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Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -07001#gRPC Basics: Objective-C
2
3This tutorial provides a basic Objective-C programmer's introduction to working with gRPC. By walking through this example you'll learn how to:
4
5- Define a service in a .proto file.
6- Generate client code using the protocol buffer compiler.
7- Use the Objective-C gRPC API to write a simple client for your service.
8
9It assumes a passing familiarity with [protocol buffers](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/overview). Note that the example in this tutorial uses the proto3 version of the protocol buffers language, which is currently in alpha release: you can find out more in the [proto3 language guide](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/proto3) and see the [release notes](https://github.com/google/protobuf/releases) for the new version in the protocol buffers Github repository.
10
11This isn't a comprehensive guide to using gRPC in Objective-C: more reference documentation is coming soon.
12
13- [Why use gRPC?](#why-grpc)
14- [Example code and setup](#setup)
15- [Try it out!](#try)
16- [Defining the service](#proto)
17- [Generating client code](#protoc)
18- [Creating the client](#client)
19
20<a name="why-grpc"></a>
21## Why use gRPC?
22
23With gRPC you can define your service once in a .proto file and implement clients and servers in any of gRPC's supported languages, which in turn can be run in environments ranging from servers inside Google to your own tablet - all the complexity of communication between different languages and environments is handled for you by gRPC. You also get all the advantages of working with protocol buffers, including efficient serialization, a simple IDL, and easy interface updating.
24
25gRPC and proto3 are specially suited for mobile clients: gRPC is implemented on top of HTTP/2, which results in network bandwidth savings over using HTTP/1.1. Serialization and parsing of the proto binary format is more efficient than the equivalent JSON, resulting in CPU and battery savings. And proto3 uses a runtime that has been optimized over the years at Google to keep code size to a minimum. The latter is important in Objective-C, because the ability of the compiler to strip unused code is limited by the dynamic nature of the language.
26
27
28<a name="setup"></a>
29## Example code and setup
30
31The example code for our tutorial is in [grpc/grpc-common/objective-c/route_guide](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common/tree/master/objective-c/route_guide). To download the example, clone the `grpc-common` repository by running the following command:
32```shell
33$ git clone https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common.git
34```
35
36Then change your current directory to `grpc-common/objective-c/route_guide`:
37```shell
38$ cd grpc-common/objective-c/route_guide
39```
40
41Our example is a simple route mapping application that lets clients get information about features on their route, create a summary of their route, and exchange route information such as traffic updates with the server and other clients.
42
43You also should have [Cocoapods](https://cocoapods.org/#install) installed, as well as the relevant tools to generate the client library code (and a server in another language, for testing). You can obtain the latter by following [these setup instructions](https://github.com/grpc/homebrew-grpc).
44
45
46<a name="try"></a>
47## Try it out!
48
49To try the sample app, we need a gRPC server running locally. Let's compile and run, for example, the C++ server in this repository:
50
51```shell
52$ pushd ../../cpp/route_guide
53$ make
54$ ./route_guide_server &
55$ popd
56```
57
58Now have Cocoapods generate and install the client library for our .proto files:
59
60```shell
61$ pod install
62```
63
64(This might have to compile OpenSSL, which takes around 15 minutes if Cocoapods doesn't have it yet on your computer's cache).
65
66Finally, open the XCode workspace created by Cocoapods, and run the app. You can check the calling code in `ViewControllers.m` and see the results in XCode's log console.
67
68The next sections guide you step-by-step through the creation of this proto service, the client library generated from it, and the app that uses that library.
69
70
71<a name="proto"></a>
72## Defining the service
73
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -070074Our first step is to define the gRPC *service* and the method *request* and *response* types using [protocol buffers](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/overview). You can see the complete .proto file in [`grpc-common/protos/route_guide.proto`](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common/blob/master/protos/route_guide.proto).
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -070075
76To define a service, you specify a named `service` in your .proto file:
77
78```protobuf
79service RouteGuide {
80 ...
81}
82```
83
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -070084Then you define `rpc` methods inside your service definition, specifying their request and response types. Protocol buffers let you define four kinds of service method, all of which are used in the `RouteGuide` service:
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -070085
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -070086- A *simple RPC* where the client sends a request to the server and receives a response later, just like a normal remote procedure call.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -070087```protobuf
88 // Obtains the feature at a given position.
89 rpc GetFeature(Point) returns (Feature) {}
90```
91
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -070092- A *response-streaming RPC* where the client sends a request to the server and gets back a stream of response messages. You specify a response-streaming method by placing the `stream` keyword before the *response* type.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -070093```protobuf
94 // Obtains the Features available within the given Rectangle. Results are
95 // streamed rather than returned at once (e.g. in a response message with a
96 // repeated field), as the rectangle may cover a large area and contain a
97 // huge number of features.
98 rpc ListFeatures(Rectangle) returns (stream Feature) {}
99```
100
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700101- A *request-streaming RPC* where the client sends a sequence of messages to the server. Once the client has finished writing the messages, it waits for the server to read them all and return its response. You specify a request-streaming method by placing the `stream` keyword before the *request* type.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700102```protobuf
103 // Accepts a stream of Points on a route being traversed, returning a
104 // RouteSummary when traversal is completed.
105 rpc RecordRoute(stream Point) returns (RouteSummary) {}
106```
107
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700108- A *bidirectional streaming RPC* where both sides send a sequence of messages to the other. The two streams operate independently, so clients and servers can read and write in whatever order they like: for example, the server could wait to receive all the client messages before writing its responses, or it could alternately read a message then write a message, or some other combination of reads and writes. The order of messages in each stream is preserved. You specify this type of method by placing the `stream` keyword before both the request and the response.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700109```protobuf
110 // Accepts a stream of RouteNotes sent while a route is being traversed,
111 // while receiving other RouteNotes (e.g. from other users).
112 rpc RouteChat(stream RouteNote) returns (stream RouteNote) {}
113```
114
115Our .proto file also contains protocol buffer message type definitions for all the request and response types used in our service methods - for example, here's the `Point` message type:
116```protobuf
117// Points are represented as latitude-longitude pairs in the E7 representation
118// (degrees multiplied by 10**7 and rounded to the nearest integer).
119// Latitudes should be in the range +/- 90 degrees and longitude should be in
120// the range +/- 180 degrees (inclusive).
121message Point {
122 int32 latitude = 1;
123 int32 longitude = 2;
124}
125```
126
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700127You can specify a prefix to be used for your generated classes by adding the `objc_class_prefix` option at the top of the file. For example:
128```protobuf
129option objc_class_prefix = "RTG";
130```
131
132
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700133<a name="protoc"></a>
134## Generating client code
135
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700136Next we need to generate the gRPC client interfaces from our .proto service definition. We do this using the protocol buffer compiler (`protoc`) with a special gRPC Objective-C plugin.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700137
138For simplicity, we've provided a [Podspec file](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common/blob/master/objective-c/route_guide/RouteGuide.podspec) that runs `protoc` for you with the appropriate plugin, input, and output, and describes how to compile the generated files. You just need to run in this directory:
139
140```shell
141$ pod install
142```
143
144which, before installing the generated library in the XCode project of this sample, runs:
145
146```shell
147$ protoc -I ../../protos --objc_out=Pods/RouteGuide --objcgrpc_out=Pods/RouteGuide ../../protos/route_guide.proto
148```
149
150Running this command generates the following files in under `Pods/RouteGuide/`:
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700151- `RouteGuide.pbobjc.h`, the header which declares your generated message classes.
152- `RouteGuide.pbobjc.m`, which contains the implementation of your message classes.
153- `RouteGuide.pbrpc.h`, the header which declares your generated service classes.
154- `RouteGuide.pbrpc.m`, which contains the implementation of your service classes.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700155
156These contain:
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700157- All the protocol buffer code to populate, serialize, and retrieve our request and response message types.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700158- A class called `RTGRouteGuide` that for clients to call with the methods defined in the `RouteGuide` service.
159
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700160The provided Podspec file works for any proto library you define; you just need to replace the name (matching the file name), version, and other metadata.
161
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700162
163<a name="client"></a>
164## Creating the client
165
166In this section, we'll look at creating an Objective-C client for our `RouteGuide` service. You can see our complete example client code in [grpc-common/objective-c/route_guide/ViewControllers.m](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-common/blob/master/objective-c/route_guide/ViewControllers.m). (Note: In your apps, for maintainability and readability reasons, you shouldn't put all of your view controllers in a single file; it's done here only to simplify the learning process).
167
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700168### Constructing a client object
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700169
170To call service methods, we first need to create a client object, an instance of the generated `RTGRouteGuide` class. The designated initializer of the class expects a `NSString *` with the server address and port we want to connect to:
171
172```objective-c
173#import <RouteGuide/RouteGuide.pbrpc.h>
174
175static NSString * const kHostAddress = @"http://localhost:50051";
176
177...
178
179RTGRouteGuide *client = [[RTGRouteGuide alloc] initWithHost:kHostAddress];
180```
181
Jorge Canizales69cd3ef2015-06-08 23:40:01 -0700182Notice that we've specified the HTTP scheme in the host address. This is because the server we will be using to test our client doesn't use [TLS](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_Layer_Security). This is fine because it will be running locally on our development machine. The most common case, though, is connecting with a gRPC server on the internet, running gRPC over TLS. For that case, the HTTPS scheme can be specified (or no scheme at all, as HTTPS is the default value). The default value of the port is that of the scheme selected: 443 for HTTPS and 80 for HTTP.
Jorge Canizales5436cf12015-06-08 23:06:54 -0700183
184
185### Calling service methods
186
187Now let's look at how we call our service methods. As you will see, all these methods are asynchronous, so you can call them from the main thread of your app without worrying about freezing your UI or the OS killing your app.
188
189#### Simple RPC
190
191Calling the simple RPC `GetFeature` is nearly as straightforward as calling any other aynschronous method on Cocoa.
192
193```objective-c
194RTGPoint *point = [RTGPoint message];
195point.latitude = 40E7;
196point.longitude = -74E7;
197
198[client getFeatureWithRequest:point handler:^(RTGFeature *response, NSError *error) {
199 if (response) {
200 // Successful response received
201 } else {
202 // RPC error
203 }
204}];
205```
206
207As you can see, we create and populate a request protocol buffer object (in our case `RTGPoint`). Then, we call the method on the client object, passing it the request, and a block to handle the response (or any RPC error). If the RPC finished successfully, the handler block is called with a `nil` error argument, and we can read the response information from the server from the response argument. If, instead, some RPC error happened, the handler block is called with a `nil` response argument, and we can read the details of the problem from the error argument.
208
209```objective-c
210NSLog(@"Found feature called %@ at %@.", response.name, response.location);
211```
212
213#### Streaming RPCs
214
215Now let's look at our streaming methods. Here's where we call the response-streaming method `ListFeatures`, which results in our client receiving a stream of geographical `RTGFeature`s:
216
217```objective-c
218[client listFeaturesWithRequest:rectangle handler:^(BOOL done, RTGFeature *response, NSError *error) {
219 if (response) {
220 // Element of the stream of responses received
221 } else if (error) {
222 // RPC error; the stream is over.
223 }
224 if (done) {
225 // The stream is over (all the responses were received, or an error occured). Do any cleanup.
226 }
227}];
228```
229
230Notice how the signature of the handler block now includes a `BOOL done` parameter. The block will be called any number of times; only on the last call will the `done` argument be `YES`. If an error occurs, the RPC will be finished and the handler will be called with arguments `(YES, nil, error)`.
231
232The request-streaming method `RecordRoute` expects a stream of `RTGPoint`s from the cient. This stream is passed to the method as an object that conforms to the `GRXWriter` protocol. The simplest way to create one is to initialize one from a `NSArray` object:
233
234
235```objective-c
236#import <gRPC/GRXWriter+Immediate.h>
237
238...
239
240RTGPoint *point1 = [RTGPoint message];
241point.latitude = 40E7;
242point.longitude = -74E7;
243
244RTGPoint *point2 = [RTGPoint message];
245point.latitude = 40E7;
246point.longitude = -74E7;
247
248GRXWriter *locationsWriter = [GRXWriter writerWithContainer:@[point1, point2]];
249
250[client recordRouteWithRequestsWriter:locationsWriter handler:^(RTGRouteSummary *response, NSError *error) {
251 if (response) {
252 NSLog(@"Finished trip with %i points", response.pointCount);
253 NSLog(@"Passed %i features", response.featureCount);
254 NSLog(@"Travelled %i meters", response.distance);
255 NSLog(@"It took %i seconds", response.elapsedTime);
256 } else {
257 NSLog(@"RPC error: %@", error);
258 }
259}];
260
261```
262
263The `GRXWriter` protocol is generic enough to allow for asynchronous streams, streams of future values, or even infinite streams.
264
265Finally, let's look at our bidirectional streaming RPC `RouteChat()`. The way to call a bidirectional streaming RPC is just a combination of how to call request-streaming RPCs and response-streaming RPCs.
266
267```objective-c
268[client routeChatWithRequestsWriter:notesWriter handler:^(BOOL done, RTGRouteNote *note, NSError *error) {
269 if (note) {
270 NSLog(@"Got message %@ at %@", note.message, note.location);
271 } else if (error) {
272 NSLog(@"RPC error: %@", error);
273 }
274 if (done) {
275 NSLog(@"Chat ended.");
276 }
277}];
278```
279
280The semantics for the handler block and the `GRXWriter` argument here are exactly the same as for our request-streaming and response-streaming methods. Although both client and server will always get the other's messages in the order they were written, the two streams operate completely independently.