このページは、まだ日本語ではご利用いただけません。翻訳中です。
古いプラグインバージョンのドキュメントを閲覧しています。
This plugin should be enabled on a Kong route that serves the HTTP(S)
protocol
but proxies to a service with the GRPC(S)
protocol.
Sample configuration via declarative (YAML):
_format_version: "3.0"
services:
- protocol: grpc
host: localhost
port: 9000
routes:
- protocols:
- name: http
paths:
- /
plugins:
- name: grpc-web
Same thing via the Admin API:
- Add the gRPC service:
curl -X POST localhost:8001/services \ --data name=grpc \ --data protocol=grpc \ --data host=localhost \ --data port=9000
- Add an
http
route:curl -X POST localhost:8001/services/grpc/routes \ --data protocols=http \ --data name=web-service \ --data paths[]=/
- Add the plugin to the route:
curl -X POST localhost:8001/routes/web-service/plugins \ --data name=grpc-web
In these examples, we don’t set any plugin configurations.
This minimal setup works for the default varieties of the gRPC-Web protocol,
which use ProtocolBuffer messages either directly in binary or with base64-encoding.
The related Content-Type
headers are application/grpc-web
or application/grpc-web+proto
for binary, and application/grpc-web-text
or application/grpc-web-text+proto
for text.
If you want to use JSON encoding, you have to provide the gRPC specification in
a .proto
file, which needs to be installed in the Kong node running the plugin.
A path starting with a /
is considered absolute; otherwise, it interprets
relative to the Kong node’s prefix (/usr/local/kong/
by default).
Example Protobuf definition (hello.proto
):
syntax = "proto2";
package hello;
service HelloService {
rpc SayHello(HelloRequest) returns (HelloResponse);
rpc LotsOfReplies(HelloRequest) returns (stream HelloResponse);
rpc LotsOfGreetings(stream HelloRequest) returns (HelloResponse);
rpc BidiHello(stream HelloRequest) returns (stream HelloResponse);
}
message HelloRequest {
optional string greeting = 1;
}
message HelloResponse {
required string reply = 1;
}
The declarative configuration becomes:
_format_version: "3.0"
services:
- protocol: grpc
host: localhost
port: 9000
routes:
- protocols:
- name: http
paths:
- /
plugins:
- name: grpc-web
proto: path/to/hello.proto
or via the Admin API:
curl -X POST localhost:8001/routes/web-service/plugins \
--data name=grpc-web \
--data config.proto=path/to/hello.proto
Upload the Protobuf definition to your Kong Node:
docker cp hello.proto localhost:/usr/local/kong/
Test your setup:
curl -X POST localhost:8000/hello.HelloService/SayHello \
--header 'x-grpc: true' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data '{"greeting":"kong2.1"}'
With this setup, there’s support for gRPC-Web/JSON clients using Content-Type
headers
like application/grpc-web+json
or application/grpc-web-text+json
.
Note: When using JSON encoding, the gRPC-Web protocol specifies that both request and response data consist of a series of frames, in a similar way to the full gRPC protocol. The gRPC-Web library performs this framing as expected.
As an extension, this plugin also allows naked JSON requests with the POST method and
Content-Type: application/json
header. These requests are encoded to ProtocolBuffer,
framed, and forwarded to the gRPC service. Likewise, the responses are transformed
on the way back, allowing any HTTP client to use a gRPC service without special
libraries. This feature is limited to unary (non-streaming) requests. Streaming
responses are encoded into multiple JSON objects; it’s up to the client to split into
separate records if it has to support multiple response messages.