grpc Kotlin example ============================================== The examples require grpc-java to already be built. You are strongly encouraged to check out a git release tag, since there will already be a build of grpc available. Otherwise you must follow COMPILING.md. You may want to read through the [Quick Start Guide](https://grpc.io/docs/quickstart/java.html) before trying out the examples. To build the examples, run in this directory: ``` $ ./gradlew installDist ``` This creates the scripts `hello-world-server`, `hello-world-client`, `route-guide-server`, and `route-guide-client` in the `build/install/examples/bin/` directory that run the examples. Each example requires the server to be running before starting the client. For example, to try the hello world example first run: ``` $ ./build/install/examples/bin/hello-world-server ``` And in a different terminal window run: ``` $ ./build/install/examples/bin/hello-world-client ``` That's it! Please refer to gRPC Java's [README](../README.md) and [tutorial](https://grpc.io/docs/tutorials/basic/java.html) for more information. Unit test examples ============================================== Examples for unit testing gRPC clients and servers are located in [./src/test](./src/test). In general, we DO NOT allow overriding the client stub. We encourage users to leverage `InProcessTransport` as demonstrated in the examples to write unit tests. `InProcessTransport` is light-weight and runs the server and client in the same process without any socket/TCP connection. For testing a gRPC client, create the client with a real stub using an InProcessChannelBuilder.java and test it against an InProcessServer.java with a mock/fake service implementation. For testing a gRPC server, create the server as an InProcessServer, and test it against a real client stub with an InProcessChannel. The gRPC-java library also provides a JUnit rule, GrpcCleanupRule.java, to do the graceful shutdown boilerplate for you.