From 8cf002a989225cefe5c914d12e6d81761cc40c21 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Mark D. Roth" Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2017 07:30:43 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] Use '//' for JSON comments. --- doc/service_config.md | 162 +++++++++++++++++++++--------------------- 1 file changed, 81 insertions(+), 81 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/service_config.md b/doc/service_config.md index 2dabb83a37f..ecc23817d12 100644 --- a/doc/service_config.md +++ b/doc/service_config.md @@ -12,105 +12,105 @@ The service config is a JSON string of the following form: ``` { - # Load balancing policy name. - # Supported values are 'round_robin' and 'grpclb'. - # Optional; if unset, the default behavior is pick the first available - # backend. - # Note that if the resolver returns only balancer addresses and no - # backend addresses, gRPC will always use the 'grpclb' policy, - # regardless of what this field is set to. + // Load balancing policy name. + // Supported values are 'round_robin' and 'grpclb'. + // Optional; if unset, the default behavior is pick the first available + // backend. + // Note that if the resolver returns only balancer addresses and no + // backend addresses, gRPC will always use the 'grpclb' policy, + // regardless of what this field is set to. 'loadBalancingPolicy': string, - # Per-method configuration. Optional. + // Per-method configuration. Optional. 'methodConfig': [ { - # The names of the methods to which this method config applies. There - # must be at least one name. Each name entry must be unique across the - # entire service config. If the 'method' field is empty, then this - # method config specifies the defaults for all methods for the specified - # service. - # - # For example, let's say that the service config contains the following - # method config entries: - # - # 'methodConfig': [ - # { 'name': [ { 'service': 'MyService' } ] ... }, - # { 'name': [ { 'service': 'MyService', 'method': 'Foo' } ] ... } - # ] - # - # For a request for MyService/Foo, we will use the second entry, because - # it exactly matches the service and method name. - # For a request for MyService/Bar, we will use the first entry, because - # it provides the default for all methods of MyService. + // The names of the methods to which this method config applies. There + // must be at least one name. Each name entry must be unique across the + // entire service config. If the 'method' field is empty, then this + // method config specifies the defaults for all methods for the specified + // service. + // + // For example, let's say that the service config contains the following + // method config entries: + // + // 'methodConfig': [ + // { 'name': [ { 'service': 'MyService' } ] ... }, + // { 'name': [ { 'service': 'MyService', 'method': 'Foo' } ] ... } + // ] + // + // For a request for MyService/Foo, we will use the second entry, because + // it exactly matches the service and method name. + // For a request for MyService/Bar, we will use the first entry, because + // it provides the default for all methods of MyService. 'name': [ { - # RPC service name. Required. - # If using gRPC with protobuf as the IDL, then this will be of - # the form "pkg.service_name", where "pkg" is the package name - # defined in the proto file. + // RPC service name. Required. + // If using gRPC with protobuf as the IDL, then this will be of + // the form "pkg.service_name", where "pkg" is the package name + // defined in the proto file. 'service': string, - # RPC method name. Optional (see above). + // RPC method name. Optional (see above). 'method': string, } ], - # Whether RPCs sent to this method should wait until the connection is - # ready by default. If false, the RPC will abort immediately if there - # is a transient failure connecting to the server. Otherwise, gRPC will - # attempt to connect until the deadline is exceeded. - # - # The value specified via the gRPC client API will override the value - # set here. However, note that setting the value in the client API will - # also affect transient errors encountered during name resolution, - # which cannot be caught by the value here, since the service config - # is obtained by the gRPC client via name resolution. + // Whether RPCs sent to this method should wait until the connection is + // ready by default. If false, the RPC will abort immediately if there + // is a transient failure connecting to the server. Otherwise, gRPC will + // attempt to connect until the deadline is exceeded. + // + // The value specified via the gRPC client API will override the value + // set here. However, note that setting the value in the client API will + // also affect transient errors encountered during name resolution, + // which cannot be caught by the value here, since the service config + // is obtained by the gRPC client via name resolution. 'waitForReady': bool, - # The default timeout in seconds for RPCs sent to this method. This can - # be overridden in code. If no reply is received in the specified amount - # of time, the request is aborted and a deadline-exceeded error status - # is returned to the caller. - # - # The actual deadline used will be the minimum of the value specified - # here and the value set by the application via the gRPC client API. - # If either one is not set, then the other will be used. - # If neither is set, then the request has no deadline. - # - # The format of the value is that of the 'Duration' type defined here: - # https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/proto3#json + // The default timeout in seconds for RPCs sent to this method. This can + // be overridden in code. If no reply is received in the specified amount + // of time, the request is aborted and a deadline-exceeded error status + // is returned to the caller. + // + // The actual deadline used will be the minimum of the value specified + // here and the value set by the application via the gRPC client API. + // If either one is not set, then the other will be used. + // If neither is set, then the request has no deadline. + // + // The format of the value is that of the 'Duration' type defined here: + // https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/proto3#json 'timeout': string, - # The maximum allowed payload size for an individual request or object - # in a stream (client->server) in bytes. The size which is measured is - # the serialized, uncompressed payload in bytes. This applies both - # to streaming and non-streaming requests. - # - # The actual value used is the minimum of the value specified here and - # the value set by the application via the gRPC client API. - # If either one is not set, then the other will be used. - # If neither is set, then the built-in default is used. - # - # If a client attempts to send an object larger than this value, it - # will not be sent and the client will see an error. - # Note that 0 is a valid value, meaning that the request message must - # be empty. + // The maximum allowed payload size for an individual request or object + // in a stream (client->server) in bytes. The size which is measured is + // the serialized, uncompressed payload in bytes. This applies both + // to streaming and non-streaming requests. + // + // The actual value used is the minimum of the value specified here and + // the value set by the application via the gRPC client API. + // If either one is not set, then the other will be used. + // If neither is set, then the built-in default is used. + // + // If a client attempts to send an object larger than this value, it + // will not be sent and the client will see an error. + // Note that 0 is a valid value, meaning that the request message must + // be empty. 'maxRequestMessageBytes': number, - # The maximum allowed payload size for an individual response or object - # in a stream (server->client) in bytes. The size which is measured is - # the serialized, uncompressed payload in bytes. This applies both - # to streaming and non-streaming requests. - # - # The actual value used is the minimum of the value specified here and - # the value set by the application via the gRPC client API. - # If either one is not set, then the other will be used. - # If neither is set, then the built-in default is used. - # - # If a server attempts to send an object larger than this value, it - # will not be sent, and the client will see an error. - # Note that 0 is a valid value, meaning that the response message must - # be empty. + // The maximum allowed payload size for an individual response or object + // in a stream (server->client) in bytes. The size which is measured is + // the serialized, uncompressed payload in bytes. This applies both + // to streaming and non-streaming requests. + // + // The actual value used is the minimum of the value specified here and + // the value set by the application via the gRPC client API. + // If either one is not set, then the other will be used. + // If neither is set, then the built-in default is used. + // + // If a server attempts to send an object larger than this value, it + // will not be sent, and the client will see an error. + // Note that 0 is a valid value, meaning that the response message must + // be empty. 'maxResponseMessageBytes': number } ]