wasmws
grpc-web
wasmws | grpc-web | |
---|---|---|
5 | 33 | |
61 | 8,309 | |
- | 0.8% | |
0.0 | 6.4 | |
over 2 years ago | 18 days ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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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
grpc-web
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Ask HN: WebSocket server transforming channel subscriptions to gRPC streams
* Additionally, client can stream data to the backend server (if bidirectional GRPC streams are used). I.e. client sends WebSocket messages, those will be transformed to GRPC messages by WebSocket server and delivered to the application backend.
As a result we have a system which allows to quickly create individual streams by using strict GRPC contract but terminating connections over WebSocket transport. So it works well in web browsers. After that no need to write WebSocket protocol, client implementation, handle WebSocket connection. This all will be solved by a suggested WebSocket server and its client SDKs.
The mechanics is similar to Websocketd (https://github.com/joewalnes/websocketd), but instead of creating OS processes we create GRPC streams. The difference from grpc-web (https://github.com/grpc/grpc-web) is that we provide streaming capabilities but not exposing GRPC contract to the client - just allowing to stream any data as payload (both binary and text) with some wrappers from our client SDKs side for managing subscriptions. I.e. it's not native GRPC streams on the client side - we expose just Connection/Subscription object to stream in both directions. GRPC streams used only for communication between WebSocket server and backend. To mention - grpc-web does not support all kinds of streaming now (https://github.com/grpc/grpc-web#streaming-support) while proposed solution can. This all should provide a cross-platform way to quickly write streaming apps due to client SDKs and language-agnostic nature of GRPC.
I personally see both pros and cons in this scheme (without concentrating on both too much here to keep the question short). I spent some time thinking about this myself, already have some working prototypes – but turned out need more opinions before moving forward with the idea and releasing this, kinda lost in doubts.
My main question - whether this seems interesting for someone here? Do you find this useful and see practical value?
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Build and Deploy a gRPC-Web App Using Rust Tonic and React
By default, web browsers do not support gRPC, but we will use gRPC-web to make it possible.
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Lemmy v0.18.0 Release - A reddit alternative written in Rust.
You just have to use a library implementation for JavaScript https://github.com/grpc/grpc-web
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Full Stack Forays with Go and gRPC
TypeScript support remains an experimental feature of gRPC.
- Seeking Opinion: Choosing Between Gateway and Envoy Proxy for Our Microservices Architecture
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Introducing Tempo: low latency, cross-platform, end-to-end typesafe APIs
The gRPC-Web protocol supports HTTP/1 and can be used from a browser.
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gRPC on the client side
-- grpc-web
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Introduction to gRPC
gRPC is mainly used in server-to-server communication, but it can also be used in client-to-server communication. gRPC-web is a gRPC implementation for web browsers. It is a JavaScript library that allows you to call gRPC services from a web browser. It supports Unary and Streaming Server API calls.
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gRPC vs REST: Comparing API Styles in Practice
Since we're using Envoy, there's one more neat trick that we can employ. It turns out that Envoy also support gRPC-Web out of the box, a JavaScript client designed to support gRPC communication from the browser! That means that we can send gRPC messages over HTTP/1.1 as base64 encoded strings or as binary protobufs. Messages will be sent through our proxy and on to our backend service. The advantage of this is smaller and more efficient wire communication which should lead to better performance.
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Understanding gRPC Concepts, Use Cases & Best Practices
protoc-gen-grpc-web — a plugin that allows our front end to communicate with the backend using gRPC calls. A separate blog post on this coming up in the future.
What are some alternatives?
goomerang - A small communications library based on protocol buffers over websockets
ngx-grpc - Angular gRPC framework
wombat - Cross platform gRPC client
grpc-over-webrtc - gRPC over WebRTC
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.
buf - The best way of working with Protocol Buffers.
ote - ote updates a packages' go.mod file with a comment next to all dependencies that are test dependencies; identifying them as such.
webrpc - webrpc is a schema-driven approach to writing backend services for modern Web apps and networks
nbio - Pure Go 1000k+ connections solution, support tls/http1.x/websocket and basically compatible with net/http, with high-performance and low memory cost, non-blocking, event-driven, easy-to-use.
evans - Evans: more expressive universal gRPC client