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FSharp.GrpcCodeGenerator

This project is aimed at providing complete integration of gRPC and protocol buffers into the F# language. The project is early in development and, while all features have been implemented, it's not guranteed to work correctly.

Suggestions, bug reports and pull requests are very welcome.

How do I use it?

  • Install the plugin as a global dotnet tool: dotnet tool install -g grpc-fsharp. This is needed for the build scripts to work.

  • Install the Grpc-FSharp.Tools package into your project.

    • If you get an error that looks like Invalid command line switch for "...\tools\windows_x64\protoc.exe". System.ArgumentNullException: Parameter "message" cannot be null., you probably haven't installed the grpc-fsharp tool globally. Verify the tool is installed and available by running protoc-gen-fsharp from a terminal window.
  • Add your .proto files into the project:

    <ItemGroup>
      <Protobuf Include="path\to\definition.proto" GrpcServices="Both" Link="greet.proto" />
    </ItemGroup>
    • You can control Grpc service stub generation via the GrpcServices setting. It can be one of Both, Server, Client and None.
    • By including the Link setting, Visual Studio will include the .proto file in the solution explorer.
    • The Tools package's source was taken from the official Grpc.Tools package, so any settings that work with that package should also work here.
  • Reference the correct nuget packages:

    • If you only need protobuf serialization, add a reference to the Protobuf.FSharp package.
    • To create a GRPC server with ASP.NET Core or Giraffe, you need the Grpc-FSharp.AspNetCore meta-package.
    • If you're using Saturn, you can use the Grpc-FSharp.Saturn meta-package which adds a use_grpc custom operation to the application builder.
    • To create a client, you need Grpc-FSharp.Net.Client. There is also a Grpc-FSharp.Net.ClientFactory, in case you need to use IHttpClientFactory.
  • If Visual Studio is having trouble building your project, restart it. It sometimes happens when build dependencies are updated.

  • Should you need to use the plugin manually for some reason, you can do it:

    • Run protoc with the --fsharp_out flag: protoc my-proto-file.proto --fsharp_out=./generated-sources
      • Do not run the tool directly and expect good things to happen. It can only be used by protoc.
      • You can use the --fsharp_opt=no_server and --fsharp_opt=no_client flags to control GRPC service code generation.
      • You can use --fsharp_opt=internal_access to generate an internal module.
    • Place the generated files inside your project.

How does it work?

Now that that's out of the way, let's see how it all works.

Messages

Protobuf messages are transformed into F# records. This means we get to use F#'s automatic implementations for Equals, ToString etc. Now, you may be used to strictly immutable records, so be warned: the records contain mutable fields. This is because the .NET protobuf runtime is implemented with mutability in mind, and object are constructed and initialized in separate phases. It'd be a much bigger task to adapt the runtime to strictly immutable messages.

Fields

All primitive and message fields are transformed into ValueOption fields. This is because any field can simply be missing from a protobuf message, and we don't want to start guessing whether a 0 came in the actual message or was filled in as a default.

On the plus side, we no longer need HasXXX and ClearXXX calls. Simply match the ValueOption to test for a field's presence and set it to ValueNone to clear it from the message. Another benefit is that the deserializer never generates null fields; if you see one, it's a bug that needs to be reported.

But why use value option, I hear you ask? Performance! I wouldn't want each field of each message to cause an allocation. I know you wouldn't either. Someone could implement a switch to override this behaviour, but I won't. Allocation is evil.

And BTW, if you think handling all those options all over your code is troublesome, you need to stop passing network DTO's into your business logic. You may want to take a look at Onion architecture.

Collections

Repeated and map fields use the built-in RepeatedField and MapField types from protobuf, which include special support for the binary protocol.

Enums

Enums are transformed into CLR enums, not F# unions. This is due to the fact that an enum field is, in the end, a number field, which is a perfect match for CLR enums, including the possibility of encountering numbers with no assigned name.

One-of

One-of fields, however, are transformed into F# union types. Contrary to the C# plugin which generates separate properties for each one-of entry, you'll get only one record field of type ValueOption<UnionType>. A ValueNone indicates none of the fields were present in the message. If one was present, you'll get a ValueSome(UnionCase). If more than one is present (and you have a malformed message), only the last value will be preserved.

Helpers

Each message gets an accompanying module. It contains:

  • A Parser you can use to read binary messages.
  • An empty() function which returns an empty record with all fields set to none or empty collections. You can use this to start constructing new messages.
  • Field number and codec definitions.

Reflection

Each file also gets a Reflection module. This module contains the reflection descriptor for the whole file. It also contains descriptors for each message type, should you need to access them by name.

Services

Services are transformed into classes. This is due to the OO nature of the runtime. For each service, you get a client class and an abstract server base class.

You also get a MyService.MyServiceClient.Functions module with F# functions that take an instance of the client class as input. This is meant to facilitate function composition, since composing instance methods (when possible at all) is kind of a nightmare...

The one divergence from the C# code generator is that the server base class contains no default logic to return a "not implemented" response; you get abstract methods instead.

What else?

  • As you know, the F# compiler is single-pass and takes file order into account. The Tools package adds the converted F# sources before all other sources, regardless of where in the project file the <Protobuf> elements appear. This means that any generated code should be accessible throughout your entire project.

  • You may need to be aware of the fact that any type inside the Google.Protobuf.* namespace will have its namespace rewritten to Google.Protobuf.FSharp.*. This is to keep the types from clashing with the ones provided inside the Google.Protobuf package, which you always need to reference. So, for example, you get the any type at Google.Protobuf.FSharp.WellKnownTypes.Any.

  • The code generator respects the csharp_namespace option. There is currently no separate fsharp_namespace option. I don't know whether this behaviour needs to be changed.

  • Contrary to the C# version, this code generator has no special handling for the types in wrappers.proto, since a ValueOption<uint64> is completely adequate for use in place of a Nullable<uint64>. See here for more info.

Show me some code

Here you are. First, reading and writing messages directly:

open Google.Protobuf

// Read a message
use stdIn = Console.OpenStandardInput()
let req = Compiler.CodeGeneratorRequest.Parser.ParseFrom(stdIn)

// Do something with it
let files = ... // left out

// Create a response message
let resp = { Compiler.CodeGeneratorResponse.empty() with SupportedFeatures = ValueSome <| uint64 Compiler.CodeGeneratorResponse.Types.Feature.Proto3Optional }
resp.File.AddRange files

// Write it somewhere
use stdOut = Console.OpenStandardOutput()
// WriteTo is provided in Google.Protobuf.MessageExtensions
resp.WriteTo(stdOut)

Here's a service client:

use channel = GrpcChannel.ForAddress("https://localhost:5001/")
let client = Greet.GreeterService.GreeterServiceClient(channel)
let req = { Greet.HelloRequest.empty() with Name = ValueSome "World" }
let resp = client.SayHello(req).ResponseAsync.Result
printfn "%s" resp.Message

And a service implementation:

type GreeterService() =
    inherit Greet.GreeterService.GreeterServiceBase()

    override _.SayHello req ctx =
        let resp =
            { Greet.HelloReply.empty() with
                // Notice how we're immediately forced to handle missing fields.
                // The language itself protects you from the binary protocol's quirks.
                // How cool is THAT?
                Message = req.Name |> ValueOption.map (sprintf "Hello, %s!")
            }
        Threading.Tasks.Task.FromResult(resp)

A note on protoc plugins

It took me considerable effort (much more than the ~5 minutes it takes to read the following paragraphs) to figure out how to implement a protoc plugin. If there is adequate documentation anywhere, I must have missed it; so I'll document what I've learned here.

The protocol buffers compiler supports plugins in the shape of executables named protoc-gen-XXXX, where XXXX is the name of the plugin. You enable a plugin by specifying --XXXX_out=some_directory and optionally pass it arguments by specifying --XXXX_opt=opt1=val1,opt2=val2. protoc attempts to execute protoc-gen-XXXX and write a serialized code generation request to the process's stdin. It then waits for the process to write a code generation response back to its stdout. The request and response are serialized as (you guessed it!) a protobuf message. The contract for these types is available from google/protobuf/compiler/plugin.proto, found inside the protoc download archive.

(Fascinatingly, the C# implementation inside protoc does not handle GRPC services. Those are generated by a separate plugin. This is why in C# you get two source files per .proto file instead of one.)

If you're implementing a plugin in C++, you can use a bunch of utilities the protobuf team have made available, but if you're implementing a plugin in another language, you'll have to be able to understand protobuf in order to understand protobuf, so to speak. This chicken-and-egg situation is the same as with any language which has its primary compiler implemented in the language itself. You'd basically have to implement the initial version in another language and then use that to implement the language again, this time in itself. I was lucky enough to have the C# protobuf plugin available, which means I implemented the original code in F#, and only had to account for the change from classes to records and such minor cases. It may not be as easy for another language where no support is available.