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README.md
gRPC ORCA Example
The ORCA example consists of a Hello World client and a Hello World server. Out-of-the-box the client behaves the same the hello-world version and the server behaves similar to the example-hostname. In addition, they have been integrated with backend metrics reporting features.
Build the example
Build the ORCA hello-world example client & server. From the grpc-java/examples/examples-orca
directory:
$ ../gradlew installDist
This creates the scripts build/install/example-orca/bin/custom-backend-metrics-client
and
build/install/example-orca/bin/custom-backend-metrics-server
.
Run the example
To use ORCA, you have to instrument both the client and the server. At the client, in your own load balancer policy, you use gRPC APIs to install listeners to receive per-query and out-of-band metric reports. At the server, you add a server interceptor provided by gRPC in order to send per-query backend metrics. And you register a bindable service, also provided by gRPC, in order to send out-of-band backend metrics. Meanwhile, you update the metrics data from your own measurements.
That's it! In this example, we simply put all the necessary pieces together to demonstrate the metrics reporting mechanism.
- To start the ORCA enabled example server on its default port of 50051, run:
$ ./build/install/example-orca/bin/custom-backend-metrics-server
- In a different terminal window, run the ORCA enabled example client:
$ ./build/install/example-orca/bin/custom-backend-metrics-client "orca tester" 1500
The first command line argument (orca tester
) is the name you wish to include in
the greeting request to the server and the second argument
(1500
) is the time period (in milliseconds) you want to run the client before it shut downed so that it will show
more periodic backend metrics reports. You are expected to see the metrics data printed out. Try it!