The XDS example consists of a Hello World client and a Hello World server capable of being configured with the XDS management protocol. Out-of-the-box the client behaves the same the hello-world version and the server behaves similar to the example-hostname but with a required dependency on xDS.
XDS support is incomplete and experimental, with limited compatibility. It will be very hard to produce a working environment just by this example. Please refer to documentation specific for your XDS management server and environment.
Build the XDS hello-world example client & server. From the grpc-java/examples/examples-xds
directory:
$ ../gradlew installDist
This creates the scripts build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-client
and build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-server
.
To use XDS, you should first deploy the XDS management server in your deployment environment and know its name. You need to set the GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP
environment variable (preferred) or if that is not set then the io.grpc.xds.bootstrap
java system property to point to the gRPC XDS bootstrap file (see gRFC A27 for the bootstrap format). This is needed by both build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-client
and build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-server
.
$ export GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP=/path/to/bootstrap.json $ ./build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-server
$ export GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP=/path/to/bootstrap.json $ ./build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-client "xds world" xds:///yourServersName
The first command line argument (xds world
) is the name you wish to include in the greeting request to the server and the second argument (xds:///yourServersName
) is the target to connect to using the xds:
target scheme.
The above example used plaintext (insecure) credentials as explicitly provided by the client and server code. We will now demonstrate how the code can authorize use of xDS provided credentials by using XdsChannelCredentials
on the client side and using XdsServerCredentials
on the server side. This code is enabled by providing an additional command line argument.
--xds-creds
on the command line to authorize use of xDS security:$ export GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP=/path/to/bootstrap.json $ ./build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-server --xds-creds
--xds-creds
on the command line when you run the xDS client:$ export GRPC_XDS_BOOTSTRAP=/path/to/bootstrap.json $ ./build/install/example-xds/bin/xds-hello-world-client --xds-creds "xds world" xds:///yourServersName
In this case, if the xDS management server is configured to provide mTLS credentials (for example) to the client and server, then they will use these credentials to create an mTLS channel to authenticate and encrypt.