/*
Copyright The Kubernetes Authors.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
*/
// This file was autogenerated by go-to-protobuf. Do not edit it manually!
syntax = "proto2";
package k8s.io.apimachinery.pkg.api.resource;
// Package-wide variables from generator "generated".
option go_package = "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/api/resource";
// Quantity is a fixed-point representation of a number.
// It provides convenient marshaling/unmarshaling in JSON and YAML,
// in addition to String() and AsInt64() accessors.
//
// The serialization format is:
//
// ```
// <quantity> ::= <signedNumber><suffix>
//
// (Note that <suffix> may be empty, from the "" case in <decimalSI>.)
//
// <digit> ::= 0 | 1 | ... | 9
// <digits> ::= <digit> | <digit><digits>
// <number> ::= <digits> | <digits>.<digits> | <digits>. | .<digits>
// <sign> ::= "+" | "-"
// <signedNumber> ::= <number> | <sign><number>
// <suffix> ::= <binarySI> | <decimalExponent> | <decimalSI>
// <binarySI> ::= Ki | Mi | Gi | Ti | Pi | Ei
//
// (International System of units; See: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html)
//
// <decimalSI> ::= m | "" | k | M | G | T | P | E
//
// (Note that 1024 = 1Ki but 1000 = 1k; I didn't choose the capitalization.)
//
// <decimalExponent> ::= "e" <signedNumber> | "E" <signedNumber>
// ```
//
// No matter which of the three exponent forms is used, no quantity may represent
// a number greater than 2^63-1 in magnitude, nor may it have more than 3 decimal
// places. Numbers larger or more precise will be capped or rounded up.
// (E.g.: 0.1m will rounded up to 1m.)
// This may be extended in the future if we require larger or smaller quantities.
//
// When a Quantity is parsed from a string, it will remember the type of suffix
// it had, and will use the same type again when it is serialized.
//
// Before serializing, Quantity will be put in "canonical form".
// This means that Exponent/suffix will be adjusted up or down (with a
// corresponding increase or decrease in Mantissa) such that:
//
// - No precision is lost
// - No fractional digits will be emitted
// - The exponent (or suffix) is as large as possible.
//
// The sign will be omitted unless the number is negative.
//
// Examples:
//
// - 1.5 will be serialized as "1500m"
// - 1.5Gi will be serialized as "1536Mi"
//
// Note that the quantity will NEVER be internally represented by a
// floating point number. That is the whole point of this exercise.
//
// Non-canonical values will still parse as long as they are well formed,
// but will be re-emitted in their canonical form. (So always use canonical
// form, or don't diff.)
//
// This format is intended to make it difficult to use these numbers without
// writing some sort of special handling code in the hopes that that will
// cause implementors to also use a fixed point implementation.
//
// +protobuf=true
// +protobuf.embed=string
// +protobuf.options.marshal=false
// +protobuf.options.(gogoproto.goproto_stringer)=false
// +k8s:deepcopy-gen=true
// +k8s:openapi-gen=true
message Quantity {
optional string string = 1;
}
// QuantityValue makes it possible to use a Quantity as value for a command
// line parameter.
//
// +protobuf=true
// +protobuf.embed=string
// +protobuf.options.marshal=false
// +protobuf.options.(gogoproto.goproto_stringer)=false
// +k8s:deepcopy-gen=true
message QuantityValue {
optional string string = 1;
}