@connectrpc/protoc-gen-connect-query
The code generator for Connect-Query, a expansion pack for TanStack Query (react-query), that enables effortless communication with servers that speak the Connect Protocol.
Learn more about Connect-Query at github.com/connectrpc/connect-query-es.
Installation
protoc-gen-connect-query
is a code generator plugin for Protocol Buffer compilers like buf and protoc. It generates clients from your Protocol Buffer schema, and works in tandem with
@bufbuild/protoc-gen-es, the code generator plugin for all Protocol Buffer base types. The code those two plugins generate requires the runtime libraries @connectrpc/connect-query, and @bufbuild/protobuf.
To install the plugins and their runtime libraries, run:
npm install --save-dev @connectrpc/protoc-gen-connect-query @bufbuild/protoc-gen-es
npm install @connectrpc/connect-query @bufbuild/protobuf
We use peer dependencies to ensure that code generator and runtime library are compatible with each other. Note that yarn and pnpm only emit a warning in this case.
Generating Code
example.proto
For these examples, consider the following example proto file example.proto
:
syntax = "proto3";
package example.v1;
message Nothing {}
message Todo {
string id = 1;
string name = 2;
bool completed = 3;
}
message Todos {
repeated Todo todos = 1;
}
service TodoService {
rpc GetTodos(Nothing) returns (Todos);
rpc AddTodo(Todo) returns (Nothing);
}
This file creates an RPC service with the following:
GetTodos
takes no inputs and returns an array of Todo
s.AddTodo
adds a new Todo
and returns nothing.
buf.gen.yaml
Add a new configuration file buf.gen.yaml
version: v1
plugins:
- name: es
out: src/gen
opt: target=ts
- name: connect-query
out: src/gen
opt: target=ts
With the buf
CLI
To use the buf CLI to generate code for all protobuf files within your project, simply run:
npx @bufbuild/buf generate
Note that buf
can generate from various inputs, not just local protobuf files. For example, npm run generate buf.build/connectrpc/eliza
generates code for the module connectrpc/eliza on the Buf Schema Registry.
With protoc
PATH=$PATH:$(pwd)/node_modules/.bin \
protoc -I . \
--es_out src/gen \
--es_opt target=ts \
--connect-query_out src/gen \
--connect-query_opt target=ts \
example.proto
Note that we are adding node_modules/.bin
to the $PATH
, so that the protocol buffer compiler can find them. This happens automatically with npm scripts.
Note: Since yarn v2 and above does not use a node_modules
directory, you need to change the variable a bit:
PATH=$(dirname $(yarn bin protoc-gen-es)):$(dirname $(yarn bin protoc-gen-connect-es)):$PATH
With Node
Add a line to the scripts
section of your package.json
to run buf generate
.
"scripts": {
...
"buf:generate": "npx @bufbuild/buf generate example.proto"
},
Finally, tell Buf to generate code by running your command:
npm run buf:generate
Now you should see your generated code:
.
└── gen/
├── example_pb.ts
└── example-TodoService_connectquery.ts
Generated Output
Connect-Query will create one output file for every service in every protofile. Say you have the following file structure:
.
└── proto/
├── pizza.proto
└── curry.proto
Where pizza.proto
contains DetroitStyleService
and ChicagoStyleService
, and where curry.proto
contains VindalooService
. Your generated output will look like this:
.
└── gen/
├── pizza_pb.ts
├── pizza-DetroitStyleService_connectquery.ts
├── pizza-ChicagoStyleService_connectquery.ts
├── curry_pb.ts
└── curry-VindalooService_connectquery.ts
The reason each service gets a separate file is to facilitate intellisense and language server protocol imports. Notice that one file per input proto is generated by protoc-gen-es
(pizza_pb.ts
and curry_pb.ts
), and that one file per service is created by protoc-gen-connect-query
(making up the remainder). The Protobuf-ES generated files (*_pb.ts
) are important because those files are referenced from the *_connectquery.ts
files.
Plugin options
target
This option controls whether the plugin generates JavaScript, TypeScript, or TypeScript declaration files.
Say, for example, you used example.proto
:
Target | Generated output |
---|
target=js | example-TodoService_connectquery.js |
target=ts | example-TodoService_connectquery.ts |
target=dts | example-TodoService_connectquery.d.ts |
Multiple values can be given by separating them with +
, for example target=js+dts
.
By default, we generate JavaScript and TypeScript declaration files, which produces the smallest code size and is the most compatible with various bundler configurations. If you prefer to generate TypeScript, use target=ts
.
import_extension=.js
By default, protoc-gen-connect-query (and all other plugins based on @bufbuild/protoplugin) uses a .js
file extensions in import paths, even in TypeScript files.
This is unintuitive, but necessary for ECMAScript modules in Node.js.
Unfortunately, not all bundlers and tools have caught up yet, and Deno requires .ts
. With this plugin option, you can replace .js
extensions in import paths with the given value. For example, set
import_extension=none
to remove the .js
extensionimport_extension=.ts
to replace the .js
extension with .ts
keep_empty_files=true
This option exists for other plugins but is not applicable to protoc-gen-connect-query
because, unlike most other plugins, it does not generate a maximum of one output file for every input proto file. Instead, it generates one output file per service. If you provide a valid proto file that contains no services, protoc-gen-connect-query
will have no output.
js_import_style
By default, protoc-gen-connect-query
(and all other plugins based on @bufbuild/protoplugin)
generate ECMAScript import
and export
statements. For use cases where
CommonJS is difficult to avoid, this option can be used to generate CommonJS
require()
calls.
Possible values:
js_import_style=module
generate ECMAScript import
/ export
statements -
the default behavior.js_import_style=legacy_commonjs
generate CommonJS require()
calls.
Example Generated Code
See eliza.proto
for example inputs, and look here to see the outputs those files generate.