This tutorial provides a basic Objective-C programmer’s introduction to working with gRPC.
By walking through this example you’ll learn how to:
It assumes a passing familiarity with protocol buffers. Note that the example in this tutorial uses the proto3 version of the protocol buffers language, which is currently in beta release: you can find out more in the proto3 language guide and the Objective-C generated code guide, and see the release notes for the new version in the protocol buffers GitHub repository.
With 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.
gRPC 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.
The example code for our tutorial is in
grpc/grpc/examples/objective-c/route_guide.
To download the example, clone the grpc
repository by running the following
commands:
$ git clone -b v1.17.1 https://github.com/grpc/grpc
$ cd grpc
$ git submodule update --init
Then change your current directory to examples/objective-c/route_guide
:
$ cd examples/objective-c/route_guide
Our 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.
You also should have Cocoapods 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.
To try the sample app, we need a gRPC server running locally. Let’s compile and run, for example, the C++ server in this repository:
$ pushd ../../cpp/route_guide
$ make
$ ./route_guide_server &
$ popd
Now have Cocoapods generate and install the client library for our .proto files:
$ pod install
(This might have to compile OpenSSL, which takes around 15 minutes if Cocoapods doesn’t have it yet on your computer’s cache).
Finally, 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.
The next sections guide you step-by-step through how this proto service is defined, how to generate a client library from it, and how to create an app that uses that library.
First let’s look at how the service we’re using is defined. A gRPC service and
its method request and response types using protocol
buffers. You can
see the complete .proto file for our example in
examples/protos/route_guide.proto
.
To define a service, you specify a named service
in your .proto file:
service RouteGuide {
...
}
Then 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:
// Obtains the feature at a given position.
rpc GetFeature(Point) returns (Feature) {}
stream
keyword before the response type.// Obtains the Features available within the given Rectangle. Results are
// streamed rather than returned at once (e.g. in a response message with a
// repeated field), as the rectangle may cover a large area and contain a
// huge number of features.
rpc ListFeatures(Rectangle) returns (stream Feature) {}
stream
keyword before the request
type.// Accepts a stream of Points on a route being traversed, returning a
// RouteSummary when traversal is completed.
rpc RecordRoute(stream Point) returns (RouteSummary) {}
stream
keyword
before both the request and the response.// Accepts a stream of RouteNotes sent while a route is being traversed,
// while receiving other RouteNotes (e.g. from other users).
rpc RouteChat(stream RouteNote) returns (stream RouteNote) {}
Our .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:
// Points are represented as latitude-longitude pairs in the E7 representation
// (degrees multiplied by 10**7 and rounded to the nearest integer).
// Latitudes should be in the range +/- 90 degrees and longitude should be in
// the range +/- 180 degrees (inclusive).
message Point {
int32 latitude = 1;
int32 longitude = 2;
}
You 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:
option objc_class_prefix = "RTG";
Next 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.
For simplicity, we’ve provided a Podspec
file
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 (examples/objective-c/route_guide
):
$ pod install
which, before installing the generated library in the XCode project of this sample, runs:
$ protoc -I ../../protos --objc_out=Pods/RouteGuide --objcgrpc_out=Pods/RouteGuide ../../protos/route_guide.proto
Running this command generates the following files under Pods/RouteGuide/
:
RouteGuide.pbobjc.h
, the header which declares your generated message
classes.RouteGuide.pbobjc.m
, which contains the implementation of your message
classes.RouteGuide.pbrpc.h
, the header which declares your generated service
classes.RouteGuide.pbrpc.m
, which contains the implementation of your service
classes.These contain:
RTGRouteGuide
that lets clients call the methods defined in
the RouteGuide
service.You can also use the provided Podspec file to generate client code from any other proto service definition; just replace the name (matching the file name), version, and other metadata.
In this section, we’ll look at creating an Objective-C client for our
RouteGuide
service. You can see our complete example client code in
examples/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).
To call service methods, we first need to create a service 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:
#import <GRPCClient/GRPCCall+Tests.h>
#import <RouteGuide/RouteGuide.pbrpc.h>
static NSString * const kHostAddress = @"localhost:50051";
...
[GRPCCall useInsecureConnectionsForHost:kHostAddress];
RTGRouteGuide *service = [[RTGRouteGuide alloc] initWithHost:kHostAddress];
Notice that before constructing our service object we’ve told the gRPC library
to use insecure connections for that host:port pair. This is because the server
we will be using to test our client doesn’t use
TLS. 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 useInsecureConnectionsForHost:
call isn’t needed,
and the port defaults to 443 if absent.
Now 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.
Calling the simple RPC GetFeature
is as straightforward as calling any other
asynchronous method on Cocoa.
RTGPoint *point = [RTGPoint message];
point.latitude = 40E7;
point.longitude = -74E7;
[service getFeatureWithRequest:point handler:^(RTGFeature *response, NSError *error) {
if (response) {
// Successful response received
} else {
// RPC error
}
}];
As you can see, we create and populate a request protocol buffer object (in our
case RTGPoint
). Then, we call the method on the service object, passing it the
request, and a block to handle the response (or any RPC error). If the RPC
finishes 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 happens, the handler block is called with
a nil
response argument, and we can read the details of the problem from the
error argument.
NSLog(@"Found feature called %@ at %@.", response.name, response.location);
Now let’s look at our streaming methods. Here’s where we call the
response-streaming method ListFeatures
, which results in our client app
receiving a stream of geographical RTGFeature
s:
[service listFeaturesWithRequest:rectangle
eventHandler:^(BOOL done, RTGFeature *response, NSError *error) {
if (response) {
NSLog(@"Found feature at %@ called %@.", response.location, response.name);
} else if (error) {
NSLog(@"RPC error: %@", error);
}
}];
Notice how the signature of the handler block now includes a BOOL done
parameter. The handler block can be called any number of times; only on the last
call is the done
argument value set to YES
. If an error occurs, the RPC
finishes and the handler is called with the arguments (YES, nil, error)
.
The 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:
#import <gRPC/GRXWriter+Immediate.h>
...
RTGPoint *point1 = [RTGPoint message];
point.latitude = 40E7;
point.longitude = -74E7;
RTGPoint *point2 = [RTGPoint message];
point.latitude = 40E7;
point.longitude = -74E7;
GRXWriter *locationsWriter = [GRXWriter writerWithContainer:@[point1, point2]];
[service recordRouteWithRequestsWriter:locationsWriter handler:^(RTGRouteSummary *response, NSError *error) {
if (response) {
NSLog(@"Finished trip with %i points", response.pointCount);
NSLog(@"Passed %i features", response.featureCount);
NSLog(@"Travelled %i meters", response.distance);
NSLog(@"It took %i seconds", response.elapsedTime);
} else {
NSLog(@"RPC error: %@", error);
}
}];
The GRXWriter
protocol is generic enough to allow for asynchronous streams, streams of future values, or even infinite streams.
Finally, 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.
[service routeChatWithRequestsWriter:notesWriter handler:^(BOOL done, RTGRouteNote *note, NSError *error) {
if (note) {
NSLog(@"Got message %@ at %@", note.message, note.location);
} else if (error) {
NSLog(@"RPC error: %@", error);
}
if (done) {
NSLog(@"Chat ended.");
}
}];
The 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.