wasmws
evans
wasmws | evans | |
---|---|---|
5 | 11 | |
61 | 4,118 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 4.8 | |
over 2 years ago | 4 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | MIT License |
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wasmws
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Is there an alternative to gorilla websocket?
Thanks for writing this! I found it really great to use when I wrote https://github.com/tarndt/wasmws
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Goomerang 🪃 A protocol buffers over websockets communications library
Before looking at the readme, I thought this was an alternative to using https://github.com/tarndt/wasmws which lets you use gRPC over websockets so that you can use gPRC via WASM without needing an http to gRPC gateway. Now I'm understanding a bit differently. It looks like this uses protobufs but doesn't have anything to do with gRPC at all, instead implementing some of the communication parts of gRPC while ignoring the generation of services but instead focusing a bit more on message routing and pub/sub that you would probably still need NATS.io for if you were using gRPC.
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Even More Minor Features in Go 1.18
The hijacking a websocket works very well, live in the future today! https://github.com/tarndt/wasmws
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Migrating from nodejs to go codebase using gopherjs
Everything said above is valid, but if you do think you have a need to transpile... consider running any Go frontend code as WASM rather than Javascript. A few years ago I started doing my frontends and backends all in Go and its been wonderful. I even wrote a library so I could use gRPC from my WASM/Go frontends rather than REST: https://github.com/tarndt/wasmws . Extra wonderful, at least for my tastes. Once caveat is if your brotli compressed, CDN/browser cached, etagged Go WASM is still to big, you can usually make it even smaller by using tinygo rather than the std tool chain for the compiling to WASM.
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Go and gRPC is just so intuitive. Here's a detailed full-stack flow with gRPC-Web, Go and React. Also, there is a medium story focused on explaining how such a setup might boost efficiency and the step-by-step implementation.
A while back I was writing a pure Go frontend app (WASM) and I wrote this so I could use gRPC rather than REST to talk to my backend: https://github.com/tarndt/wasmws
evans
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Understanding gRPC Concepts, Use Cases & Best Practices
Note: gRPC services can also be tested from CLI using tools like evans-cli. But for that reflection needs (if not enabled the path to the proto file is required) to be enabled in gRPC servers. This compare link shows the way to enable reflection and how to enter into evans-cli repl mode. Post entering repl mode of evans-cli, gRPC services can be tested from CLI itself and the process is described in evans-cli GitHub page.
- Evans: More expressive universal gRPC client
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Smart way to create gRPC CLI
Do you mean this one https://github.com/ktr0731/evans ?
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grpcurl-like tool for grpcweb
I use Evans, it supports gRPC and gRPC-web and also supports reflection protocol.
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Go and gRPC is just so intuitive. Here's a detailed full-stack flow with gRPC-Web, Go and React. Also, there is a medium story focused on explaining how such a setup might boost efficiency and the step-by-step implementation.
https://github.com/ktr0731/evans it's the best cli tool I've ever used
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Postman-powered testing of Akka Serverless gRPC APIs
Over the holidays, 2021, Postman gifted a fine upgrade to its users: beta support for the gRPC protocol in its API platform. As a Product Manager for Lightbend and helping out on its new gRPC native PaaS for building and running APIs and microservices, I was excited, to say the least. In another, recent blog post, I mentioned my desire to leverage UI test-and-try tools for APIs (my time in the REST API world of Mashery and PubNub was the source of such desire). In that same post though, I noted the lack of several important gRPC features, like server reflection and more robust import capabilities, as blockers; hence, my deep dive, in that post, into the CLI tool, Evans.
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gRPC test-and-try with Akka Serverless and Evans
And who am I kidding? I'm a CLI-type person. Which is why I was super excited to stumble about Evans. Within minutes, I had gone from installation to trying out TLS-secured APIs and microservices running in the cloud on Lightbend's new serverless offering.
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Set Up Grpc Web Server With AWS
If everything is set up correctly, you should now be able to use evans to access your web server at the load balancer url or even the url for your ec2 instance directly e.g.
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Setting Up a gRPC Protobuf Server With Tonic
After running the server with cargo run, I needed a way to test that the server works. I had heard of an interesting tool called evans, so I decided to use this. It took me a while to figure out the right parameters to query the server, especially because tonic doesn't seem to support gRPC reflection right now, and there are few examples out there.
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Go, RabbitMQ and gRPC Clean Architecture microservice 💫👋
For testing gRPC we can use evans and need add reflection:
What are some alternatives?
goomerang - A small communications library based on protocol buffers over websockets
grpc-web - gRPC for Web Clients
wombat - Cross platform gRPC client
grpcui - An interactive web UI for gRPC, along the lines of postman
bloomrpc - Former GUI client for gRPC services. No longer maintained.
goja - ECMAScript/JavaScript engine in pure Go
grpcurl - Like cURL, but for gRPC: Command-line tool for interacting with gRPC servers
ws - Tiny WebSocket library for Go.
Go-gRPC-RabbitMQ-microservice - Go gRPC RabbitMQ email microservice
ote - ote updates a packages' go.mod file with a comment next to all dependencies that are test dependencies; identifying them as such.
tonic - A native gRPC client & server implementation with async/await support.