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The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#)
https://grpc.io/
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Sergii Tkachenko
de6ed9ba9f
|
1 year ago | |
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.. | ||
README.md | ||
client.py | 1 year ago | |
helloworld_pb2.py | ||
helloworld_pb2.pyi | ||
helloworld_pb2_grpc.py | ||
requirements.txt | ||
server.py | 1 year ago |
README.md
gRPC Hostname Example
The hostname example is a Hello World server whose response includes its hostname. It also supports health and reflection services. This makes it a good server to test infrastructure, like load balancing. This example depends on a gRPC version of 1.28.1 or newer.
Run the Server
- Navigate to this directory:
cd grpc/examples/python/xds
- Run the server
virtualenv venv -p python3
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
python server.py
Run the Client
- Set up xDS configuration.
After configuring your xDS server to track the gRPC server we just started, create a bootstrap file as desribed in gRFC A27:
{
xds_servers": [
{
"server_uri": <string containing URI of xds server>,
"channel_creds": [
{
"type": <string containing channel cred type>,
"config": <JSON object containing config for the type>
}
]
}
],
"node": <JSON form of Node proto>
}
- Point the
GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP
environment variable at the bootstrap file:
export GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP=/etc/xds-bootstrap.json
- Run the client:
python client.py xds:///my-backend
Verifying Configuration with a CLI Tool
Alternatively, grpcurl
can be used to verify your server. If you don't have it,
install grpcurl
. This will allow
you to manually test the service.
Be sure to set up the bootstrap file and GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP
as in the previous
section.
- Verify the server's application-layer service:
> grpcurl --plaintext -d '{"name": "you"}' localhost:50051
{
"message": "Hello you from rbell.svl.corp.google.com!"
}
- Verify that all services are available via reflection:
> grpcurl --plaintext localhost:50051 list
grpc.health.v1.Health
grpc.reflection.v1alpha.ServerReflection
helloworld.Greeter
- Verify that all services are reporting healthy:
> grpcurl --plaintext -d '{"service": "helloworld.Greeter"}' localhost:50051
grpc.health.v1.Health/Check
{
"status": "SERVING"
}
> grpcurl --plaintext -d '{"service": ""}' localhost:50051
grpc.health.v1.Health/Check
{
"status": "SERVING"
}
Running with Proxyless Security
Run the Server with Secure Credentials
Add the --secure true
flag to the invocation outlined above.
python server.py --secure true
Run the Client with Secure Credentials
Add the --secure true
flag to the invocation outlined above.
- Run the client:
python client.py xds:///my-backend --secure true