Book Image

gRPC Go for Professionals

By : Clément Jean
Book Image

gRPC Go for Professionals

By: Clément Jean

Overview of this book

In recent years, the popularity of microservice architecture has surged, bringing forth a new set of requirements. Among these, efficient communication between the different services takes center stage, and that's where gRPC shines. This book will take you through creating gRPC servers and clients in an efficient, secure, and scalable way. However, communication is just one aspect of microservices, so this book goes beyond that to show you how to deploy your application on Kubernetes and configure other tools that are needed for making your application more resilient. With these tools at your disposal, you’ll be ready to get started with using gRPC in a microservice architecture. In gRPC Go for Professionals, you'll explore core concepts such as message transmission and the role of Protobuf in serialization and deserialization. Through a step-by-step implementation of a TODO list API, you’ll see the different features of gRPC in action. You’ll then learn different approaches for testing your services and debugging your API endpoints. Finally, you’ll get to grips with deploying the application services via Docker images and Kubernetes.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
10
Epilogue

Beware the unpacked repeated field

The last consideration is not helpful for our TODO API but is worth mentioning. In Protobuf, we have different ways of encoding repeated fields. We have packed and unpacked repeated fields.

Packed repeated fields

To understand, let us see an example of a packed repeated field. Let us say that we have the following message:

message RepeatedUInt32Values {
  repeated uint32 values = 1;
}

It is a simple list of the uint32 scalar type. If we serialized this with the values 1, 2, and 3, we would get the following result:

$ cat repeated_scalar.txt | protoc --encode=
 RepeatedUInt32Values proto/repeated.proto | hexdump -C
0a 03 01 02 03
00000005

repeated_scalar.txt from the preceding command contains the following:

values: 1
values: 2
values: 3

This is an example of a packed repeated field because of how the field wraps multiple values. You might think that this is normal since this is a list, but we are going to see later...