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package com.google.protobuf;

Abstract base interface for protocol-buffer-based RPC services. Services themselves are abstract classes (implemented either by servers or as stubs), but they subclass this base interface. The methods of this interface can be used to call the methods of the service without knowing its exact type at compile time (analogous to the Message interface).

Starting with version 2.3.0, RPC implementations should not try to build on this, but should instead provide code generator plugins which generate code specific to the particular RPC implementation. This way the generated code can be more appropriate for the implementation in use and can avoid unnecessary layers of indirection.

Author:kenton@google.com Kenton Varda
/** * Abstract base interface for protocol-buffer-based RPC services. Services themselves are abstract * classes (implemented either by servers or as stubs), but they subclass this base interface. The * methods of this interface can be used to call the methods of the service without knowing its * exact type at compile time (analogous to the Message interface). * * <p>Starting with version 2.3.0, RPC implementations should not try to build on this, but should * instead provide code generator plugins which generate code specific to the particular RPC * implementation. This way the generated code can be more appropriate for the implementation in use * and can avoid unnecessary layers of indirection. * * @author kenton@google.com Kenton Varda */
public interface Service {
Get the ServiceDescriptor describing this service and its methods.
/** Get the {@code ServiceDescriptor} describing this service and its methods. */
Descriptors.ServiceDescriptor getDescriptorForType();
Call a method of the service specified by MethodDescriptor. This is normally implemented as a simple switch() that calls the standard definitions of the service's methods.

Preconditions:

  • method.getService() == getDescriptorForType()
  • request is of the exact same class as the object returned by getRequestPrototype(method).
  • controller is of the correct type for the RPC implementation being used by this Service. For stubs, the "correct type" depends on the RpcChannel which the stub is using. Server-side Service implementations are expected to accept whatever type of RpcController the server-side RPC implementation uses.

Postconditions:

  • done will be called when the method is complete. This may be before callMethod() returns or it may be at some point in the future.
  • The parameter to done is the response. It must be of the exact same type as would be returned by getResponsePrototype(method).
  • If the RPC failed, the parameter to done will be null. Further details about the failure can be found by querying controller.
/** * Call a method of the service specified by MethodDescriptor. This is normally implemented as a * simple {@code switch()} that calls the standard definitions of the service's methods. * * <p>Preconditions: * * <ul> * <li>{@code method.getService() == getDescriptorForType()} * <li>{@code request} is of the exact same class as the object returned by {@code * getRequestPrototype(method)}. * <li>{@code controller} is of the correct type for the RPC implementation being used by this * Service. For stubs, the "correct type" depends on the RpcChannel which the stub is using. * Server-side Service implementations are expected to accept whatever type of {@code * RpcController} the server-side RPC implementation uses. * </ul> * * <p>Postconditions: * * <ul> * <li>{@code done} will be called when the method is complete. This may be before {@code * callMethod()} returns or it may be at some point in the future. * <li>The parameter to {@code done} is the response. It must be of the exact same type as would * be returned by {@code getResponsePrototype(method)}. * <li>If the RPC failed, the parameter to {@code done} will be {@code null}. Further details * about the failure can be found by querying {@code controller}. * </ul> */
void callMethod( Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method, RpcController controller, Message request, RpcCallback<Message> done);
callMethod() requires that the request passed in is of a particular subclass of Message. getRequestPrototype() gets the default instances of this type for a given method. You can then call Message.newBuilderForType() on this instance to construct a builder to build an object which you can then pass to callMethod().

Example:

  MethodDescriptor method =
    service.getDescriptorForType().findMethodByName("Foo");
  Message request =
    stub.getRequestPrototype(method).newBuilderForType()
        .mergeFrom(input).build();
  service.callMethod(method, request, callback);
/** * {@code callMethod()} requires that the request passed in is of a particular subclass of {@code * Message}. {@code getRequestPrototype()} gets the default instances of this type for a given * method. You can then call {@code Message.newBuilderForType()} on this instance to construct a * builder to build an object which you can then pass to {@code callMethod()}. * * <p>Example: * * <pre> * MethodDescriptor method = * service.getDescriptorForType().findMethodByName("Foo"); * Message request = * stub.getRequestPrototype(method).newBuilderForType() * .mergeFrom(input).build(); * service.callMethod(method, request, callback); * </pre> */
Message getRequestPrototype(Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method);
Like getRequestPrototype(), but gets a prototype of the response message. getResponsePrototype() is generally not needed because the Service implementation constructs the response message itself, but it may be useful in some cases to know ahead of time what type of object will be returned.
/** * Like {@code getRequestPrototype()}, but gets a prototype of the response message. {@code * getResponsePrototype()} is generally not needed because the {@code Service} implementation * constructs the response message itself, but it may be useful in some cases to know ahead of * time what type of object will be returned. */
Message getResponsePrototype(Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method); }