| // Copyright 2016 Michal Witkowski. All Rights Reserved. |
| // See LICENSE for licensing terms. |
| |
| /* |
| `grpc_middleware` is a collection of gRPC middleware packages: interceptors, helpers and tools. |
| |
| Middleware |
| |
| gRPC is a fantastic RPC middleware, which sees a lot of adoption in the Golang world. However, the |
| upstream gRPC codebase is relatively bare bones. |
| |
| This package, and most of its child packages provides commonly needed middleware for gRPC: |
| client-side interceptors for retires, server-side interceptors for input validation and auth, |
| functions for chaining said interceptors, metadata convenience methods and more. |
| |
| Chaining |
| |
| By default, gRPC doesn't allow one to have more than one interceptor either on the client nor on |
| the server side. `grpc_middleware` provides convenient chaining methods |
| |
| Simple way of turning a multiple interceptors into a single interceptor. Here's an example for |
| server chaining: |
| |
| myServer := grpc.NewServer( |
| grpc.StreamInterceptor(grpc_middleware.ChainStreamServer(loggingStream, monitoringStream, authStream)), |
| grpc.UnaryInterceptor(grpc_middleware.ChainUnaryServer(loggingUnary, monitoringUnary, authUnary)), |
| ) |
| |
| These interceptors will be executed from left to right: logging, monitoring and auth. |
| |
| Here's an example for client side chaining: |
| |
| clientConn, err = grpc.Dial( |
| address, |
| grpc.WithUnaryInterceptor(grpc_middleware.ChainUnaryClient(monitoringClientUnary, retryUnary)), |
| grpc.WithStreamInterceptor(grpc_middleware.ChainStreamClient(monitoringClientStream, retryStream)), |
| ) |
| client = pb_testproto.NewTestServiceClient(clientConn) |
| resp, err := client.PingEmpty(s.ctx, &myservice.Request{Msg: "hello"}) |
| |
| These interceptors will be executed from left to right: monitoring and then retry logic. |
| |
| The retry interceptor will call every interceptor that follows it whenever when a retry happens. |
| |
| Writing Your Own |
| |
| Implementing your own interceptor is pretty trivial: there are interfaces for that. But the interesting |
| bit exposing common data to handlers (and other middleware), similarly to HTTP Middleware design. |
| For example, you may want to pass the identity of the caller from the auth interceptor all the way |
| to the handling function. |
| |
| For example, a client side interceptor example for auth looks like: |
| |
| func FakeAuthUnaryInterceptor(ctx context.Context, req interface{}, info *grpc.UnaryServerInfo, handler grpc.UnaryHandler) (interface{}, error) { |
| newCtx := context.WithValue(ctx, "user_id", "john@example.com") |
| return handler(newCtx, req) |
| } |
| |
| Unfortunately, it's not as easy for streaming RPCs. These have the `context.Context` embedded within |
| the `grpc.ServerStream` object. To pass values through context, a wrapper (`WrappedServerStream`) is |
| needed. For example: |
| |
| func FakeAuthStreamingInterceptor(srv interface{}, stream grpc.ServerStream, info *grpc.StreamServerInfo, handler grpc.StreamHandler) error { |
| newStream := grpc_middleware.WrapServerStream(stream) |
| newStream.WrappedContext = context.WithValue(ctx, "user_id", "john@example.com") |
| return handler(srv, newStream) |
| } |
| */ |
| package grpc_middleware |