# gRPC Server Reflection Tutorial gRPC Server Reflection provides information about publicly-accessible gRPC services on a server, and assists clients at runtime to construct RPC requests and responses without precompiled service information. It is used by gRPC CLI, which can be used to introspect server protos and send/receive test RPCs. ## Enable Server Reflection gRPC-go Server Reflection is implemented in package [reflection](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go/tree/master/reflection). To enable server reflection, you need to import this package and register reflection service on your gRPC server. For example, to enable server reflection in `example/helloworld`, we need to make the following changes: ```diff --- a/examples/helloworld/greeter_server/main.go +++ b/examples/helloworld/greeter_server/main.go @@ -40,6 +40,7 @@ import ( "google.golang.org/grpc" pb "google.golang.org/grpc/examples/helloworld/helloworld" + "google.golang.org/grpc/reflection" ) const ( @@ -61,6 +62,8 @@ func main() { } s := grpc.NewServer() pb.RegisterGreeterServer(s, &server{}) + // Register reflection service on gRPC server. + reflection.Register(s) if err := s.Serve(lis); err != nil { log.Fatalf("failed to serve: %v", err) } ``` An example server with reflection registered can be found at `examples/features/reflection/server`. ## gRPC CLI After enabling Server Reflection in a server application, you can use gRPC CLI to check its services. gRPC CLI is only available in c++. Instructions on how to use gRPC CLI can be found at [command_line_tool.md](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/doc/command_line_tool.md). To build gRPC CLI: ```sh git clone https://github.com/grpc/grpc cd grpc make grpc_cli cd bins/opt # grpc_cli is in directory bins/opt/ ``` ## Use gRPC CLI to check services First, start the helloworld server in grpc-go directory: ```sh $ cd $ go run examples/features/reflection/server/main.go ``` Open a new terminal and make sure you are in the directory where grpc_cli lives: ```sh $ cd /bins/opt ``` ### List services `grpc_cli ls` command lists services and methods exposed at a given port: - List all the services exposed at a given port ```sh $ ./grpc_cli ls localhost:50051 ``` output: ```sh grpc.examples.echo.Echo grpc.reflection.v1alpha.ServerReflection helloworld.Greeter ``` - List one service with details `grpc_cli ls` command inspects a service given its full name (in the format of \.\). It can print information with a long listing format when `-l` flag is set. This flag can be used to get more details about a service. ```sh $ ./grpc_cli ls localhost:50051 helloworld.Greeter -l ``` output: ```sh filename: helloworld.proto package: helloworld; service Greeter { rpc SayHello(helloworld.HelloRequest) returns (helloworld.HelloReply) {} } ``` ### List methods - List one method with details `grpc_cli ls` command also inspects a method given its full name (in the format of \.\.\). ```sh $ ./grpc_cli ls localhost:50051 helloworld.Greeter.SayHello -l ``` output: ```sh rpc SayHello(helloworld.HelloRequest) returns (helloworld.HelloReply) {} ``` ### Inspect message types We can use`grpc_cli type` command to inspect request/response types given the full name of the type (in the format of \.\). - Get information about the request type ```sh $ ./grpc_cli type localhost:50051 helloworld.HelloRequest ``` output: ```sh message HelloRequest { optional string name = 1[json_name = "name"]; } ``` ### Call a remote method We can send RPCs to a server and get responses using `grpc_cli call` command. - Call a unary method ```sh $ ./grpc_cli call localhost:50051 SayHello "name: 'gRPC CLI'" ``` output: ```sh message: "Hello gRPC CLI" ```