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README

protoc-gen-doc

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This is a documentation generator plugin for the Google Protocol Buffers compiler (protoc). The plugin can generate HTML, JSON, DocBook, and Markdown documentation from comments in your .proto files.

It supports proto2 and proto3, and can handle having both in the same context (see examples for proof).

Installation

There is a Docker image available (docker pull pseudomuto/protoc-gen-doc) that has everything you need to generate documentation from your protos.

If you'd like to install this locally, you can go get it.

go get -u github.com/pseudomuto/protoc-gen-doc/cmd/protoc-gen-doc

Alternatively, you can download a pre-built release for your platform from the releases page.

Invoking the Plugin

The plugin is invoked by passing the --doc_out, and --doc_opt options to the protoc compiler. The option has the following format:

--doc_opt=<FORMAT>|<TEMPLATE_FILENAME>,<OUT_FILENAME>[,default|source_relative]

The format may be one of the built-in ones ( docbook, html, markdown or json) or the name of a file containing a custom Go template.

If the source_relative flag is specified, the output file is written in the same relative directory as the input file.

Using the Docker Image (Recommended)

The docker image has two volumes: /out and /protos which are the directory to write the documentation to and the directory containing your proto files.

You could generate HTML docs for the examples by running the following:

docker run --rm \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/doc:/out \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/proto:/protos \
  pseudomuto/protoc-gen-doc

By default HTML documentation is generated in /out/index.html for all .proto files in the /protos volume. This can be changed by passing the --doc_opt parameter to the container.

For example, to generate Markdown for all the examples:

docker run --rm \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/doc:/out \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/proto:/protos \
  pseudomuto/protoc-gen-doc --doc_opt=markdown,docs.md

You can also generate documentation for a single file. This can be done by passing the file(s) to the command:

docker run --rm \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/doc:/out \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/proto:/protos \
  pseudomuto/protoc-gen-doc --doc_opt=markdown,docs.md /protos/Booking.proto [OPTIONALLY LIST MORE FILES]

You can also exclude proto files that match specific path expressions. This is done by passing a second option delimited by :. For example, you can pass any number of comma separated patterns as the second option:

docker run --rm \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/doc:/out \
  -v $(pwd)/examples/proto:/protos \
  pseudomuto/protoc-gen-doc --doc_opt=:google/*,somepath/*

Remember: Paths should be from within the container, not the host!

NOTE: Due to the way wildcard expansion works with docker you cannot use a wildcard path (e.g. protos/*.proto) in the file list. To get around this, if no files are passed, the container will generate docs for protos/*.proto, which can be changed by mounting different volumes.

Simple Usage

For example, to generate HTML documentation for all .proto files in the proto directory into doc/index.html, type:

protoc --doc_out=./doc --doc_opt=html,index.html proto/*.proto

The plugin executable must be in PATH for this to work.

Using a precompiled binary

Alternatively, you can specify a pre-built/not in PATH binary using the --plugin option.

protoc \
  --plugin=protoc-gen-doc=./protoc-gen-doc \
  --doc_out=./doc \
  --doc_opt=html,index.html \
  proto/*.proto

With a Custom Template

If you'd like to use your own template, simply use the path to the template file rather than the type.

protoc --doc_out=./doc --doc_opt=/path/to/template.tmpl,index.txt proto/*.proto

For information about the available template arguments and functions, see Custom Templates. If you just want to customize the look of the HTML output, put your CSS in stylesheet.css next to the output file and it will be picked up.

Writing Documentation

Messages, Fields, Services (and their methods), Enums (and their values), Extensions, and Files can be documented. Generally speaking, comments come in 2 forms: leading and trailing.

Leading comments

Leading comments can be used everywhere.

/**
 * This is a leading comment for a message
*/
message SomeMessage {
  // this is another leading comment
  string value = 1;
}

NOTE: File level comments should be leading comments on the syntax directive.

Trailing comments

Fields, Service Methods, Enum Values and Extensions support trailing comments.

enum MyEnum {
  DEFAULT = 0; // the default value
  OTHER   = 1; // the other value
}

Excluding comments

If you want to have some comment in your proto files, but don't want them to be part of the docs, you can simply prefix the comment with @exclude.

Example: include only the comment for the id field

/**
 * @exclude
 * This comment won't be rendered
 */
message ExcludedMessage {
  string id   = 1; // the id of this message.
  string name = 2; // @exclude the name of this message

  /* @exclude the value of this message. */
  int32 value = 3;
}

Check out the example protos to see all the options.

Output Example

With the input .proto files

the plugin gives the output

Check out the examples task in the Makefile to see how these were generated.

Extension points exported contracts — how you extend this code

Processor (Interface)
Processor is an interface that is satisfied by all built-in processors (text, html, and json). [3 implementers]
renderer.go
Transformer (FuncType)
Transformer functions for transforming payloads of an extension option into something that can be rendered by a template
extensions/extensions.go

Core symbols most depended-on inside this repo

ParseFlags
called by 15
cmd/protoc-gen-doc/flags.go
SetTransformer
called by 10
extensions/extensions.go
Transform
called by 10
extensions/extensions.go
Len
called by 9
template.go
ParseOptions
called by 8
plugin.go
description
called by 8
template.go
mergeOptions
called by 7
template.go
extractOptions
called by 7
template.go

Shape

Function 86
Method 46
Struct 23
TypeAlias 5
Interface 3
FuncType 1

Languages

Go100%

Modules by API surface

template.go61 symbols
template_test.go23 symbols
renderer.go13 symbols
plugin_test.go9 symbols
cmd/protoc-gen-doc/flags.go9 symbols
cmd/protoc-gen-doc/flags_test.go7 symbols
plugin.go6 symbols
extensions/envoyproxy_validate/envoyproxy_validate.go6 symbols
extensions/validator_field/validator_field.go5 symbols
filters_test.go4 symbols
filters.go4 symbols
extensions/google_api_http/google_api_http.go4 symbols

Used by 1 indexed graphs manifest dependencies, hub-wide

Dependencies from manifests, versioned

cloud.google.com/gov0.94.1 · 1×
github.com/Masterminds/semverv1.4.2 · 1×
github.com/Masterminds/sprigv2.15.0+incompatible · 1×
github.com/aokoli/goutilsv1.0.1 · 1×
github.com/envoyproxy/protoc-gen-validatev0.3.0-java · 1×
github.com/golang/groupcachev0.0.0-2020012104513 · 1×
github.com/googleapis/gax-go/v2v2.1.1 · 1×
github.com/huandu/xstringsv1.0.0 · 1×

For agents

$ claude mcp add protoc-gen-doc \
  -- python -m otcore.mcp_server <graph>

⬇ download graph artifact