4.0 KiB
Service Config in gRPC
Objective
The service config is a mechanism that allows service owners to publish parameters to be automatically used by all clients of their service.
Format
The fields of the service config are defined by the
grpc.service_config.ServiceConfig
protocol buffer
message.
Note that new fields may be added in the future as new functionality is
introduced.
Internally, gRPC uses the service config in JSON form. The JSON representation is the result of converting the protobuf form into JSON using the normal protobuf to JSON translation rules. In particular, this means:
- Field names are converted from
snake_case
tocamelCase
. - Field values are converted as per the documented translation rules:
- Strings, 32-bit integers, and bools are converted into the corresponding JSON types.
- 64-bit integers are converted into strings (e.g.,
"251"
). - The value of a repeated field will be represented as a JSON array.
- The value of a
google.protobuf.Duration
will be represented as a string containing a decimal number of seconds (e.g.,"1.000340012s"
).
For more details, see the protobuf docs linked above.
Note that the JSON representation has one advantage over the protobuf
representation, which is that it is possible to encode configurations
for LB policies that are not known to gRPC. In
protobuf form, the loadBalancingConfig
field contains a oneof
supporting only the built-in LB policies. However, in JSON form, the
field inside the oneof
is encoded as a string that indicates the LB
policy name. In JSON form, that string can be any arbitrary value, not
just one of the supported policies inside of the oneof
, so third-party
policies can be selected.
Architecture
A service config is associated with a server name. The name resolver plugin, when asked to resolve a particular server name, will return both the resolved addresses and the service config.
The name resolver returns the service config to the gRPC client in JSON form. Individual resolver implementations determine where and in what format the service config is stored. If the resolver implemention obtains the service config in protobuf form, it must convert it to JSON. Alternatively, a resolver implementation may obtain the service config already in JSON form, in which case it may return it directly. Or it may construct the JSON dynamically from some other source data.
For details of how the DNS resolver plugin supports service configs, see gRFC A2: Service Config via DNS.
Example
Here is an example service config in protobuf form:
{
// Use round_robin LB policy.
load_balancing_config: { round_robin: {} }
// This method config applies to method "foo/bar" and to all methods
// of service "baz".
method_config: {
name: {
service: "foo"
method: "bar"
}
name: {
service: "baz"
}
// Default timeout for matching methods.
timeout: {
seconds: 1
nanos: 1
}
}
}
Here is the same example service config in JSON form:
{
"loadBalancingConfig": [ { "round_robin": {} } ],
"methodConfig": [
{
"name": [
{ "service": "foo", "method": "bar" },
{ "service": "baz" }
],
"timeout": "1.000000001s"
}
]
}
APIs
The service config is used in the following APIs:
- In the resolver API, used by resolver plugins to return the service config to the gRPC client.
- In the gRPC client API, where users can query the channel to obtain the service config associated with the channel (for debugging purposes).
- In the gRPC client API, where users can set the service config explicitly. This can be used to set the config in unit tests. It can also be used to set the default config that will be used if the resolver plugin does not return a service config.