Ethan Buchman 39ee59c26e | 8 years ago | |
---|---|---|
client | 9 years ago | |
server | 8 years ago | |
test | 8 years ago | |
types | 9 years ago | |
LICENSE | 9 years ago | |
Makefile | 8 years ago | |
README.md | 8 years ago | |
circle.yml | 8 years ago | |
rpc_test.go | 8 years ago | |
version.go | 9 years ago |
HTTP RPC server supporting calls via uri params, jsonrpc, and jsonrpc over websockets
Suppose we want to expose the rpc function HelloWorld(name string, num int)
.
As a GET request, it would have URI encoded parameters, and look like:
curl 'http://localhost:8008/hello_world?name="my_world"&num=5'
Note the '
around the url, which is just so bash doesn't ignore the quotes in "my_world"
.
This should also work:
curl http://localhost:8008/hello_world?name=\"my_world\"&num=5
A GET request to /
returns a list of available endpoints.
For those which take arguments, the arguments will be listed in order, with _
where the actual value should be.
As a POST request, we use JSONRPC. For instance, the same request would have this as the body:
{
"jsonrpc":"2.0",
"id":"anything",
"method":"hello_world",
"params":["my_world", 5]
}
Note the params
does not currently support key-value pairs (https://github.com/tendermint/go-rpc/issues/1), so order matters (you can get the order from making a
GET request to /
)
With the above saved in file data.json
, we can make the request with
curl --data @data.json http://localhost:8008
All requests are exposed over websocket in the same form as the POST JSONRPC.
Websocket connections are available at their own endpoint, typically /websocket
,
though this is configurable when starting the server.
Define some types and routes:
// Define a type for results and register concrete versions with go-wire
type Result interface{}
type ResultStatus struct {
Value string
}
var _ = wire.RegisterInterface(
struct{ Result }{},
wire.ConcreteType{&ResultStatus{}, 0x1},
)
// Define some routes
var Routes = map[string]*rpcserver.RPCFunc{
"status": rpcserver.NewRPCFunc(StatusResult, "arg"),
}
// an rpc function
func StatusResult(v string) (Result, error) {
return &ResultStatus{v}, nil
}
Now start the server:
mux := http.NewServeMux()
rpcserver.RegisterRPCFuncs(mux, Routes)
wm := rpcserver.NewWebsocketManager(Routes, nil)
mux.HandleFunc("/websocket", wm.WebsocketHandler)
go func() {
_, err := rpcserver.StartHTTPServer("0.0.0.0:8008", mux)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}()
Note that unix sockets are supported as well (eg. /path/to/socket
instead of 0.0.0.0:8008
)
Now see all available endpoints by sending a GET request to 0.0.0.0:8008
.
Each route is available as a GET request, as a JSONRPCv2 POST request, and via JSONRPCv2 over websockets