| grpc Examples |
| ============================================== |
| |
| The examples require grpc-java to already be built. You are strongly encouraged |
| to check out a git release tag, since there will already be a build of grpc |
| available. Otherwise you must follow [COMPILING](../COMPILING.md). |
| |
| You may want to read through the |
| [Quick Start Guide](https://grpc.io/docs/quickstart/java.html) |
| before trying out the examples. |
| |
| ## Basic examples |
| |
| - [Hello world](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/helloworld) |
| |
| - [Route guide](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/routeguide) |
| |
| - [Metadata](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/header) |
| |
| - [Error handling](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/errorhandling) |
| |
| - [Compression](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/experimental) |
| |
| - [Flow control](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/manualflowcontrol) |
| |
| - [Json serialization](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/advanced) |
| |
| - <details> |
| <summary>Hedging</summary> |
| |
| The [hedging example](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/hedging) demonstrates that enabling hedging |
| can reduce tail latency. (Users should note that enabling hedging may introduce other overhead; |
| and in some scenarios, such as when some server resource gets exhausted for a period of time and |
| almost every RPC during that time has high latency or fails, hedging may make things worse. |
| Setting a throttle in the service config is recommended to protect the server from too many |
| inappropriate retry or hedging requests.) |
| |
| The server and the client in the example are basically the same as those in the |
| [hello world](src/main/java/io/grpc/examples/helloworld) example, except that the server mimics a |
| long tail of latency, and the client sends 2000 requests and can turn on and off hedging. |
| |
| To mimic the latency, the server randomly delays the RPC handling by 2 seconds at 10% chance, 5 |
| seconds at 5% chance, and 10 seconds at 1% chance. |
| |
| When running the client enabling the following hedging policy |
| |
| ```json |
| "hedgingPolicy": { |
| "maxAttempts": 3, |
| "hedgingDelay": "1s" |
| } |
| ``` |
| Then the latency summary in the client log is like the following |
| |
| ```text |
| Total RPCs sent: 2,000. Total RPCs failed: 0 |
| [Hedging enabled] |
| ======================== |
| 50% latency: 0ms |
| 90% latency: 6ms |
| 95% latency: 1,003ms |
| 99% latency: 2,002ms |
| 99.9% latency: 2,011ms |
| Max latency: 5,272ms |
| ======================== |
| ``` |
| |
| See [the section below](#to-build-the-examples) for how to build and run the example. The |
| executables for the server and the client are `hedging-hello-world-server` and |
| `hedging-hello-world-client`. |
| |
| To disable hedging, set environment variable `DISABLE_HEDGING_IN_HEDGING_EXAMPLE=true` before |
| running the client. That produces a latency summary in the client log like the following |
| |
| ```text |
| Total RPCs sent: 2,000. Total RPCs failed: 0 |
| [Hedging disabled] |
| ======================== |
| 50% latency: 0ms |
| 90% latency: 2,002ms |
| 95% latency: 5,002ms |
| 99% latency: 10,004ms |
| 99.9% latency: 10,007ms |
| Max latency: 10,007ms |
| ======================== |
| ``` |
| |
| </details> |
| |
| ### <a name="to-build-the-examples"></a> To build the examples |
| |
| 1. **[Install gRPC Java library SNAPSHOT locally, including code generation plugin](../COMPILING.md) (Only need this step for non-released versions, e.g. master HEAD).** |
| |
| 2. From grpc-java/examples directory: |
| ``` |
| $ ./gradlew installDist |
| ``` |
| |
| This creates the scripts `hello-world-server`, `hello-world-client`, |
| `route-guide-server`, `route-guide-client`, etc. in the |
| `build/install/examples/bin/` directory that run the examples. Each |
| example requires the server to be running before starting the client. |
| |
| For example, to try the hello world example first run: |
| |
| ``` |
| $ ./build/install/examples/bin/hello-world-server |
| ``` |
| |
| And in a different terminal window run: |
| |
| ``` |
| $ ./build/install/examples/bin/hello-world-client |
| ``` |
| |
| That's it! |
| |
| Please refer to gRPC Java's [README](../README.md) and |
| [tutorial](https://grpc.io/docs/tutorials/basic/java.html) for more |
| information. |
| |
| ### Maven |
| |
| If you prefer to use Maven: |
| 1. **[Install gRPC Java library SNAPSHOT locally, including code generation plugin](../COMPILING.md) (Only need this step for non-released versions, e.g. master HEAD).** |
| |
| 2. Run in this directory: |
| ``` |
| $ mvn verify |
| $ # Run the server |
| $ mvn exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=io.grpc.examples.helloworld.HelloWorldServer |
| $ # In another terminal run the client |
| $ mvn exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=io.grpc.examples.helloworld.HelloWorldClient |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Bazel |
| |
| If you prefer to use Bazel: |
| ``` |
| $ bazel build :hello-world-server :hello-world-client |
| $ # Run the server |
| $ bazel-bin/hello-world-server |
| $ # In another terminal run the client |
| $ bazel-bin/hello-world-client |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Other examples |
| |
| - [Android examples](android) |
| |
| - Secure channel examples |
| |
| + [TLS examples](example-tls) |
| |
| + [ALTS examples](example-alts) |
| |
| - [Google Authentication](example-gauth) |
| |
| - [Kotlin examples](example-kotlin) |
| |
| - [Kotlin Android examples](example-kotlin/android) |
| |
| ## Unit test examples |
| |
| Examples for unit testing gRPC clients and servers are located in [examples/src/test](src/test). |
| |
| In general, we DO NOT allow overriding the client stub and we DO NOT support mocking final methods |
| in gRPC-Java library. Users should be cautious that using tools like PowerMock or |
| [mockito-inline](https://search.maven.org/search?q=g:org.mockito%20a:mockito-inline) can easily |
| break this rule of thumb. We encourage users to leverage `InProcessTransport` as demonstrated in the |
| examples to write unit tests. `InProcessTransport` is light-weight and runs the server |
| and client in the same process without any socket/TCP connection. |
| |
| Mocking the client stub provides a false sense of security when writing tests. Mocking stubs and responses |
| allows for tests that don't map to reality, causing the tests to pass, but the system-under-test to fail. |
| The gRPC client library is complicated, and accurately reproducing that complexity with mocks is very hard. |
| You will be better off and write less code by using `InProcessTransport` instead. |
| |
| Example bugs not caught by mocked stub tests include: |
| |
| * Calling the stub with a `null` message |
| * Not calling `close()` |
| * Sending invalid headers |
| * Ignoring deadlines |
| * Ignoring cancellation |
| |
| For testing a gRPC client, create the client with a real stub |
| using an |
| [InProcessChannel](../core/src/main/java/io/grpc/inprocess/InProcessChannelBuilder.java), |
| and test it against an |
| [InProcessServer](../core/src/main/java/io/grpc/inprocess/InProcessServerBuilder.java) |
| with a mock/fake service implementation. |
| |
| For testing a gRPC server, create the server as an InProcessServer, |
| and test it against a real client stub with an InProcessChannel. |
| |
| The gRPC-java library also provides a JUnit rule, |
| [GrpcCleanupRule](../testing/src/main/java/io/grpc/testing/GrpcCleanupRule.java), to do the graceful |
| shutdown boilerplate for you. |
| |
| ## Even more examples |
| |
| A wide variety of third-party examples can be found [here](https://github.com/saturnism/grpc-java-by-example). |