An Elixir implementation of gRPC.
The package can be installed as:
def deps do
[
{:grpc, "~> 0.7"},
# We don't force protobuf as a dependency for more
# flexibility on which protobuf library is used,
# but you probably want to use it as well
{:protobuf, "~> 0.11"}
]
end
-
Generate Elixir code from proto file as protobuf-elixir shows(especially the
gRPC Support
section). -
Implement the server side code like below and remember to return the expected message types.
defmodule Helloworld.Greeter.Server do
use GRPC.Server, service: Helloworld.Greeter.Service
@spec say_hello(Helloworld.HelloRequest.t, GRPC.Server.Stream.t) :: Helloworld.HelloReply.t
def say_hello(request, _stream) do
Helloworld.HelloReply.new(message: "Hello #{request.name}")
end
end
- Start the server
You can start the gRPC server as a supervised process. First, add GRPC.Server.Supervisor
to your supervision tree.
# Define your endpoint
defmodule Helloworld.Endpoint do
use GRPC.Endpoint
intercept GRPC.Server.Interceptors.Logger
run Helloworld.Greeter.Server
end
# In the start function of your Application
defmodule HelloworldApp do
use Application
def start(_type, _args) do
children = [
# ...
{GRPC.Server.Supervisor, endpoint: Helloworld.Endpoint, port: 50051, start_server: true}
]
opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: YourApp]
Supervisor.start_link(children, opts)
end
end
- Call rpc:
iex> {:ok, channel} = GRPC.Stub.connect("localhost:50051")
iex> request = Helloworld.HelloRequest.new(name: "grpc-elixir")
iex> {:ok, reply} = channel |> Helloworld.Greeter.Stub.say_hello(request)
# With interceptors
iex> {:ok, channel} = GRPC.Stub.connect("localhost:50051", interceptors: [GRPC.Client.Interceptors.Logger])
...
Check examples and interop(Interoperability Test) for some examples.
- Various kinds of RPC:
- TLS Authentication
- Error handling
- Interceptors(See
GRPC.Endpoint
) - Connection Backoff
- Data compression
-
Simple benchmark by using ghz
-
Benchmark followed by official spec
Your contributions are welcome!
Please open issues if you have questions, problems and ideas. You can create pull requests directly if you want to fix little bugs, add small features and so on. But you'd better use issues first if you want to add a big feature or change a lot of code.