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Miguel Veloso edited this page Nov 26, 2019 · 3 revisions

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One of the big news on .NET Core 3.0 is the native support for gRPC. eShopOnContainers makes use of gRPC for internal microservice-to-microservice synchronous communication. Note that, in eShop most of the communication between microservices is decoupled and asynchronous using an Event Bus (supporting either RabbitMQ or Azure Service Bus).

gRPC is a high-performance communication protocol, based on HTTP/2 and protocol buffers. It should be the primary choice for direct synchronous communication between services (as opposed to other protocols like AMQP used for asynchronous communication like queues or pub/sub).

Its main benefits over using HTTP with JSON are:

  • Protocol buffers are a binary, high-performance serialization mechanism. Depending on the language implementation protocol buffers can be up to 8x faster than JSON serialization while the messages can be around 60%-80% smaller.
  • Supports streaming of data
  • Contract between service and client is explicit (by using proto files)

gRPC usage in eShopOnContainers

In the current implementation the use of gRPC is limited to the communication between aggregators and microservices. eShopOnContainers currently has the following synchronous communications between services:

  1. External clients (that is, Xamarin App or Browser) to Api Gateways (BFFs): Use HTTP/REST
  2. From BFFs to Aggregators: Use HTTP/REST
    • This is basically a request forward. Based on the request route, it's forwarded from the BFF to the aggregator. This is performed for "logically complex" requests, when a single client call involves various microservices that are coordinated from the aggregator.
  3. From BFFs to microservices: Use HTTP/REST
    • This is basically a request forward. Based on the request route, it's forwarded from the BFF to the internal microservice. This is performed for simple CRUD requests.
  4. From Aggregators to microservices: Use gRPC

Currently there's no transcoding from gRPC to HTTP/REST. This would allow the use of gRPC from the BFFs to both aggregators and microservices while keeping an HTTP/REST interface to the clients. This gRPC<->HTTP/REST translation could be done at BFF level.

Following microservices expose gRPC endpoints:

  • Ordering API
  • Catalog API
  • Basket API

And following BFFs are gRPC clients:

  • Mobile Shopping
  • Web Shopping

gRPC implementation in eShopOnContainers

gRPC is language agnostic: all services are defined using proto files (usually with the .proto extension). These files are based on the protobuffer language, and define the interface of the service. Based on the proto file, a code for creating the server and the client can be generated for every language. The canonical tool is protoc which supports generate C# code.

Starting from .NET Core 3, gRPC is deeply integrated in both, the tooling and the framework, to make the experience of using gRPC as seamless as possible.

Generating server or client stubs from proto file in .NET Core 3

The tooling, integrated in msbuild (so it can be used by Visual Studio and the dotnet build SDK command), allows the generation of the code needed to create a gRPC server or client based on a proto file. The proto file has to be referenced in the csproj using a <ProtoBuf> tag (inside a <ItemGroup>):

<ItemGroup>
  <Protobuf Include="Protos\catalog.proto" GrpcServices="Client" />
</ItemGroup>

The GrpcServices attributes is for specifying whether a Server or a Client stub has to be generated.

Note You can include as many <Protobuf> tags as you need.

When you compile the code (either by running Build from Visual Studio or dotnet build) all code will be generated and placed in the obj folder. This is intentionally: this code should never be in the source control repository.

obj output with auto-generated files

Creating the gRPC server

The server stub generated code, defines an abstract base class with a set of abstract methods, that you have to implement. You will have one abstract method for every rpc method defined in the proto file.

So, given a proto file that defines the following methods:

service Catalog {
  rpc GetItemById (CatalogItemRequest) returns (CatalogItemResponse) {}
  rpc GetItemsByIds (CatalogItemsRequest) returns (PaginatedItemsResponse) {}

A CatalogBase abstract class will be generated:

public class CatalogService : CatalogBase
{
    public CatalogService()
    {
    }

    public override async Task<CatalogItemResponse> GetItemById(CatalogItemRequest request, ServerCallContext context)
    {
        // Code
    }

    public override async Task<PaginatedItemsResponse> GetItemsByIds(CatalogItemsRequest request, ServerCallContext context)
    {
        // Code
    }
}

All needed C# types for parameters and return values will be generated automatically.

Adding the gRPC pipeline into ASP.NET Core

ASP.NET Core supports direct integration of the gRPC pipeline. You only have to use the method MapGrpcService of the IEndpointRouteBuilder in your Startup class:

app.UseEndpoints(endpoints =>
{
    endpoints.MapDefaultControllerRoute();
    endpoints.MapControllers();
    endpoints.MapGrpcService<CatalogService>();
});

Creating the gRPC client

If you are creating a gRPC client instead of a server, you need to create a GrpChannel and then a gRPC client using this channel:

var channel = GrpcChannel.ForAddress(UrlOfService);
var client = new Basket.BasketClient(channel);

The class Basket.BasketClient is the stub generated from the proto file. Then you can call the methods of the BasketClient class.

Using gRPC without TLS

gRPC works with HTTP/2 only. Usually when a client connects to a server, the connection is done using HTTP1.1 and promoted to HTTP/2 only if both, server and client, support HTTP/2. This promotion is performed using a protocol negotiation, usually implemented using ALPN protocol which requires TLS.

That means, that by default, you need to have a TLS endpoint enabled to be able to use gRPC.

However in internal microservices, maybe you don't have a TLS enabled endpoints (because those endpoints are internal). In this case you have two options:

  • Open a single Kestrel endpoint, listening on HTTP/2
  • Open two Kestrel endpoints, one listening on HTTP1.1 the other listening on HTTP/2

The second option is the one needed if your server must support HTTP1.1 clients other than gRPC clients. Following C# code (in Program.cs) shows the second approach:

WebHost.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
    .ConfigureKestrel(options =>
    {
        options.Listen(IPAddress.Any, ports.httpPort, listenOptions =>
        {
            listenOptions.Protocols = HttpProtocols.Http1AndHttp2;
        });
        options.Listen(IPAddress.Any, ports.grpcPort, listenOptions =>
        {
            listenOptions.Protocols = HttpProtocols.Http2;
        });

    })

But, this is not enough. We need to tell the gRPC client, that can connect directly to a HTTP/2 endpoint, without the need to have TLS. By default ASP.NET doesn't allow a gRPC client to connect to a non-TLS endpoint.

The following lines are needed on the client:

AppContext.SetSwitch("System.Net.Http.SocketsHttpHandler.Http2UnencryptedSupport", true);
AppContext.SetSwitch("System.Net.Http.SocketsHttpHandler.Http2Support", true);

Those settings could be set only once at the beginning of the client.

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