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Carl Mastrangelo 5e30b2f7ba netty: speed up header conversion by caching user agent string
Performance gain seems to be about 100-200ns based on a a couple trials.

Benchmark                                 (headerCount)  (validate)    Mode     Cnt     Score    Error  Units
HeadersBenchmark.convertClientHeadersOld             10       false  sample  187490   858.234 ±  3.992  ns/op
HeadersBenchmark.convertClientHeadersOld             20       false  sample  113589  1407.557 ± 45.178  ns/op
HeadersBenchmark.convertClientHeadersOld             50       false  sample  100725  3141.936 ± 55.175  ns/op
HeadersBenchmark.convertClientHeadersOld            100       false  sample  109742  5707.748 ± 38.222  ns/op
HeadersBenchmark.convertHeaders                      10       false  sample  109137   748.486 ±  4.060  ns/op
HeadersBenchmark.convertHeaders                      20       false  sample  133639  1238.528 ± 51.914  ns/op
HeadersBenchmark.convertHeaders                      50       false  sample  107914  2915.602 ± 10.017  ns/op
HeadersBenchmark.convertHeaders                     100       false  sample  110305  5682.404 ± 44.032  ns/op
2016-05-23 17:49:30 -07:00
all Stop producing a fat grpc-all jar 2016-04-28 16:23:39 -07:00
android-interop-testing android-interop-test: Enable checkstyle; fix violations 2016-05-16 12:44:15 -07:00
auth Allow application to pass cancellation details. 2016-04-27 09:38:18 -07:00
benchmarks netty: speed up header conversion by caching user agent string 2016-05-23 17:49:30 -07:00
buildscripts Allow cache to be shared between Linux and OS X 2016-04-27 19:35:06 -07:00
compiler Begin v0.15.0 Cycle 2016-04-29 13:54:18 -07:00
core netty: speed up header conversion by caching user agent string 2016-05-23 17:49:30 -07:00
examples Upgrade to Gradle 2.13 2016-05-09 09:36:13 -07:00
gradle/wrapper Upgrade to Gradle 2.13 2016-05-09 09:36:13 -07:00
grpclb all: Finish adding tracking issues for ExperimentalApi 2016-05-03 16:15:57 -07:00
interop-testing implements health check service 2016-05-20 14:03:29 -07:00
netty netty: speed up header conversion by caching user agent string 2016-05-23 17:49:30 -07:00
okhttp okhttp: Enable transport test 2016-05-16 09:52:48 -07:00
protobuf Updating status codes to match the spec. 2016-05-09 13:55:50 -07:00
protobuf-lite protolite: Use 'unused' variable to avoid CheckReturnValue 2016-05-20 09:46:46 -07:00
protobuf-nano Speed up NanoUtilsTest by 10s 2016-03-14 13:26:31 -07:00
services implements health check service 2016-05-20 14:03:29 -07:00
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testing Updating status codes to match the spec. 2016-05-09 13:55:50 -07:00
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COMPILING.md Upgrade to protobuf-3.0.0-beta-2 and protobuf-nano-3.0.0-alpha-5 2016-01-27 23:32:01 -08:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Document how to use IntelliJ style 2015-05-07 07:38:52 -07:00
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NOTICE.txt Reduce OkHttp dependency, copy all the needed files into our repository. 2015-10-15 16:35:08 -07:00
PATENTS Create PATENTS 2015-02-26 15:10:59 -08:00
README.md docs: Don't suggest downloading grpc-all 2016-05-12 13:00:47 -07:00
RELEASING.md Disable parallel with argument for greater ease 2016-05-01 08:19:00 -07:00
SECURITY.md use Jetty ALPN agent instead of Jetty ALPN 2016-05-02 14:01:36 -07:00
build.gradle build: Update jetty for JDK 8u92 2016-05-19 11:43:48 -07:00
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gradlew.bat Upgrade to Gradle 2.13 2016-05-09 09:36:13 -07:00
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settings.gradle implements health check service 2016-05-20 14:03:29 -07:00

README.md

gRPC-Java - An RPC library and framework

gRPC-Java works with JDK 6. TLS usage typically requires using Java 8, or Play Services Dynamic Security Provider on Android. Please see the Security Readme.

Homepage: www.grpc.io
Mailing List: grpc-io@googlegroups.com

Build Status Coverage Status

Download

Download the JARs. Or for Maven, add to your pom.xml:

<dependency>
  <groupId>io.grpc</groupId>
  <artifactId>grpc-all</artifactId>
  <version>0.14.0</version>
</dependency>

Or for Gradle, add to your dependencies:

compile 'io.grpc:grpc-all:0.14.0'

For Android client, you only need to depend on the needed sub-projects, such as:

compile 'io.grpc:grpc-okhttp:0.14.0'
compile 'io.grpc:grpc-protobuf-nano:0.14.0'
compile 'io.grpc:grpc-stub:0.14.0'

Development snapshots are available in Sonatypes's snapshot repository.

For protobuf-based codegen, you can put your proto files in the src/main/proto and src/test/proto directories along with an appropriate plugin.

For protobuf-based codegen integrated with the Maven build system, you can use protobuf-maven-plugin:

<build>
  <extensions>
    <extension>
      <groupId>kr.motd.maven</groupId>
      <artifactId>os-maven-plugin</artifactId>
      <version>1.4.1.Final</version>
    </extension>
  </extensions>
  <plugins>
    <plugin>
      <groupId>org.xolstice.maven.plugins</groupId>
      <artifactId>protobuf-maven-plugin</artifactId>
      <version>0.5.0</version>
      <configuration>
        <!--
          The version of protoc must match protobuf-java. If you don't depend on
          protobuf-java directly, you will be transitively depending on the
          protobuf-java version that grpc depends on.
        -->
        <protocArtifact>com.google.protobuf:protoc:3.0.0-beta-2:exe:${os.detected.classifier}</protocArtifact>
        <pluginId>grpc-java</pluginId>
        <pluginArtifact>io.grpc:protoc-gen-grpc-java:0.14.0:exe:${os.detected.classifier}</pluginArtifact>
      </configuration>
      <executions>
        <execution>
          <goals>
            <goal>compile</goal>
            <goal>compile-custom</goal>
          </goals>
        </execution>
      </executions>
    </plugin>
  </plugins>
</build>

For protobuf-based codegen integrated with the Gradle build system, you can use protobuf-gradle-plugin:

apply plugin: 'java'
apply plugin: 'com.google.protobuf'

buildscript {
  repositories {
    mavenCentral()
  }
  dependencies {
    // ASSUMES GRADLE 2.12 OR HIGHER. Use plugin version 0.7.5 with earlier
    // gradle versions
    classpath 'com.google.protobuf:protobuf-gradle-plugin:0.7.7'
  }
}

protobuf {
  protoc {
    // The version of protoc must match protobuf-java. If you don't depend on
    // protobuf-java directly, you will be transitively depending on the
    // protobuf-java version that grpc depends on.
    artifact = "com.google.protobuf:protoc:3.0.0-beta-2"
  }
  plugins {
    grpc {
      artifact = 'io.grpc:protoc-gen-grpc-java:0.14.0'
    }
  }
  generateProtoTasks {
    all()*.plugins {
      grpc {}
    }
  }
}

How to Build

If you are making changes to gRPC-Java, see the compiling instructions.

Navigating Around the Source

Here's a quick readers' guide to the code to help folks get started. At a high level there are three distinct layers to the library: Stub, Channel & Transport.

Stub

The Stub layer is what is exposed to most developers and provides type-safe bindings to whatever datamodel/IDL/interface you are adapting. gRPC comes with a plugin to the protocol-buffers compiler that generates Stub interfaces out of .proto files, but bindings to other datamodel/IDL should be trivial to add and are welcome.

Key Interfaces

Stream Observer

Channel

The Channel layer is an abstraction over Transport handling that is suitable for interception/decoration and exposes more behavior to the application than the Stub layer. It is intended to be easy for application frameworks to use this layer to address cross-cutting concerns such as logging, monitoring, auth etc. Flow-control is also exposed at this layer to allow more sophisticated applications to interact with it directly.

Common

Client

Server

Transport

The Transport layer does the heavy lifting of putting and taking bytes off the wire. The interfaces to it are abstract just enough to allow plugging in of different implementations. Transports are modeled as Stream factories. The variation in interface between a server Stream and a client Stream exists to codify their differing semantics for cancellation and error reporting.

Note the transport layer API is considered internal to gRPC and has weaker API guarantees than the core API under package io.grpc.

gRPC comes with three Transport implementations:

  1. The Netty-based transport is the main transport implementation based on Netty. It is for both the client and the server.
  2. The OkHttp-based transport is a lightweight transport based on OkHttp. It is mainly for use on Android and is for client only.
  3. The inProcess transport is for when a server is in the same process as the client. It is useful for testing.

Common

Client

Server

Examples

Tests showing how these layers are composed to execute calls using protobuf messages can be found here https://github.com/google/grpc-java/tree/master/interop-testing/src/main/java/io/grpc/testing/integration