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# ADR 057: RPC |
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## Changelog |
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- 19-05-2020: created |
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## Context |
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Currently the RPC layer of Tendermint is using a variant of the JSON-RPC protocol. This ADR is meant to serve as a pro/con list for possible alternatives and JSON-RPC. |
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There are currently two options being discussed: gRPC & JSON-RPC. |
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### JSON-RPC |
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JSON-RPC is a JSON-based RPC protocol. Tendermint has implemented its own variant of JSON-RPC which is not compatible with the [JSON-RPC 2.0 specification](https://www.jsonrpc.org/specification). |
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**Pros:** |
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- Easy to use & implement (by default) |
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- Well-known and well-understood by users and integrators |
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- Integrates reasonably well with web infrastructure (proxies, API gateways, service meshes, caches, etc) |
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- human readable encoding (by default) |
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**Cons:** |
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- No schema support |
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- RPC clients must be hand-written |
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- Streaming not built into protocol |
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- Underspecified types (e.g. numbers and timestamps) |
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- Tendermint has its own implementation (not standards compliant, maintenance overhead) |
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- High maintenance cost associated to this |
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- Stdlib `jsonrpc` package only supports JSON-RPC 1.0, no dominant package for JSON-RPC 2.0 |
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- Tooling around documentation/specification (e.g. Swagger) could be better |
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- JSON data is larger (offset by HTTP compression) |
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- Serializing is slow ([~100% marshal, ~400% unmarshal](https://github.com/alecthomas/go_serialization_benchmarks)); insignificant in absolute terms |
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- Specification was last updated in 2013 and is way behind Swagger/OpenAPI |
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### gRPC + gRPC-gateway (REST + Swagger) |
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gRPC is a high performant RPC framework. It has been battle tested by a large number of users and is heavily relied on and maintained by countless large corporations. |
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**Pros:** |
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- Efficient data retrieval for users, lite clients and other protocols |
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- Easily implemented in supported languages (Go, Dart, JS, TS, rust, Elixir, Haskell, ...) |
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- Defined schema with richer type system (Protocol Buffers) |
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- Can use common schemas and types across all protocols and data stores (RPC, ABCI, blocks, etc) |
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- Established conventions for forwards- and backwards-compatibility |
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- Bi-directional streaming |
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- Servers and clients are be autogenerated in many languages (e.g. Tendermint-rs) |
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- Auto-generated swagger documentation for REST API |
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- Backwards and forwards compatibility guarantees enforced at the protocol level. |
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- Can be used with different codecs (JSON, CBOR, ...) |
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**Cons:** |
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- Complex system involving cross-language schemas, code generation, and custom protocols |
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- Type system does not always map cleanly to native language type system; integration woes |
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- Many common types require Protobuf plugins (e.g. timestamps and duration) |
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- Generated code may be non-idiomatic and hard to use |
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- Migration will be disruptive and laborious |
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## Decision |
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> This section explains all of the details of the proposed solution, including implementation details. |
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> It should also describe affects / corollary items that may need to be changed as a part of this. |
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> If the proposed change will be large, please also indicate a way to do the change to maximize ease of review. |
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> (e.g. the optimal split of things to do between separate PR's) |
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## Status |
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> A decision may be "proposed" if it hasn't been agreed upon yet, or "accepted" once it is agreed upon. If a later ADR changes or reverses a decision, it may be marked as "deprecated" or "superseded" with a reference to its replacement. |
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{Deprecated|Proposed|Accepted} |
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## Consequences |
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> This section describes the consequences, after applying the decision. All consequences should be summarized here, not just the "positive" ones. |
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### Positive |
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### Negative |
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### Neutral |
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## References |
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> Are there any relevant PR comments, issues that led up to this, or articles referenced for why we made the given design choice? If so link them here! |
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- {reference link} |