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by cherrycherry98
287 days ago
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Proto2 let you do this and the "required" keyword was removed because of the problems it introduces when evolving the schema in a system with many users that you don't necessarily control. Let's say you want to add a new required field, if your system receives messages from clients some clients may be sending you old data without the field and now the parse step fails because it detects a missing field. If you ever want to remove a required field you have the opposite problem, there will components that have to have those fields present just to satisfy the parser even if they're only interested in some other fields. Philosophically, checking that a field is required or not is data validation and doesn't have anything to do with serialization. You can't specify that an integer falls into a certain valid range or that a string has a valid number of characters or is the correct format (e.g. if it's supposed to be an email or a phone number). The application code needs to do that kind of validation anyway. If something really is required then that should be the application's responsibility to deal with it appropriately if it's missing. The Captn Proto docs also describe why being able to declare required fields is a bad idea: https://capnproto.org/faq.html#how-do-i-make-a-field-require... |
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But protocol buffers is not just a serialization format it is an interface definition language. And not being able to communicate that a field is required or not is very limiting. Sometimes things are required to process a message. If you need to add a new field but be able to process older versions of the message where the field wasn't required (or didn't exist) then you can just add it as optional.
I understand that in some situations you have very hard compatibility requirements and it makes sense to make everything optional and deal with it in application code, but adding a required attribute to fields doesn't stop you from doing that. You can still just make everything optional. You can even add a CI lint that prevents people from merging code with required fields. But making required fields illegal at the interface definition level just strikes me as killing a fly with a bazooka.