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build(deps): bump kotlinx-serialization from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3
Bumps kotlinx-serialization from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3.
Updates org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-core from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3
Release notes
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-core's releases.
1.7.3
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster and Christian.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
Serializer for kotlin.uuid.Uuid
Kotlin 2.0.20 added a common class to represent UUIDs in a multiplatform code. kotlinx.serialization 1.7.2 provides a corresponding
Uuid.serializer()for it, making it possible to use it in@Serializableclasses.Note that for now, serializer should be provided manually with
@Contextualannotation. Plugin will be able to automatically insertUuidserializer in Kotlin 2.1.0.See more details in the corresponding PR.
... (truncated)
Changelog
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-core's changelog.
1.7.3 / 2024-09-19
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2 / 2024-08-28
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
... (truncated)
Commits
d4d066dPrepare 1.7.3 release (#2821)21311a6Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)2f1dbdbUse explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)595bcbdDrop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)d9753afCheck against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)0b015e1Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() f...8c84a5bPrepare 1.7.2 release (#2798)b3cfe56Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into dev550e1a8Rework opt-ins in build scripts (#2794)e4fa8a3Update Annotations.kt, fixed typo: RgpPixel -> RgbPixel (#2793)- Additional commits viewable in compare view
Updates org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-json from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3
Release notes
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-json's releases.
1.7.3
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster and Christian.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
Serializer for kotlin.uuid.Uuid
Kotlin 2.0.20 added a common class to represent UUIDs in a multiplatform code. kotlinx.serialization 1.7.2 provides a corresponding
Uuid.serializer()for it, making it possible to use it in@Serializableclasses.Note that for now, serializer should be provided manually with
@Contextualannotation. Plugin will be able to automatically insertUuidserializer in Kotlin 2.1.0.See more details in the corresponding PR.
... (truncated)
Changelog
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-json's changelog.
1.7.3 / 2024-09-19
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2 / 2024-08-28
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
... (truncated)
Commits
d4d066dPrepare 1.7.3 release (#2821)21311a6Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)2f1dbdbUse explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)595bcbdDrop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)d9753afCheck against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)0b015e1Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() f...8c84a5bPrepare 1.7.2 release (#2798)b3cfe56Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into dev550e1a8Rework opt-ins in build scripts (#2794)e4fa8a3Update Annotations.kt, fixed typo: RgpPixel -> RgbPixel (#2793)- Additional commits viewable in compare view
Updates org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-hocon from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3
Release notes
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-hocon's releases.
1.7.3
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster and Christian.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
Serializer for kotlin.uuid.Uuid
Kotlin 2.0.20 added a common class to represent UUIDs in a multiplatform code. kotlinx.serialization 1.7.2 provides a corresponding
Uuid.serializer()for it, making it possible to use it in@Serializableclasses.Note that for now, serializer should be provided manually with
@Contextualannotation. Plugin will be able to automatically insertUuidserializer in Kotlin 2.1.0.See more details in the corresponding PR.
... (truncated)
Changelog
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-hocon's changelog.
1.7.3 / 2024-09-19
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2 / 2024-08-28
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
... (truncated)
Commits
d4d066dPrepare 1.7.3 release (#2821)21311a6Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)2f1dbdbUse explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)595bcbdDrop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)d9753afCheck against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)0b015e1Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() f...8c84a5bPrepare 1.7.2 release (#2798)b3cfe56Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into dev550e1a8Rework opt-ins in build scripts (#2794)e4fa8a3Update Annotations.kt, fixed typo: RgpPixel -> RgbPixel (#2793)- Additional commits viewable in compare view
Updates org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-protobuf from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3
Release notes
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-protobuf's releases.
1.7.3
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster and Christian.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
Serializer for kotlin.uuid.Uuid
Kotlin 2.0.20 added a common class to represent UUIDs in a multiplatform code. kotlinx.serialization 1.7.2 provides a corresponding
Uuid.serializer()for it, making it possible to use it in@Serializableclasses.Note that for now, serializer should be provided manually with
@Contextualannotation. Plugin will be able to automatically insertUuidserializer in Kotlin 2.1.0.See more details in the corresponding PR.
... (truncated)
Changelog
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-protobuf's changelog.
1.7.3 / 2024-09-19
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2 / 2024-08-28
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
... (truncated)
Commits
d4d066dPrepare 1.7.3 release (#2821)21311a6Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)2f1dbdbUse explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)595bcbdDrop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)d9753afCheck against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)0b015e1Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() f...8c84a5bPrepare 1.7.2 release (#2798)b3cfe56Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into dev550e1a8Rework opt-ins in build scripts (#2794)e4fa8a3Update Annotations.kt, fixed typo: RgpPixel -> RgbPixel (#2793)- Additional commits viewable in compare view
Updates org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-cbor from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3
Release notes
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-cbor's releases.
1.7.3
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster and Christian.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
Serializer for kotlin.uuid.Uuid
Kotlin 2.0.20 added a common class to represent UUIDs in a multiplatform code. kotlinx.serialization 1.7.2 provides a corresponding
Uuid.serializer()for it, making it possible to use it in@Serializableclasses.Note that for now, serializer should be provided manually with
@Contextualannotation. Plugin will be able to automatically insertUuidserializer in Kotlin 2.1.0.See more details in the corresponding PR.
... (truncated)
Changelog
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-cbor's changelog.
1.7.3 / 2024-09-19
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2 / 2024-08-28
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
useDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.- Option to globally prefer major type 2 for byte array encoding — see
alwaysUseByteStringflag.Since there are quite a lot of flags now, they were restructured to a separate
CborConfigurationclass, similarly toJsonConfiguration. It is possible to retrieve this configuration fromCborEncoder/CborDecoderinterfaces in your custom serializers (see their documentation for details).All of these features make it possible to serialize and parse COSE-compliant CBOR, for example, ISO/IEC 18013-5:2021-compliant mobile driving license data. In case you want to make use of them, there is a predefined
Cbor.CoseCompliantinstance. However, some canonicalization steps (such as sorting keys) still need to be performed manually.This functionality was contributed to us by Bernd Prünster.
Keeping generated serializers
One of the most requested features for serialization plugin was to continue to generate a serializer even if a custom one is specified for the class. It allows using a plugin-generated serializer in a fallback or delegate strategy, accessing type structure via descriptor, using default serialization behavior in inheritors that do not use custom serializers.
Starting with this release, you can specify the
@KeepGeneratedSerializerannotation on the class declaration to instruct the plugin to continue generating the serializer. In this case, the serializer will be accessible using the.generatedSerializer()function on the class's companion object.This annotation is currently experimental. Kotlin 2.0.20 or higher is required for this feature to work.
You can check out the examples in the documentation and in the PRs: #2758, #2669.
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Commits
d4d066dPrepare 1.7.3 release (#2821)21311a6Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)2f1dbdbUse explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)595bcbdDrop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)d9753afCheck against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)0b015e1Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() f...8c84a5bPrepare 1.7.2 release (#2798)b3cfe56Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into dev550e1a8Rework opt-ins in build scripts (#2794)e4fa8a3Update Annotations.kt, fixed typo: RgpPixel -> RgbPixel (#2793)- Additional commits viewable in compare view
Updates org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-properties from 1.7.1 to 1.7.3
Release notes
Sourced from org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-serialization-properties's releases.
1.7.3
This release aims to fix important issues that were discovered in the 1.7.2 release, including the inability to sync certain projects into Android Studio/IntelliJ IDEA and exceptions from custom Uuid serializers.
It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
- Use explicit kotlin-stdlib and kotlin-test versions from version catalog (#2818)
- Drop usage of deprecated Any?.freeze() in K/N target (#2819)
- Check against serialName instead of simpleClassName (#2802)
- Ignore NoClassDefFoundError when initializing builtins map for serializer() function (#2803)
- Clarify example for SerializationException (#2806)
1.7.2
This release provides several new features, including a major Cbor configuration rework. It uses Kotlin 2.0.20 by default.
Cbor feature set for COSE compliance
This change brings a lot of features to the CBOR format, namely:
- Serial Labels — see
@CborLabelannotation andpreferCborLabelsOverNamesflag.- Tagging of keys and values — see
encode*Tagsandverify*Tagsset of flags- Definite length encoding — see
<...>Description has been truncateduseDefiniteLengthEncoding. This flag affects object encoding, since decoding of arrays with definite lenghts is automatically supported.