gruf 2.7.0 → 2.7.1
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- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/CHANGELOG.md +4 -0
- data/README.md +5 -500
- data/lib/gruf/client.rb +3 -0
- data/lib/gruf/configuration.rb +1 -0
- data/lib/gruf/version.rb +1 -1
- metadata +3 -3
checksums.yaml
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz: 7b2f3d645e99fc49e53a97e75b5c59c6c9c1d35c2544642f52bc7607beb7aab0
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SHA512:
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metadata.gz:
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metadata.gz: 93c5133334095c2319e555d902b8f597c01ec5cdc1ecd48d670fcb247ee45df4304c7623f91f50142cd10277175f22ec7c6a6ea428f70834afeee0bfc3b1373d
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data.tar.gz: 538bee3d11ee7a1fa45b375304857cf4f8daa18f0ef545e36a69a6d147a0b8cd911b759a2bdc7b9247e882829c95ae9ebc29a72852d126985555e8970b24694e
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data/CHANGELOG.md
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@@ -2,6 +2,10 @@ Changelog for the gruf gem. This includes internal history before the gem was ma
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### Pending release
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### 2.7.1
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- Add `channel_credentials` option to `Gruf::Client` and `default_channel_credentials` option to `Gruf::Configuration` [#85] [#87]
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### 2.7.0
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10
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- Add hook support for executing code paths before a server is started, and after a server stops
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data/README.md
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@@ -17,515 +17,20 @@ up fast and efficiently at scale. Some of its features include:
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still preserving gRPC BadStatus codes
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* Server and client execution timings in responses
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gruf currently has active support for gRPC 1.10.x+. gruf is compatible and tested with Ruby 2.2-2.
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gruf currently has active support for gRPC 1.10.x+. gruf is compatible and tested with Ruby 2.2-2.6.
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gruf is also not [Rails](https://github.com/rails/rails)-specific, and can be used in any Ruby framework
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(such as [Grape](https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape), for instance).
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(such as [Grape](https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape) or [dry-rb](https://dry-rb.org/), for instance).
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### Getting Started
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```
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Then in an initializer or before use:
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```ruby
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require 'gruf'
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```
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Make sure to review [UPGRADING.md](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf/blob/master/UPGRADING.md)
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if you are upgrading gruf between minor or major versions.
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### Client
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Add an initializer:
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```ruby
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require 'gruf'
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Gruf.configure do |c|
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c.default_client_host = 'grpc.service.com:9003'
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end
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```
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If you don't explicitly set `default_client_host`, you will need to pass it into the options, like so:
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```ruby
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client = ::Gruf::Client.new(service: ::Demo::ThingService, options: {hostname: 'grpc.service.com:9003'})
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```
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From there, you can instantiate a client given a stub service (say on an SslCertificates proto with a GetSslCertificate call):
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```ruby
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require 'gruf'
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id = args[:id].to_i.presence || 1
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begin
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client = ::Gruf::Client.new(service: ::Demo::ThingService)
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response = client.call(:GetMyThing, id: id)
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puts response.message.inspect
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rescue Gruf::Client::Error => e
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puts e.error.inspect
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end
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```
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Note this returns a response object. The response object can provide `trailing_metadata` as well as a `execution_time`.
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### SynchronizedClient
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SynchronizedClient wraps Client with some additional behavior to help prevent generating spikes
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of redundant requests. If multiple calls to the same endpoint with the same parameters are made,
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the first one will be executed and the following ones will block, waiting for the first result.
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```ruby
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require 'gruf'
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require 'thwait'
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id = args[:id].to_i.presence || 1
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client = ::Gruf::SynchronizedClient.new(service: ::Demo::ThingService)
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thread1 = Thread.new { client.call(:GetMyThing, id: id) }
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thread2 = Thread.new { client.call(:GetMyThing, id: id) }
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ThreadsWait.all_waits(thread1, thread2)
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```
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In the above example, thread1 will make the rpc call, thread2 will block until the call is complete, and then
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will get the same value without making a second rpc call.
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You can also skip this behavior for certain methods if desired.
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```ruby
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require 'gruf'
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require 'thwait'
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id = args[:id].to_i.presence || 1
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client = ::Gruf::SynchronizedClient.new(service: ::Demo::ThingService, options: { unsynchronized_methods: [:GetMyThing] })
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thread1 = Thread.new { client.call(:GetMyThing, id: id) }
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thread2 = Thread.new { client.call(:GetMyThing, id: id) }
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ThreadsWait.all_waits(thread1, thread2)
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```
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In the above example, thread1 and thread2 will make rpc calls in parallel, in the same way as if you had used
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`Gruf::Client`.
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### Client Interceptors
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Gruf comes with an assistance class for client interceptors that you can use - or you can use the native gRPC core
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interceptors. Either way, you pass them into the `client_options` when creating a client:
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```ruby
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class MyInterceptor < Gruf::Interceptors::ClientInterceptor
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def call(request_context:)
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logger.info "Got method #{request_context.method}!"
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yield
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end
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end
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::Gruf::Client.new(
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service: ::Demo::ThingService,
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client_options: {
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interceptors: [MyInterceptor.new]
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})
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```
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The `interceptors` option in `client_options` can accept either a `GRPC::ClientInterceptor` class or a
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`Gruf::Interceptors::ClientInterceptor`, since the latter just extends the former. The gruf client interceptors
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take an optional alternative approach: rather than having separate methods for each request type, it provides a default
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`call` method that passes in a `RequestContext` object, which has the following attributes:
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* *type* - A Symbol of the type of request (`request_response`, `server_streamer`, etc)
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* *requests* An enumerable of requests being sent. For unary requests, this is a single request in an array
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* *call* - The `GRPC::ActiveCall` object
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* *method* - The Method being called
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* *metadata* - The hash of outgoing metadata
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Note that you _must_ yield back the block when building a client interceptor, so that the call can be executed.
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### Server
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Add an initializer:
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```ruby
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require 'gruf'
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Gruf.configure do |c|
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c.server_binding_url = 'grpc.service.com:9003'
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end
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```
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Next, setup some handlers based on your proto configurations in `/app/rpc/`. For example, for the Thing service, with a
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GetThingReq/GetThingResp call based on this proto:
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```proto
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syntax = "proto3";
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package demo;
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service Jobs {
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rpc GetJob(GetJobReq) returns (GetJobResp) { }
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}
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message GetJobReq {
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uint64 id = 1;
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}
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message GetJobResp {
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uint64 id = 1;
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string name = 2;
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}
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```
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You'd have this handler in `/app/rpc/demo/job_controller.rb`
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```ruby
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module Demo
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class JobController < ::Gruf::Controllers::Base
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bind ::Demo::Jobs::Service
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##
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# @return [Demo::GetJobResp] The job response
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#
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def get_job
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thing = Job.find(request.message.id)
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Demo::GetJobResp.new(id: thing.id)
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rescue
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fail!(:not_found, :job_not_found, "Failed to find Job with ID: #{request.message.id}")
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end
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end
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end
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```
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Finally, you can start the server by running:
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```bash
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bundle exec gruf
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```
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### Command-Line Options
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Gruf comes baked in with a few command-line options for the binstub:
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| Option | Description |
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| ------ | ----------- |
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| -h, --help | Displays the help message |
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| -v, --version | Displays the gruf version |
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| --host | Specify the server binding host |
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| --suppress-default-interceptors | Do not use the default interceptors for the server |
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| --backtrace-on-error | Push backtraces on exceptions to the error serializer |
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These options will override whatever is passed in the Gruf configure block or
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initializer.
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### Basic Authentication
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Gruf comes packaged in with a Basic Authentication interceptor. It takes in an array of supported
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username and password pairs (or password-only credentials).
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In Server:
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```ruby
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Gruf.configure do |c|
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c.interceptors.use(
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Gruf::Interceptors::Authentication::Basic,
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credentials: [{
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username: 'my-username-here',
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password: 'my-password-here',
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},{
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username: 'another-username',
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password: 'another-password',
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},{
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password: 'a-password-only'
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}]
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)
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end
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```
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In Client:
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```ruby
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require 'gruf'
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id = args[:id].to_i.presence || 1
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options = {
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username: ENV.fetch('DEMO_THING_SERVICE_USERNAME'),
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password: ENV.fetch('DEMO_THING_SERVICE_PASSWORD')
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}
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begin
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client = ::Gruf::Client.new(service: ::Demo::ThingService, options: options)
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response = client.call(:GetMyThing, id: id)
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puts response.message.inspect
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rescue Gruf::Client::Error => e
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puts e.error.inspect
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end
|
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```
|
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|
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Supporting an array of credentials allow for unique credentials per service, or for easy credential
|
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rotation with zero downtime.
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### SSL Configuration
|
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|
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We don't recommend using TLS for gRPC, but instead using something like [linkerd](https://linkerd.io) for TLS
|
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encryption between services. If you need it, however, this library supports TLS.
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For the client, you'll need to point to the public certificate:
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```ruby
|
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::Gruf::Client.new(
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service: Demo::ThingService,
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options: {
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ssl_certificate: 'x509 public certificate here',
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# OR
|
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ssl_certificate_file: '/path/to/my.crt'
|
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}
|
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)
|
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```
|
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-
|
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|
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If you want to run a server you'll need both the CRT and the key file if you want to do credentialed auth:
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|
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```ruby
|
289
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Gruf.configure do |c|
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c.use_ssl = true
|
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c.ssl_crt_file = "#{Rails.root}/config/ssl/#{Rails.env}.crt"
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c.ssl_key_file = "#{Rails.root}/config/ssl/#{Rails.env}.key"
|
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|
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end
|
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```
|
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|
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### GRPC::RpcServer configuration
|
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To customize parameters for the underlying GRPC::RpcServer, such as the size of the gRPC thread pool,
|
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you can pass them in via Gruf.rpc\_server\_options.
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|
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```ruby
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Gruf.configure do |c|
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# The size of the underlying thread pool. No more concurrent requests can be made
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# than the size of the thread pool.
|
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c.rpc_server_options[:pool_size] = 100
|
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end
|
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```
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|
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## Server Interceptors
|
309
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|
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gruf supports interceptors around the grpc server calls, allowing you to perform actions around your service
|
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method calls. This can be used to add tracing data, connection resets in the grpc thread pool, further
|
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instrumentation, and other things.
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|
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Adding a hook is as simple as creating a class that extends `Gruf::Interceptor::ServerInterceptor`,
|
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and a `call` method that yields control to get the method result:
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|
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```ruby
|
318
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class MyInterceptor < ::Gruf::Interceptors::ServerInterceptor
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def call
|
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yield
|
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end
|
322
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end
|
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```
|
324
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|
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Interceptors have access to the `request` object, which is the `Gruf::Controller::Request` object
|
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described above.
|
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|
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### Failing in an Interceptor
|
329
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-
|
330
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Interceptors can fail requests with the same method calls as a controller:
|
331
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|
332
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```ruby
|
333
|
-
class MyFailingInterceptor < ::Gruf::Interceptors::ServerInterceptor
|
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|
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def call
|
335
|
-
result = yield # this returns the protobuf message
|
336
|
-
unless result.dont_hijack
|
337
|
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# we'll assume this "dont_hijack" attribute exists on the message for this example
|
338
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fail!(:internal, :hijacked, 'Hijack all the things!')
|
339
|
-
end
|
340
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result
|
341
|
-
end
|
342
|
-
end
|
343
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-
```
|
344
|
-
|
345
|
-
Similarly, you can raise `GRPC::BadStatus` calls to trigger similar errors without accompanying metadata.
|
346
|
-
|
347
|
-
### Configuring Interceptors
|
348
|
-
|
349
|
-
From there, the interceptor can be added to the server manually (if not executing via `bundle exec gruf`):
|
350
|
-
|
351
|
-
```ruby
|
352
|
-
server = Gruf::Server.new
|
353
|
-
server.add_interceptor(MyInterceptor, option_foo: 'value 123')
|
354
|
-
```
|
355
|
-
|
356
|
-
Or, alternatively, the more common method of passing them into the `interceptors` configuration hash:
|
357
|
-
|
358
|
-
```ruby
|
359
|
-
Gruf.configure do |c|
|
360
|
-
c.interceptors.use(MyInterceptor, option_foo: 'value 123')
|
361
|
-
end
|
362
|
-
```
|
363
|
-
|
364
|
-
Interceptors each wrap the call and are run recursively within each other. This means that if you have
|
365
|
-
three interceptors - `Interceptor1`, `Interceptor2`, and `Interceptor3` - they will run in FIFO
|
366
|
-
(first in, first out) order. `Interceptor1` will run, yielding to `Interceptor2`,
|
367
|
-
which will then yield to `Interceptor3`, which will then yield to your service method call,
|
368
|
-
ending the chain.
|
369
|
-
|
370
|
-
You can utilize the `insert_before` and `insert_after` methods to maintain order:
|
371
|
-
|
372
|
-
```ruby
|
373
|
-
Gruf.configure do |c|
|
374
|
-
c.interceptors.use(Interceptor1)
|
375
|
-
c.interceptors.use(Interceptor2)
|
376
|
-
c.interceptors.insert_before(Interceptor2, Interceptor3) # 3 will now happen before 2
|
377
|
-
c.interceptors.insert_after(Interceptor1, Interceptor4) # 4 will now happen after 1
|
378
|
-
end
|
379
|
-
```
|
380
|
-
|
381
|
-
By default, the ActiveRecord Connection Reset interceptor and Output Metadata Timing interceptor
|
382
|
-
are loaded into gruf unless explicitly told not to via the `use_default_interceptors` configuration
|
383
|
-
parameter.
|
384
|
-
|
385
|
-
## Hooks
|
386
|
-
|
387
|
-
Hooks, unlike interceptors, are executed outside of the request chain, such as when a server starts
|
388
|
-
or stops. They run in FIFO order sequentially and do not wrap one another. They can be used to provide
|
389
|
-
custom boot sequences, external instrumentation support, or shutdown alerting.
|
390
|
-
|
391
|
-
You can create a hook by extending the `Gruf::Hooks::Base` class and defining the methods
|
392
|
-
on the hook you wish to implement:
|
393
|
-
|
394
|
-
```ruby
|
395
|
-
class MyHook < Gruf::Hooks::Base
|
396
|
-
def before_server_start(server:)
|
397
|
-
# do my thing before the server starts
|
398
|
-
end
|
399
|
-
|
400
|
-
def after_server_stop(server:)
|
401
|
-
# do my thing after the server stops
|
402
|
-
end
|
403
|
-
end
|
404
|
-
|
405
|
-
# Then in an initializer:
|
406
|
-
|
407
|
-
Gruf.configure do |c|
|
408
|
-
c.hooks.use(MyHook, option_foo: 'value 123')
|
409
|
-
end
|
410
|
-
```
|
411
|
-
|
412
|
-
Exceptions raised in hooks will halt the execution chain and bubble up the stack appropriately.
|
413
|
-
|
414
|
-
### Available Hook Insertion Points
|
415
|
-
|
416
|
-
Current hook insertion points are:
|
417
|
-
|
418
|
-
* `before_server_start` - Right before the gRPC server starts
|
419
|
-
* `after_server_stop` - Right after the gRPC server is shutdown
|
420
|
-
|
421
|
-
Note that exceptions raised in `before_server_start` will halt the execution chain for the remaining
|
422
|
-
`before_server_start` hooks, but will still execute the `after_server_stop` hooks as expected. Exceptions raised
|
423
|
-
in `after_server_stop` will prevent further `after_server_stop` hooks from running.
|
424
|
-
|
425
|
-
## Instrumentation
|
426
|
-
|
427
|
-
gruf comes out of the box with a couple of instrumentation interceptors packed in:
|
428
|
-
output metadata timings and StatsD support.
|
429
|
-
|
430
|
-
### Output Metadata Timing
|
431
|
-
|
432
|
-
Enabled by default, this will push timings for _successful responses_ through the response output
|
433
|
-
metadata back to the client.
|
434
|
-
|
435
|
-
### StatsD
|
436
|
-
|
437
|
-
The StatsD support is not enabled by default. To enable it, you'll want to do:
|
438
|
-
|
439
|
-
```ruby
|
440
|
-
Gruf.configure do |c|
|
441
|
-
c.interceptors.use(
|
442
|
-
Gruf::Interceptors::Instrumentation::Statsd,
|
443
|
-
client: ::Statsd.new('my.statsd.host', 8125),
|
444
|
-
prefix: 'my_application_prefix.rpc'
|
445
|
-
)
|
446
|
-
end
|
447
|
-
```
|
448
|
-
|
449
|
-
This will measure counts and timings for each endpoint.
|
450
|
-
|
451
|
-
### Request Logging
|
452
|
-
|
453
|
-
Gruf 1.2+ comes built with request logging out of the box; you'll get Rails-style logs with your
|
454
|
-
gRPC calls:
|
455
|
-
|
456
|
-
```
|
457
|
-
# plain
|
458
|
-
I, [2017-07-14T09:50:54.200506 #70571] INFO -- : [GRPC::Ok] (thing_service.get_thing) [0.348ms]
|
459
|
-
# logstash
|
460
|
-
I, [2017-07-14T09:51:03.299050 #70595] INFO -- : {"message":"[GRPC::Ok] (thing_service.get_thing) [0.372ms]","service":"thing_service","method":"thing_service.get_thing","grpc_status":"GRPC::Ok"}
|
461
|
-
```
|
462
|
-
|
463
|
-
It supports formatters (including custom ones) that you can use to specify the formatting of the logging:
|
464
|
-
|
465
|
-
```ruby
|
466
|
-
Gruf.configure do |c|
|
467
|
-
c.interceptors.use(
|
468
|
-
Gruf::Interceptors::Instrumentation::RequestLogging::Interceptor,
|
469
|
-
formatter: :logstash
|
470
|
-
)
|
471
|
-
end
|
472
|
-
```
|
473
|
-
|
474
|
-
It comes with a few more options as well:
|
475
|
-
|
476
|
-
| Option | Description | Default |
|
477
|
-
| ------ | ----------- | ------- |
|
478
|
-
| formatter | The formatter to use. By default `:plain` and `:logstash` are supported. | `:logstash` |
|
479
|
-
| log_parameters | If set to true, will log parameters in the response | `false` |
|
480
|
-
| blacklist | An array of parameter key names to redact from logging, in path.to.key format | `[]` |
|
481
|
-
| redacted_string | The string to use for redacted parameters. | `REDACTED` |
|
482
|
-
| ignore_methods | An array of method names to ignore from logging. E.g. `['namespace.health.check']` | `[]` |
|
483
|
-
|
484
|
-
It's important to maintain a safe blacklist should you decide to log parameters; gruf does no
|
485
|
-
parameter sanitization on its own. We also recommend blacklisting parameters that may contain
|
486
|
-
very large values (such as binary or json data).
|
487
|
-
|
488
|
-
## Testing with RSpec
|
489
|
-
|
490
|
-
There is a gem specifically for easy testing with RSpec: [gruf-rspec](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-rspec). Take
|
491
|
-
a look at its README for more information.
|
492
|
-
|
493
|
-
## Plugins
|
494
|
-
|
495
|
-
You can build your own hooks and middleware for gruf; here's a list of known open source gems for
|
496
|
-
gruf that you can use today:
|
497
|
-
|
498
|
-
* [gruf-lightstep](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-lightstep) - Provides a seamless
|
499
|
-
[LightStep](https://lightstep.com) integration
|
500
|
-
* [gruf-zipkin](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-zipkin) - Provides a [Zipkin](https://zipkin.io)
|
501
|
-
integration
|
502
|
-
* [gruf-newrelic](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-newrelic) - Easy [New Relic](https://newrelic.com/) integration
|
503
|
-
* [gruf-commander](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-commander) - Request/command-style validation and
|
504
|
-
execution patterns for services
|
505
|
-
* [gruf-profiler](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-profiler) - Profiles and provides memory usage
|
506
|
-
reports for clients and services
|
507
|
-
* [gruf-circuit-breaker](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-circuit-breaker) - Circuit breaker
|
508
|
-
support for services
|
26
|
+
Please see the [gruf wiki](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf/wiki) for detailed information on getting started
|
27
|
+
using gruf.
|
509
28
|
|
510
29
|
## Demo Rails App
|
511
30
|
|
512
31
|
There is a [demonstration Rails application here](https://github.com/bigcommerce/gruf-demo) you can
|
513
32
|
view and clone that shows how to integrate Gruf into an existing Rails application.
|
514
33
|
|
515
|
-
## Roadmap
|
516
|
-
|
517
|
-
### Gruf 3.0
|
518
|
-
|
519
|
-
* Change configuration to an injectable object to ensure thread safety on chained server/client interactions
|
520
|
-
* Move all references to `Gruf.` configuration into injectable parameters
|
521
|
-
* Redo server configuration to be fully injectable
|
522
|
-
|
523
|
-
## Companies Using Gruf
|
524
|
-
|
525
|
-
Using gruf and want to show your support? Let us know and we'll add your name here.
|
526
|
-
|
527
|
-
* [BigCommerce](https://www.bigcommerce.com/)
|
528
|
-
|
529
34
|
## License
|
530
35
|
|
531
36
|
Copyright (c) 2017-present, BigCommerce Pty. Ltd. All rights reserved
|
data/lib/gruf/client.rb
CHANGED
@@ -60,6 +60,7 @@ module Gruf
|
|
60
60
|
@opts = options || {}
|
61
61
|
@opts[:password] = @opts.fetch(:password, '').to_s
|
62
62
|
@opts[:hostname] = @opts.fetch(:hostname, Gruf.default_client_host)
|
63
|
+
@opts[:channel_credentials] = @opts.fetch(:channel_credentials, Gruf.default_channel_credentials)
|
63
64
|
@error_factory = Gruf::Client::ErrorFactory.new
|
64
65
|
client_options[:timeout] = client_options[:timeout].to_i if client_options.key?(:timeout)
|
65
66
|
client = "#{service}::Stub".constantize.new(@opts[:hostname], build_ssl_credentials, client_options)
|
@@ -190,6 +191,8 @@ module Gruf
|
|
190
191
|
#
|
191
192
|
# :nocov:
|
192
193
|
def build_ssl_credentials
|
194
|
+
return opts[:channel_credentials] if opts[:channel_credentials]
|
195
|
+
|
193
196
|
cert = nil
|
194
197
|
if opts[:ssl_certificate_file]
|
195
198
|
cert = File.read(opts[:ssl_certificate_file]).to_s.strip
|
data/lib/gruf/configuration.rb
CHANGED
data/lib/gruf/version.rb
CHANGED
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
|
|
1
1
|
--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
|
2
2
|
name: gruf
|
3
3
|
version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
4
|
-
version: 2.7.
|
4
|
+
version: 2.7.1
|
5
5
|
platform: ruby
|
6
6
|
authors:
|
7
7
|
- Shaun McCormick
|
8
8
|
autorequire:
|
9
9
|
bindir: bin
|
10
10
|
cert_chain: []
|
11
|
-
date: 2019-
|
11
|
+
date: 2019-12-16 00:00:00.000000000 Z
|
12
12
|
dependencies:
|
13
13
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
|
14
14
|
name: bundler
|
@@ -196,7 +196,7 @@ required_rubygems_version: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
|
196
196
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
197
197
|
version: '0'
|
198
198
|
requirements: []
|
199
|
-
rubygems_version: 3.0.
|
199
|
+
rubygems_version: 3.0.6
|
200
200
|
signing_key:
|
201
201
|
specification_version: 4
|
202
202
|
summary: gRPC Ruby Framework
|