List<Person::PhoneNumber>::Builder bobPhones =
      bob.init("phones", 2).as<List<Person::PhoneNumber>>();
  bobPhones[0].setNumber("555-4567");
  bobPhones[0].setType(Person::PhoneNumber::Type::HOME);
  bobPhones[1].setNumber("555-7654");
  bobPhones[1].setType(Person::PhoneNumber::Type::WORK);
  bob.get("employment").as<DynamicStruct>()
     .set("unemployed", ::capnp::VOID);

  writePackedMessageToFd(fd, message);
}

void dynamicPrintValue(DynamicValue::Reader value) {
  // Print an arbitrary message via the dynamic API by
  // iterating over the schema.  Look at the handling
  // of STRUCT in particular.

  switch (value.getType()) {
    case DynamicValue::VOID:
      std::cout << "";
      break;
    case DynamicValue::BOOL:
      std::cout << (value.as<bool>() ? "true" : "false");
      break;
    case DynamicValue::INT:
      std::cout << value.as<int64_t>();
      break;
    case DynamicValue::UINT:
      std::cout << value.as<uint64_t>();
      break;
    case DynamicValue::FLOAT:
      std::cout << value.as<double>();
      break;
    case DynamicValue::TEXT:
      std::cout << '\"' << value.as<Text>().cStr() << '\"';
      break;
    case DynamicValue::LIST: {
      std::cout << "[";
      bool first = true;
      for (auto element: value.as<DynamicList>()) {
        if (first) {
          first = false;
        } else {
          std::cout << ", ";
        }
        dynamicPrintValue(element);
      }
      std::cout << "]";
      break;
    }
    case DynamicValue::ENUM: {
      auto enumValue = value.as<DynamicEnum>();
      KJ_IF_MAYBE(enumerant, enumValue.getEnumerant()) {
        std::cout <<
            enumerant->getProto().getName().cStr();
      } else {
        // Unknown enum value; output raw number.
        std::cout << enumValue.getRaw();
      }
      break;
    }
    case DynamicValue::STRUCT: {
      std::cout << "(";
      auto structValue = value.as<DynamicStruct>();
      bool first = true;
      for (auto field: structValue.getSchema().getFields()) {
        if (!structValue.has(field)) continue;
        if (first) {
          first = false;
        } else {
          std::cout << ", ";
        }
        std::cout << field.getProto().getName().cStr()
                  << " = ";
        dynamicPrintValue(structValue.get(field));
      }
      std::cout << ")";
      break;
    }
    default:
      // There are other types, we aren't handling them.
      std::cout << "?";
      break;
  }
}

void dynamicPrintMessage(int fd, StructSchema schema) {
  PackedFdMessageReader message(fd);
  dynamicPrintValue(message.getRoot<DynamicStruct>(schema));
  std::cout << std::endl;
}

int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
  StructSchema schema = Schema::from<AddressBook>();
  if (argc != 2) {
    std::cerr << "Missing arg." << std::endl;
    return 1;
  } else if (strcmp(argv[1], "write") == 0) {
    writeAddressBook(1);
  } else if (strcmp(argv[1], "read") == 0) {
    printAddressBook(0);
  } else if (strcmp(argv[1], "dwrite") == 0) {
    dynamicWriteAddressBook(1, schema);
  } else if (strcmp(argv[1], "dread") == 0) {
    dynamicPrintMessage(0, schema);
  } else {
    std::cerr << "Invalid arg: " << argv[1] << std::endl;
    return 1;
  }
  return 0;
}