A C# implementation of gRPC.
Alpha : Ready for early adopters.
Prerequisites: .NET Framework 4.5+, Visual Studio 2013 with NuGet extension installed (VS2015 should work).
Open Visual Studio and start a new project/solution.
Add NuGet package Grpc
as a dependency (Project options -> Manage NuGet Packages). That will also pull all the transitive dependencies (including the native libraries that gRPC C# is internally using).
Helloworld project example can be found in https://github.com/grpc/grpc/tree/master/examples/csharp.
Prerequisites: Mono 3.2.8+, MonoDevelop 5.9 with NuGet add-in installed.
Install Linuxbrew and gRPC C Core using instructions in https://github.com/grpc/homebrew-grpc
gRPC C# depends on native shared library libgrpc_csharp_ext.so (Unix flavor of grpc_csharp_ext.dll). This library will be installed to ~/.linuxbrew/lib
by the previous step. To make it visible to mono, you need to:
(preferred approach) add libgrpc_csharp_ext.so
to /etc/ld.so.cache
by running:
$ echo "$HOME/.linuxbrew/lib" | sudo tee /etc/ld.so.conf.d/zzz_brew_lib.conf $ sudo ldconfig
(adhoc approach) set LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable to point to directory containing libgrpc_csharp_ext.so
:
$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/.linuxbrew/lib:${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}
(if you are contributor) installing gRPC from sources using sudo make install_grpc_csharp_ext
also works.
Open MonoDevelop and start a new project/solution.
Add NuGet package Grpc
as a dependency (Project -> Add NuGet packages).
Helloworld project example can be found in https://github.com/grpc/grpc/tree/master/examples/csharp.
WARNING: As of now gRPC C# only works on 64bit version of Mono (because we don't compile the native extension for C# in 32bit mode yet). That means your development experience with Xamarin Studio on MacOS will not be great, as you won't be able to run your code directly from Xamarin Studio (which requires 32bit version of Mono).
Prerequisites: Xamarin Studio with NuGet add-in installed.
Install Homebrew and gRPC C Core using instructions in https://github.com/grpc/homebrew-grpc
Install 64-bit version of mono with command brew install mono
(assumes you've already installed Homebrew).
Open Xamarin Studio and start a new project/solution.
Add NuGet package Grpc
as a dependency (Project -> Add NuGet packages).
You will be able to build your project in Xamarin Studio, but to run or test it, you will need to run it under 64-bit version of Mono.
Helloworld project example can be found in https://github.com/grpc/grpc/tree/master/examples/csharp.
You only need to go through these steps if you are planning to develop gRPC C#. If you are a user of gRPC C#, go to Usage section above.
Prerequisites for development: NET Framework 4.5+, Visual Studio 2013 (with NuGet and NUnit extensions installed).
The grpc_csharp_ext native library needs to be built so you can build the Grpc C# solution. You can either build the native solution in vsprojects/grpc.sln
from Visual Studio manually, or you can use a convenience batch script that builds everything for you.
> buildall.bat
Open Grpc.sln using Visual Studio 2013. NuGet dependencies will be restored upon build (you need to have NuGet add-in installed).
You only need to go through these steps if you are planning to develop gRPC C#. If you are a user of gRPC C#, go to Usage section above.
Prerequisites for development: Mono 3.2.8+, MonoDevelop 5.9 with NuGet and NUnit add-ins installed.
$ sudo apt-get install mono-devel $ sudo apt-get install nunit nunit-console
You can use older versions of MonoDevelop, but then you might need to restore NuGet dependencies manually (by nuget restore
), because older versions of MonoDevelop don't support NuGet add-in.
Compile and install the gRPC C# extension library (that will be used via P/Invoke from C#).
$ make grpc_csharp_ext
$ sudo make install_grpc_csharp_ext
Use MonoDevelop to open the solution Grpc.sln
Build the solution & run all the tests from test view.
gRPC C# is using NUnit as the testing framework.
Under Visual Studio, make sure NUnit test adapter is installed (under "Extensions and Updates"). Then you should be able to run all the tests using Test Explorer.
Under Monodevelop, make sure you installed "NUnit support" in Add-in manager. Then you should be able to run all the test from the Test View.
After building the solution, you can also run the tests from command line using nunit-console tool.
# from Grpc.Core.Test/bin/Debug directory $ nunit-console Grpc.Core.Tests.dll
Internally, gRPC C# uses a native library written in C (gRPC C core) and invokes its functionality via P/Invoke. grpc_csharp_ext
library is a native extension library that facilitates this by wrapping some C core API into a form that's more digestible for P/Invoke. If you get the above error, it means that the native dependencies could not be located by the C# runtime (or they are incompatible with the current runtime, so they could not be loaded). The solution to this is environment specific.
If you are developing on Windows in Visual Studio, the grpc_csharp_ext.dll
that is shipped by gRPC nuget packages should be automatically copied to your build destination folder once you build. By adjusting project properties in your VS project file, you can influence which exact configuration of grpc_csharp_ext.dll
will be used (based on VS version, bitness, debug/release configuration).
If you are running your application that is using gRPC on Windows machine that doesn't have Visual Studio installed, you might need to install Visual C++ 2013 redistributable that contains some system .dll libraries that grpc_csharp_ext.dll
depends on (see #905 for more details).
On Linux (or Docker), you need to first install gRPC C core and libgrpc_csharp_ext.so
shared libraries. Currently, the libraries can be installed by make install_grpc_csharp_ext
or using Linuxbrew (a Debian package is coming soon). Installation on a machine where your application is going to be deployed is no different.
On Mac, you need to first install gRPC C core and libgrpc_csharp_ext.dylib
shared libraries using Homebrew. See above for installation instruction. Installation on a machine where your application is going to be deployed is no different.
Possible cause for the problem is that the grpc_csharp_ext
library is installed, but it has different bitness (32/64bit) than your C# runtime (in case you are using mono) or C# application.