A Duration represents a signed, fixed-length span of time represented
as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at nanosecond
resolution. It is independent of any calendar and concepts like “day”
or “month”. It is related to Timestamp in that the difference between
two Timestamp values is a Duration and it can be added or subtracted
from a Timestamp. Range is approximately +-10,000 years.
A generic empty message that you can re-use to avoid defining duplicated
empty messages in your APIs. A typical example is to use it as the request
or the response type of an API method. For instance:
Describes the relationship between generated code and its original source
file. A GeneratedCodeInfo message is associated with only one generated
source file, but may contain references to different source .proto files.
Struct represents a structured data value, consisting of fields
which map to dynamically typed values. In some languages, Struct
might be supported by a native representation. For example, in
scripting languages like JS a struct is represented as an
object. The details of that representation are described together
with the proto support for the language.
A Timestamp represents a point in time independent of any time zone or local
calendar, encoded as a count of seconds and fractions of seconds at
nanosecond resolution. The count is relative to an epoch at UTC midnight on
January 1, 1970, in the proleptic Gregorian calendar which extends the
Gregorian calendar backwards to year one.
A message representing a option the parser does not recognize. This only
appears in options protos created by the compiler::Parser class.
DescriptorPool resolves these when building Descriptor objects. Therefore,
options protos in descriptor objects (e.g. returned by Descriptor::options(),
or produced by Descriptor::CopyTo()) will never have UninterpretedOptions
in them.
Value represents a dynamically typed value which can be either
null, a number, a string, a boolean, a recursive struct value, or a
list of values. A producer of value is expected to set one of these
variants. Absence of any variant indicates an error.