• Stars
    star
    954
  • Rank 47,914 (Top 1.0 %)
  • Language
    Go
  • License
    Apache License 2.0
  • Created about 9 years ago
  • Updated 6 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

gRPC proxy is a Go reverse proxy that allows for rich routing of gRPC calls with minimum overhead.

gRPC Proxy

Travis Build Go Report Card Go Reference Apache 2.0 License

gRPC Go Proxy server

Project Goal

Build a transparent reverse proxy for gRPC targets that will make it easy to expose gRPC services over the internet. This includes:

  • no needed knowledge of the semantics of requests exchanged in the call (independent rollouts)
  • easy, declarative definition of backends and their mappings to frontends
  • simple round-robin load balancing of inbound requests from a single connection to multiple backends

The project now exists as a proof of concept, with the key piece being the proxy package that is a generic gRPC reverse proxy handler.

Proxy Handler

The package proxy contains a generic gRPC reverse proxy handler that allows a gRPC server to not know about registered handlers or their data types. Please consult the docs, here's an exaple usage.

You can call proxy.NewProxy to create a *grpc.Server that proxies requests.

proxy := proxy.NewProxy(clientConn)

More advanced users will want to define a StreamDirector that can make more complex decisions on what to do with the request.

director = func(ctx context.Context, fullMethodName string) (context.Context, *grpc.ClientConn, error) {
    md, _ := metadata.FromIncomingContext(ctx)
    outCtx = metadata.NewOutgoingContext(ctx, md.Copy())
    return outCtx, cc, nil
	
    // Make sure we never forward internal services.
    if strings.HasPrefix(fullMethodName, "/com.example.internal.") {
        return outCtx, nil, status.Errorf(codes.Unimplemented, "Unknown method")
    }
    
    if ok {
        // Decide on which backend to dial
        if val, exists := md[":authority"]; exists && val[0] == "staging.api.example.com" {
            // Make sure we use DialContext so the dialing can be cancelled/time out together with the context.
            return outCtx, grpc.DialContext(ctx, "api-service.staging.svc.local", grpc.WithCodec(proxy.Codec())), nil
        } else if val, exists := md[":authority"]; exists && val[0] == "api.example.com" {
            return outCtx, grpc.DialContext(ctx, "api-service.prod.svc.local", grpc.WithCodec(proxy.Codec())), nil
        }
    }
    return outCtx, nil, status.Errorf(codes.Unimplemented, "Unknown method")
}

Then you need to register it with a grpc.Server. The server may have other handlers that will be served locally.

server := grpc.NewServer(
    grpc.CustomCodec(proxy.Codec()),
    grpc.UnknownServiceHandler(proxy.TransparentHandler(director)))
pb_test.RegisterTestServiceServer(server, &testImpl{})

Testing

To make debugging a bit simpler, there are some helpers.

testservice contains a method TestTestServiceServerImpl which performs a complete test against the reference implementation of the TestServiceServer.

In proxy_test.go, the test framework spins up a TestServiceServer that it tests the proxy against. To make debugging a bit simpler (eg. if the developer needs to step into google.golang.org/grpc methods), this TestServiceServer can be provided by a server by passing -test-backend=addr to go test. A simple, local-only implementation of TestServiceServer exists in testservice/server.

License

grpc-proxy is released under the Apache 2.0 license. See LICENSE.txt.