The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#) https://grpc.io/
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jan Tattermusch 2ea043cb59 change port number in examples to avoid conflict with forbidden port on win 4 years ago
..
Greeter upgrade helloworld classic example to 2.23.0 5 years ago
GreeterClient change port number in examples to avoid conflict with forbidden port on win 4 years ago
GreeterServer change port number in examples to avoid conflict with forbidden port on win 4 years ago
Greeter.sln
README.md Docs: fix links to grpc.io tutorial pages 5 years ago

README.md

gRPC in 3 minutes (C#)

BACKGROUND

This is a different version of the helloworld example, using the "classic" .csproj files, the only format supported by VS2013 (and older versions of mono). You can still use gRPC with the classic .csproj files, but using the new-style .csproj projects (supported by VS2017 v15.3 and above, and dotnet SDK) is recommended.

Example projects depend on the Grpc, Grpc.Tools and Google.Protobuf NuGet packages which have been already added to the project for you.

PREREQUISITES

  • Windows: .NET Framework 4.5+, Visual Studio 2013 or higher
  • Linux: Mono 4+, MonoDevelop 5.9+
  • Mac OS X: Xamarin Studio 5.9+

BUILD

  • Open solution Greeter.sln with Visual Studio, Monodevelop (on Linux) or Xamarin Studio (on Mac OS X)

Using Visual Studio

  • Select "Restore NuGet Packages" from the solution context menu. It is recommended to close and re-open the solution after the packages have been restored from Visual Studio.
  • Build the solution.

Using Monodevelop or Xamarin Studio

The NuGet add-in available for Xamarin Studio and Monodevelop IDEs is too old to download all of the NuGet dependencies of gRPC.

Using these IDEs, a workaround is as follows:

  • Obtain a nuget executable for your platform and update it with nuget update -self.
  • Navigate to this directory and run nuget restore.
  • Now that packages have been restored into their proper package folder, build the solution from your IDE.

Try it!

  • Run the server

    > cd GreeterServer/bin/Debug
    > GreeterServer.exe
    
  • Run the client

    > cd GreeterClient/bin/Debug
    > GreeterClient.exe
    

You can also run the server and client directly from the IDE.

On Linux or Mac, use mono GreeterServer.exe and mono GreeterClient.exe to run the server and client.

Tutorial

You can find a more detailed tutorial in gRPC Basics: C#