This directory contains the Protobuf library for Python.
For user documentation about how to use Protobuf Python, see https://protobuf.dev/getting-started/pythontutorial/
In most cases you should install the library using pip
or another package manager:
$ pip install protobuf
The packages released on https://pypi.org/project/protobuf/#files include both a source distribution and binary wheels.
If for some reason you wish to build the packages directly from this repo, you can use the following Bazel commands:
$ bazel build //python/dist:source_wheel $ bazel build //python/dist:binary_wheel
The binary wheel will build against whatever version of Python is installed on your system. The source package is always the same and does not depend on a local version of Python.
setup.py
We support building from setup.py
, but only from a Python source package. You cannot build from setup.py
using the GitHub repo or the GitHub source tarball.
To build a source package from this repo, see the instructions in the previous section.
There are three separate implementations of Python Protobuf. All of them offer the same API and are thus functionally the same, though they have very different performance characteristics.
The runtime library contains a switching layer that can choose between these backends at runtime. Normally it will choose between them automatically, using priority-ordered list, and skipping any backends that are not available. However you can request a specific backend by setting the PROTOCOL_BUFFERS_PYTHON_IMPLEMENTATION
environment variable to one of the following values:
The order given above is the general priority order, with upb
being preferred the most and the python
backend preferred the least. However this ordering can be overridden by the presence of a google.protobuf.internal._api_implementation
module. See the logic in api_implementation.py for details.
You can check which backend you are using with the following snippet:
$ python Python 3.10.9 (main, Dec 7 2022, 13:47:07) [GCC 12.2.0] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> from google.protobuf.internal import api_implementation >>> print(api_implementation.Type()) upb
This is not an officially-supported or stable API, but it is useful for ad hoc diagnostics.
More information about sharing messages between Python and C++ is available here: https://protobuf.dev/reference/python/python-generated/#sharing-messages
The code for the Protobuf Python code generator lives in //src/google/protobuf/compiler/python. The code generator can output two different files for each proto foo.proto
:
The foo_pb2.pyi
file is useful for IDEs or for users who want to read the output file. The foo_pb2.py
file is optimized for fast loading and is not readable at all.
Note that the pyi file is only generated if you pass the pyi_out
option to protoc
:
$ protoc --python_out=pyi_out:output_dir