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  2. Protocol Buffers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protocol_Buffers

    Protocol Buffers is widely used at Google for storing and interchanging all kinds of structured information. ... For example, after a C++ version of the protocol ...

  3. Comparison of data-serialization formats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_data...

    Not in protocol. Not in protocol. Not in protocol. Not in protocol. Length-encoded as an ASCII string + ':' + data + ',' Length counts only octets between ':' and ',' Not in protocol. Not in protocol. OGDL Binary Property list (binary format) Protocol Buffers

  4. FlatBuffers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FlatBuffers

    FlatBuffers is a free software library implementing a serialization format similar to Protocol Buffers, Thrift, Apache Avro, SBE, and Cap'n Proto, primarily written by Wouter van Oortmerssen and open-sourced by Google. It supports “zero-copy” deserialization, so that accessing the serialized data does not require first copying it into a ...

  5. gRPC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GRPC

    Use cases range from microservices to the "last mile" of computing (mobile, web, and Internet of Things). gRPC uses HTTP/2 for transport, Protocol Buffers as the interface description language, and provides features such as authentication, bidirectional streaming and flow control, blocking or nonblocking bindings, and cancellation and timeouts ...

  6. Cap'n Proto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cap'n_Proto

    [note 1] For example, the representation of numbers was chosen to match the representation the most popular CPU architectures. [4] When the in-memory and wire-protocol representations match, Cap'n Proto can avoid copying and encoding data when creating or reading a message and instead point to the location of the value in memory. Cap'n Proto ...

  7. ASN.1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASN.1

    ASN.1 is similar in purpose and use to Google Protocol Buffers and Apache Thrift, which are also interface description languages for cross-platform data serialization. Like those languages, it has a schema (in ASN.1, called a "module"), and a set of encodings, typically type–length–value encodings.

  8. QUIC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QUIC

    C++ This is the source code of the Chrome web browser and the reference gQUIC implementation. It contains a standalone gQUIC and QUIC client and server programs that can be used for testing. Browsable source code. This version is also the basis of LINE's stellite and Google's cronet. MsQuic: MIT License: C

  9. CBOR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CBOR

    CBOR encoded data is seen as a stream of data items. Each data item consists of a header byte containing a 3-bit type and 5-bit short count. This is followed by an optional extended count (if the short count is in the range 24–27), and an optional payload.