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The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#)
https://grpc.io/
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86 lines
2.5 KiB
86 lines
2.5 KiB
10 years ago
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# Step-2: Write a service client.
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This step uses the generated code to write a simple client to access the hello
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service. The full client is in [GreetingsClient.java](src/main/java/ex/grpc/GreetingsClient.java).
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## Configuring the service to connect to.
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The client contains uses a Stub to contact the service. The internet address
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is configured in the client constructor. gRPC Channel is the abstraction over
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transport handling; its constructor accepts the host name and port of the
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service. The channel in turn is used to construct the Stub.
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```
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private final ChannelImpl channel;
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private final GreetingGrpc.GreetingBlockingStub blockingStub;
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public HelloClient(String host, int port) {
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channel = NettyChannelBuilder.forAddress(host, port)
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.negotiationType(NegotiationType.PLAINTEXT)
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.build();
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blockingStub = GreetingGrpc.newBlockingStub(channel);
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}
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```
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## Obtaining a greeting
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The greet method uses the stub to contact the service and obtain a greeting.
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It:
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- constructs a request
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- obtains a reply from the stub
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- prints out the greeting
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```
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public void greet(String name) {
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logger.debug("Will try to greet " + name + " ...");
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try {
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Helloworld.HelloRequest request = Helloworld.HelloRequest.newBuilder().setName(name).build();
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Helloworld.HelloReply reply = blockingStub.hello(request);
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logger.info("Greeting: " + reply.getMessage());
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} catch (RuntimeException e) {
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logger.log(Level.WARNING, "RPC failed", e);
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return;
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}
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}
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```
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## Running from the command line
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The main method puts together the example so that it can be run from a command
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line.
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```
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/* Access a service running on the local machine on port 50051 */
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HelloClient client = new HelloClient("localhost", 50051);
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String user = "world";
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if (args.length > 1) {
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user = args[1];
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}
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client.greet(user);
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```
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It can be built as follows.
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```
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$ mvn package
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```
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It can also be run, but doing so now would end up a with a failure as there is
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no server available yet. The [next step](Step-3.md), describes how to
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implement, build and run a server that supports the service description.
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## Notes
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- the client uses a blocking stub. This means that the RPC call waits for the
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server to respond, and will either return a response or raise an exception.
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- gRPC Java has other kinds of stubs that make non-blocking calls to the
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server, where the response is returned asynchronously. Usage of these stubs
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is a more advanced topic and will be described in later steps.
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