This document describes the command line tool that comes with gRPC repository. It is desireable to have command line tools written in other languages to roughly follow the same syntax and flags.
At this point, the tool needs to be built from source, and it should be moved out to grpc-tools repository as a stand alone application once it is mature enough.
The command line tool can do the following things:
The command line tool should support the following things:
To use the tool, you need to get the grpc repository and in the grpc directory execute
$ make grpc_cli
The main file can be found at https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/test/cpp/util/grpc_cli.cc
Send a rpc to a helloworld server at localhost:50051
:
$ bins/opt/grpc_cli call localhost:50051 SayHello "name: 'world'" \ --enable_ssl=false
On success, the tool will print out
Rpc succeeded with OK status Response: message: "Hello world"
The localhost:50051
part indicates the server you are connecting to. SayHello
is (part of) the gRPC method string. Then "name: 'world'"
is the text format of the request proto message. We are not using ssl here by --enable_ssl=false
. For information on more flags, look at the comments of grpc_cli.cc
.
If the server does not have the server reflection service, you will need to provide local proto files containing the service definition. The tool will try to find request/response types from them.
$ bins/opt/grpc_cli call localhost:50051 SayHello "name: 'world'" \ --protofiles=examples/protos/helloworld.proto --enable_ssl=false
If the proto files is not under current directory, you can use --proto_path
to specify a new search root.
For using gRPC with protocols other than probobuf, you will need the exact method name string and a file containing the raw bytes to be sent on the wire
$ bins/opt/grpc_cli call localhost:50051 /helloworld.Greeter/SayHello --input_binary_file=input.bin \ --output_binary_file=output.bin
On success, you will need to read or decode the response from the output.bin
file.