# gRPC C++ Hello World Tutorial ### Install gRPC Make sure you have installed gRPC on your system. Follow the instructions here: [https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/INSTALL](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/INSTALL). ### Get the tutorial source code The example code for this and our other examples lives in the `grpc-common` GitHub repository. Clone this repository to your local machine by running the following command: ```sh $ git clone https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common.git ``` Change your current directory to grpc-common/cpp/helloworld ```sh $ cd grpc-common/cpp/helloworld/ ``` ### Defining a service The first step in creating our example is to define a *service*: an RPC service specifies the methods that can be called remotely with their parameters and return types. As you saw in the [overview](#protocolbuffers) above, gRPC does this using [protocol buffers](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/overview). We use the protocol buffers interface definition language (IDL) to define our service methods, and define the parameters and return types as protocol buffer message types. Both the client and the server use interface code generated from the service definition. Here's our example service definition, defined using protocol buffers IDL in [helloworld.proto](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common/blob/master/protos/helloworld.proto). The `Greeting` service has one method, `hello`, that lets the server receive a single `HelloRequest` message from the remote client containing the user's name, then send back a greeting in a single `HelloReply`. This is the simplest type of RPC you can specify in gRPC - we'll look at some other types later in this document. ``` syntax = "proto3"; option java_package = "ex.grpc"; package helloworld; // The greeting service definition. service Greeter { // Sends a greeting rpc SayHello (HelloRequest) returns (HelloReply) {} } // The request message containing the user's name. message HelloRequest { string name = 1; } // The response message containing the greetings message HelloReply { string message = 1; } ``` ### Generating gRPC code Once we've defined our service, we use the protocol buffer compiler `protoc` to generate the special client and server code we need to create our application. The generated code contains both stub code for clients to use and an abstract interface for servers to implement, both with the method defined in our `Greeting` service. To generate the client and server side interfaces: ```sh $ make helloworld.grpc.pb.cc helloworld.pb.cc ``` Which internally invokes the proto-compiler as: ```sh $ protoc -I ../../protos/ --grpc_out=. --plugin=protoc-gen-grpc=grpc_cpp_plugin ../../protos/helloworld.proto $ protoc -I ../../protos/ --cpp_out=. ../../protos/helloworld.proto ``` ### Writing a client This is an incomplete tutorial. For now the reader should refer to [greeter_client.cc](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common/blob/master/cpp/helloworld/greeter_client.cc). ### Writing a server This is an incomplete tutorial. For now the reader should refer to [greeter_server.cc](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common/blob/master/cpp/helloworld/greeter_server.cc).