grpc-spring-boot-starter | Spring Boot starter module for gRPC framework
kandi X-RAY | grpc-spring-boot-starter Summary
kandi X-RAY | grpc-spring-boot-starter Summary
README: English | 中文. Documentation: English | 中文.
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Configures the security properties
- Detects the format of a keystore file
- Loads a keystore from a resource
- Sets the accepted server certificates
- Configure the security channel
- Configures the provided client certificate
- Configures the accepted server certificates
- Intercept the next RPC call
- Intercept a method call
- Creates a new channel
- Check if the grpc client is annotated
- Intercept the authentication request
- Default DecompressorRegistry
- Cancels the authentication context
- Sets the authentication context
- Post - process the given bean factory
- Add services via grpc
- Intercept the call
- Creates a new channel builder
- Find gRPC codecs
- Find the grpc service
- Creates a pattern extractor
- Performs X509Certication
- Searches for a stub to create a stub
- Read the authentication from the remote peer
- Checks if the instance needs to be updated
grpc-spring-boot-starter Key Features
grpc-spring-boot-starter Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on grpc-spring-boot-starter
QUESTION
I'm trying to configure mail service in simple spring boot app to send email notifications.
Here is my config:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-13 at 07:33I guess your config is not correct. Instead of
QUESTION
Server:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jul-07 at 15:19It sounds like a device along the network path is killing the connection after a period of idleness. It could be a proxy, NAT, or firewall.
If you are able to find the device, you could maybe configure it. But commonly you can't configure such things well.
gRPC supports Keep Alive that is designed for this scenario. After a period of inactivity grpc will cause activity, just to make sure the connection is still good and inform networking devices the connection is still being used.
You can configure keepalive on client-side or server-side. If the networking device is part of the server deployment, having server manage the keeepalive is best. Since the client has a non-routable IP, I expect the problem is this case is the NAT in front of the client. So configuring keepalive on the client makes more sense, as different clients may have different needs.
QUESTION
We are using grpc spring boot starter on our Java application service in order to establish a connection to another 'server' service, so I define in the application.properties
the following address:
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Apr-27 at 02:00It caused by gRPC can't resolve addresss service-name:port
;
If you use static
, the value must be ip:port
; The service-name
need to be resolved as ip address;
If you are using register center like consul or eureka etc., you should use discovery:///service-name
without specify port.
If you didn't use register center, only end to end with server, replace service-name
as a ip like 127.0.0.1
which belong to server;
Or modify host config for parse service-name
like below, the file on Linux is /etc/hosts
QUESTION
I've created a simple test gRPC server(Java, Spring) to test the technology.
When trying to call a function from the server I am getting an error { "error": "2 UNKNOWN: Stream removed" }
Inside the application, no stack trace is printed, I can't catch the program execution using breakpoint invisible for me code
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Mar-25 at 10:35I can't explain the real root of the problem but the thing that helped me is providing different ports for the server and gRPC, hope it will help someone
QUESTION
I have a Spring Boot micro-service which listens through GRPC using LogNet/grpc-spring-boot-starter
By default GRPC payload maximum size is 4MB. At client side, it's easy to set the response payload size, but I want to increase the request size at the server side.
At client side,
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Jul-09 at 14:55Define a ServerBuilderConfigurer like this:
QUESTION
I'm new to gRpc, I'm trying to use it between a Java 11(Spring Boot 2) server and a Java 8 (Spring Boot 1.5) client using gRpc 1.27.1 and protobuf 3.11.
Here is my setup:
I have data model library with just 1 proto definition file and maven files to generate java source code that is shared between the client and the server
The relevant parts of the pom.xml
:
ANSWER
Answered 2020-Mar-27 at 19:52It turns out that I had not posted my server code and that is where the problem was.
I'll post my mistake here so that no one else has to spent time with this silly mistake:
QUESTION
I am trying to set up Spring Boot microservices which will communicate via gRPC. I am using the LogNet (https://github.com/LogNet/grpc-spring-boot-starter) Spring Boot starter and am trying to figure out how to have a client/consumer service "connect" to a server/producer service without using service discovery (e.g. Eureka).
I have not been able to find information on how to configure the producer to listen to a port that I specify.
I would then attempt to connect to it from the consumer with code like the following:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Jan-22 at 22:46If by producer you mean a gRPC server, then you can configure its port in your application.yml/properties
:
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install grpc-spring-boot-starter
You can use grpc-spring-boot-starter like any standard Java library. Please include the the jar files in your classpath. You can also use any IDE and you can run and debug the grpc-spring-boot-starter component as you would do with any other Java program. Best practice is to use a build tool that supports dependency management such as Maven or Gradle. For Maven installation, please refer maven.apache.org. For Gradle installation, please refer gradle.org .
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