Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects
README.md 5.75 KiB
Newer Older
[![Build Status](https://grpc-testing.appspot.com/job/gRPC_master/badge/icon)](https://grpc-testing.appspot.com/job/gRPC_master)
Jayant Kolhe's avatar
Jayant Kolhe committed
[gRPC - An RPC library and framework](http://github.com/grpc/grpc)
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
===================================

The Gitter Badger's avatar
The Gitter Badger committed
[![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/grpc/grpc](https://badges.gitter.im/grpc/grpc.svg)](https://gitter.im/grpc/grpc?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge)

Copyright 2015 Google Inc.
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

#Documentation

You can find more detailed documentation and examples in the [doc](doc) and [examples](examples) directories respectively.
Jan Tattermusch's avatar
Jan Tattermusch committed
#Installation & Testing
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

See [INSTALL](INSTALL.md) for installation instructions for various platforms.
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

Jan Tattermusch's avatar
Jan Tattermusch committed
See [tools/run_tests](tools/run_tests) for more guidance on how to run various test suites (e.g. unit tests, interop tests, benchmarks)

#Repository Structure & Status
Jayant Kolhe's avatar
Jayant Kolhe committed

This repository contains source code for gRPC libraries for multiple languages written on top of shared C core library [src/core] (src/core).
Jayant Kolhe's avatar
Jayant Kolhe committed

Libraries in different languages are in different states of development. We are seeking contributions for all of these libraries.
| Language                | Source                              | Status                           |
|-------------------------|-------------------------------------|----------------------------------|
Jacob Young's avatar
Jacob Young committed
| Shared C [core library] | [src/core] (src/core)               | Beta - the surface API is stable |
| C++                     | [src/cpp] (src/cpp)                 | Beta - the surface API is stable |
| Ruby                    | [src/ruby] (src/ruby)               | Beta - the surface API is stable |
| NodeJS                  | [src/node] (src/node)               | Beta - the surface API is stable |
| Python                  | [src/python] (src/python)           | Beta - the surface API is stable |
| PHP                     | [src/php] (src/php)                 | Beta - the surface API is stable |
| C#                      | [src/csharp] (src/csharp)           | Beta - the surface API is stable |
| Objective-C             | [src/objective-c] (src/objective-c) | Beta - the surface API is stable |
Java source code is in the [grpc-java] (http://github.com/grpc/grpc-java) repository.
Go source code is in the [grpc-go] (http://github.com/grpc/grpc-go) repository.
Jayant Kolhe's avatar
Jayant Kolhe committed

See [MANIFEST.md](MANIFEST.md) for a listing of top-level items in the
Jayant Kolhe's avatar
Jayant Kolhe committed

Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
#Overview

Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

Remote Procedure Calls (RPCs) provide a useful abstraction for building
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
distributed applications and services. The libraries in this repository
provide a concrete implementation of the gRPC protocol, layered over HTTP/2.
These libraries enable communication between clients and servers using any
combination of the supported languages.
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

##Interface


Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
Developers using gRPC typically start with the description of an RPC service
(a collection of methods), and generate client and server side interfaces
which they use on the client-side and implement on the server side.

By default, gRPC uses [Protocol Buffers](https://github.com/google/protobuf) as the
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
Interface Definition Language (IDL) for describing both the service interface
and the structure of the payload messages. It is possible to use other
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
alternatives if desired.

###Surface API
Starting from an interface definition in a .proto file, gRPC provides
Protocol Compiler plugins that generate Client- and Server-side APIs.
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
gRPC users typically call into these APIs on the Client side and implement
the corresponding API on the server side.

Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
#### Synchronous vs. asynchronous
Synchronous RPC calls, that block until a response arrives from the server, are
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
the closest approximation to the abstraction of a procedure call that RPC
aspires to.

On the other hand, networks are inherently asynchronous and in many scenarios,
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
it is desirable to have the ability to start RPCs without blocking the current
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
The gRPC programming surface in most languages comes in both synchronous and
asynchronous flavors.
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed


## Streaming

gRPC supports streaming semantics, where either the client or the server (or both)
send a stream of messages on a single RPC call. The most general case is
Bidirectional Streaming where a single gRPC call establishes a stream where both
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
the client and the server can send a stream of messages to each other. The streamed
messages are delivered in the order they were sent.


#Protocol
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

Stanley Cheung's avatar
Stanley Cheung committed
The [gRPC protocol](doc/PROTOCOL-HTTP2.md) specifies the abstract requirements for communication between
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
clients and servers. A concrete embedding over HTTP/2 completes the picture by
fleshing out the details of each of the required operations.

Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
## Abstract gRPC protocol
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
A gRPC RPC comprises of a bidirectional stream of messages, initiated by the client. In the client-to-server direction, this stream begins with a mandatory `Call Header`, followed by optional `Initial-Metadata`, followed by zero or more `Payload Messages`. The server-to-client direction contains an optional `Initial-Metadata`, followed by zero or more `Payload Messages` terminated with a mandatory `Status` and optional `Status-Metadata` (a.k.a.,`Trailing-Metadata`).

## Implementation over HTTP/2
The abstract protocol defined above is implemented over [HTTP/2](https://http2.github.io/). gRPC bidirectional streams are mapped to HTTP/2 streams. The contents of `Call Header` and `Initial Metadata` are sent as HTTP/2 headers and subject to HPACK compression. `Payload Messages` are serialized into a byte stream of length prefixed gRPC frames which are then fragmented into HTTP/2 frames at the sender and reassembled at the receiver. `Status` and `Trailing-Metadata` are sent as HTTP/2 trailing headers (a.k.a., trailers).
Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed

Abhishek Kumar's avatar
Abhishek Kumar committed
## Flow Control
Craig Tiller's avatar
Craig Tiller committed
gRPC inherits the flow control mechanisms in HTTP/2 and uses them to enable fine-grained control of the amount of memory used for buffering in-flight messages.