public interface RpcChannel
RpcChannel
represents a communication line to a
Service
which can be used to call that Service
's methods. The Service
may
be running on another machine. Normally, you should not call an RpcChannel
directly, but
instead construct a stub Service
wrapping it. Example:
RpcChannel channel = rpcImpl.newChannel("remotehost.example.com:1234"); RpcController controller = rpcImpl.newController(); MyService service = MyService.newStub(channel); service.myMethod(controller, request, callback);
Starting with version 2.3.0, RPC implementations should not try to build on this, but should instead provide code generator plugins which generate code specific to the particular RPC implementation. This way the generated code can be more appropriate for the implementation in use and can avoid unnecessary layers of indirection.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
callMethod(Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method,
RpcController controller,
Message request,
Message responsePrototype,
RpcCallback<Message> done)
Call the given method of the remote service.
|
void callMethod(Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method, RpcController controller, Message request, Message responsePrototype, RpcCallback<Message> done)
Service.callMethod()
with one important difference: the caller decides the types of the Message
objects, not the callee. The request may be of any type as long as request.getDescriptor() == method.getInputType()
. The response passed to the callback will be
of the same type as responsePrototype
(which must have getDescriptor() ==
method.getOutputType()
).Copyright © 2014–2024 The Apache Software Foundation. All rights reserved.