gRPC Swift versions v0.x
based on gRPC-Core will soon be replaced with a re-implementation based on SwiftNIO.
We strongly suggest that new projects use the re-implementation from the nio
branch which we consider to be production ready.
Please see DEPRECATION.md for more information.
This repository contains an experimental Swift gRPC API and code generator.
It is intended for use with Apple's
swift-protobuf
support for Protocol Buffers. Both projects contain
code generation plugins for protoc
, Google's
Protocol Buffer compiler, and both contain libraries
of supporting code that is needed to build and run
the generated code.
APIs and generated code is provided for both gRPC clients and servers, and can be built either with Xcode or the Swift Package Manager. Support is provided for all four gRPC API styles (Unary, Server Streaming, Client Streaming, and Bidirectional Streaming) and connections can be made either over secure (TLS) or insecure channels.
The Echo example provides a comprehensive demonstration of currently-supported features.
Swift Package Manager builds may also be made on Linux systems. Please see DOCKER.md and LINUX.md for details.
Swift gRPC is currently available from CocoaPods.
To integrate, add the following line to your Podfile
:
pod 'SwiftGRPC'
Then, run pod install
from command line and use your project's generated
.xcworkspace
file.
When not using CocoaPods, Swift gRPC includes vendored copies of the gRPC Core library and BoringSSL (an OpenSSL fork that is used by the gRPC Core). These are built automatically in Swift Package Manager builds.
After building your project, add the generated
SwiftGRPC.xcodeproj
to your project, and add build dependencies
on BoringSSL, CgRPC, and SwiftGRPC.
Please also note that your project will need to include the
SwiftProtobuf.xcodeproj
from
Swift Protobuf and
the source files that you generate with protoc
/plugins.
See Echo for a working Xcode-based example, and don't hesitate to file issues if you find any problems.
The recommended way to use Swift gRPC is to first define an API using the Protocol Buffer language and then use the Protocol Buffer Compiler and the Swift Protobuf and Swift gRPC plugins to generate the necessary support code.
Binary releases of protoc
, the Protocol Buffer Compiler, are
available on GitHub.
To build the plugins, run make plugin
in the main directory.
This uses the Swift Package Manager to build both of the necessary
plugins: protoc-gen-swift
, which generates Protocol Buffer support code
and protoc-gen-swiftgrpc
, which generates gRPC interface code.
To install these plugins, just copy the two executables (protoc-gen-swift
and protoc-gen-swiftgrpc
) that show up in the main directory into a directory that is part of your PATH
environment variable.
To use the plugins, protoc
and both plugins should be in your
search path (see above). Invoke them with commands like the following:
protoc <your proto files> \
--swift_out=. \
--swiftgrpc_out=.
By convention the --swift_out
option invokes the protoc-gen-swift
plugin and --swiftgrpc_out
invokes protoc-gen-swiftgrpc
.
To pass extra parameters to the plugin, use a comma-separated parameter list separated from the output directory by a colon.
Flag | Values | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Visibility |
Internal /Public |
Internal |
ACL of generated code |
Server |
true /false |
true |
Whether to generate server code |
Client |
true /false |
true |
Whether to generate client code |
Async |
true /false |
true |
Whether to generate asynchronous code |
Sync |
true /false |
true |
Whether to generate synchronous code |
Implementations |
true /false |
true |
Whether to generate protocols and non-test service code. Toggling this to false is mostly useful when combined with TestStubs=true to generate files containing only test stub code |
TestStubs |
true /false |
false |
Whether to generate test stub code |
FileNaming |
FullPath /PathToUnderscores /DropPath |
FullPath |
How to handle the naming of generated sources |
ExtraModuleImports |
String |
`` | Extra module to import in generated code. This parameter may be included multiple times to import more than one module |
Example:
$ protoc <your proto> --swiftgrpc_out=Client=true,Server=false:.
Most grpc-swift
development is done with the Swift Package Manager.
For usage in Xcode projects, we rely on the swift package generate-xcodeproj
command to generate an Xcode project for the grpc-swift
core libraries.
The top-level Makefile uses the Swift Package Manager to generate an Xcode project for the SwiftGRPC package:
$ make && make project
This will create SwiftGRPC.xcodeproj
, which you should
add to your project, along with setting the necessary build dependencies
mentioned above.
While the recommended way to use gRPC is with Protocol Buffers and generated code, at its core gRPC is a powerful HTTP/2-based communication system that can support arbitrary payloads. As such, each gRPC library includes low-level interfaces that can be used to directly build API clients and servers with no generated code. For an example of this in Swift, please see the Simple example.
grpc-swift depends on Swift, Xcode, and swift-protobuf. We are currently testing with the following versions:
- Xcode 10.2
- Swift 4.2 / 5.0
- swift-protobuf 1.5.0
GRPC
is a clean-room implementation of the gRPC protocol on top of the SwiftNIO
library; you can find the latest version of that implementation on the nio
branch. We consider this implementation production-ready and are planning to sunset the gRPC-Core implementation within the next few months. We strongly recommend using the nio
branch for all new projects.
You may also want to have a look at this presentation for more details on the motivation for switching to SwiftNIO.
grpc-swift is released under the same license as gRPC, repeated in LICENSE.
Please get involved! See our guidelines for contributing.
When issuing a new release, the following steps should be followed:
-
Run the CocoaPods linter to ensure that there are no new warnings/errors:
$ pod spec lint SwiftGRPC.podspec
-
Update the Carthage Xcode project (diff will need to be checked in with the version bump):
$ make project-carthage
-
Bump the version in the
SwiftGRPC.podspec
file -
Merge these changes, then create a new
Release
with correspondingTag
. Be sure to include a list of changes in the message -
Push the update to the CocoaPods specs repo:
$ pod trunk push