The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#) https://grpc.io/
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/*
*
* Copyright 2015 gRPC authors.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*
*/
#include <iostream>
#include <memory>
#include <string>
#include <grpc/support/log.h>
#include <grpcpp/grpcpp.h>
#ifdef BAZEL_BUILD
#include "examples/protos/helloworld.grpc.pb.h"
#else
#include "helloworld.grpc.pb.h"
#endif
using grpc::Channel;
using grpc::ClientAsyncResponseReader;
using grpc::ClientContext;
using grpc::CompletionQueue;
using grpc::Status;
using helloworld::Greeter;
using helloworld::HelloReply;
using helloworld::HelloRequest;
class GreeterClient {
public:
explicit GreeterClient(std::shared_ptr<Channel> channel)
: stub_(Greeter::NewStub(channel)) {}
// Assembles the client's payload, sends it and presents the response back
// from the server.
std::string SayHello(const std::string& user) {
// Data we are sending to the server.
HelloRequest request;
request.set_name(user);
// Container for the data we expect from the server.
HelloReply reply;
// Context for the client. It could be used to convey extra information to
// the server and/or tweak certain RPC behaviors.
ClientContext context;
// The producer-consumer queue we use to communicate asynchronously with the
// gRPC runtime.
CompletionQueue cq;
// Storage for the status of the RPC upon completion.
Status status;
std::unique_ptr<ClientAsyncResponseReader<HelloReply> > rpc(
stub_->AsyncSayHello(&context, request, &cq));
// Request that, upon completion of the RPC, "reply" be updated with the
// server's response; "status" with the indication of whether the operation
// was successful. Tag the request with the integer 1.
rpc->Finish(&reply, &status, (void*)1);
void* got_tag;
bool ok = false;
// Block until the next result is available in the completion queue "cq".
// The return value of Next should always be checked. This return value
// tells us whether there is any kind of event or the cq_ is shutting down.
GPR_ASSERT(cq.Next(&got_tag, &ok));
// Verify that the result from "cq" corresponds, by its tag, our previous
// request.
GPR_ASSERT(got_tag == (void*)1);
// ... and that the request was completed successfully. Note that "ok"
// corresponds solely to the request for updates introduced by Finish().
GPR_ASSERT(ok);
// Act upon the status of the actual RPC.
if (status.ok()) {
return reply.message();
} else {
return "RPC failed";
}
}
private:
// Out of the passed in Channel comes the stub, stored here, our view of the
// server's exposed services.
std::unique_ptr<Greeter::Stub> stub_;
};
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
// Instantiate the client. It requires a channel, out of which the actual RPCs
// are created. This channel models a connection to an endpoint (in this case,
// localhost at port 50051). We indicate that the channel isn't authenticated
// (use of InsecureChannelCredentials()).
GreeterClient greeter(grpc::CreateChannel(
"localhost:50051", grpc::InsecureChannelCredentials()));
std::string user("world");
std::string reply = greeter.SayHello(user); // The actual RPC call!
std::cout << "Greeter received: " << reply << std::endl;
return 0;
}