Client
The cwgo tool supports generating the calling code of HTTP Client or RPC Client through IDL, which is convenient for users to develop.
Basic commands
Use cwgo client -h
to view the help command for generating client code.
cwgo client -h
NAME:
cwgo client - generate RPC or HTTP client
Examples:
# Generate RPR client code
cwgo client --type RPC --idl {{path/to/IDL_file.thrift}} --service {{svc_name}}
# Generate HTTP client code
cwgo client --type HTTP --idl {{path/to/IDL_file.thrift}} --service {{svc_name}}
USAGE:
cwgo client [command options] [arguments...]
OPTIONS:
--service value Specify the service name.
--type value Specify the generate type. (RPC or HTTP) (default: "RPC")
--module value, --mod value Specify the Go module name to generate go.mod.
--idl value Specify the IDL file path. (.thrift or .proto)
--out_dir value, -o value Specify the output path. (default: biz/http)
--registry value Specify the registry, default is None
--proto_search_path value, -I value [ --proto_search_path value, -I value ] Add an IDL search path for includes. (Valid only if idl is protobuf)
--pass value [ --pass value ] pass param to hz or kitex
--help, -h show help (default: false)
Specification
--service specify service name
--type specifies the generation type, supports parameters RPC, HTTP
--module specifies the generated module name
--idl specify IDL file path
--out_dir specify the output path
--registry specifies the service registration component, currently only useful for RPC type, supports parameters ZK, NACOS, ETCD, POLARIS
--proto_search_path Add IDL search path, only valid for pb
--pass value parameter passed to hz and kitex
RPC Client
Write IDL
// hello. thrift
namespace go hello.example
struct HelloReq {
1: string Name
}
struct HelloResp {
1: string RespBody;
}
service HelloService {
HelloResp HelloMethod(1: HelloReq request);
HelloResp HelloMethod1(1: HelloReq request);
HelloResp HelloMethod2(1: HelloReq request);
}
Commands
cwgo client --type RPC --idl hello.thrift --service hellotest
Generate Code
├── hello. thrift # IDL file
├── kitex_gen # Generate code related to IDL content
│ └── hello
│ └── example
│ ├── hello.go # The product of thriftgo, the go code containing the content defined by hello.thrift
│ ├── helloservice
│ │ ├── client.go # provides NewClient API
│ │ ├── helloservice.go # Provides some definitions shared by client.go and server.go
│ │ ├── invoker.go
│ │ └── server.go # provides NewServer API
│ ├── k-consts.go
│ └── k-hello.go # code generated by kitex outside of thriftgo's product
└── rpc
└── hellotest
├── hellotest_client.go # client wrapper code
├── hellotest_default.go # client default implementation code
└── hellotest_init.go # client initialization code
HTTP Client
Write IDL
To write a simple IDL to generate HTTP Client, you need to add api.$method
and api.base_domain
to fill uri
and host
.
// hello. thrift
namespace go hello.example
struct HelloReq {
1: string Name (api. query="name");
}
struct HelloResp {
1: string RespBody;
}
service HelloService {
HelloResp HelloMethod1(1: HelloReq request) (api.get="/hello1");
HelloResp HelloMethod2(1: HelloReq request) (api.get="/hello2");
HelloResp HelloMethod3(1: HelloReq request) (api.get="/hello3");
}(
api.base_domain="http://127.0.0.1:8888";
)
Commands
Execute the following basic commands to generate the client
cwgo client --type HTTP --idl hello.thrift --service hellotest
Generate Code
A default client implementation is provided in hello_service.go
, and users can use it directly. If there is a need for custom configuration, you can use the options
provided in hertz_client.go
to customize the complex configuration of the Client.
.
├── biz
│ └── http
│ └── hello_service
│ ├── hello_service.go # client initialization and calling code
│ └── hertz_client.go # client specific implementation code
├── hello. thrift # IDL file
└── hertz_gen #IDL content-related generated code
└── hello
└── example
└── hello.go
client default implementation code
var defaultClient, _ = NewHelloServiceClient("http://127.0.0.1:8888")
func HelloMethod1(context context.Context, req *example.HelloReq, reqOpt ...config.RequestOption) (resp *example.HelloResp, rawResponse *protocol.Response, err error) {
return defaultClient.HelloMethod1(context, req, reqOpt...)
}
func HelloMethod2(context context.Context, req *example.HelloReq, reqOpt ...config.RequestOption) (resp *example.HelloResp, rawResponse *protocol.Response, err error) {
return defaultClient.HelloMethod2(context, req, reqOpt...)
}
func HelloMethod3(context context.Context, req *example.HelloReq, reqOpt ...config.RequestOption) (resp *example.HelloResp, rawResponse *protocol.Response, err error) {
return defaultClient.HelloMethod3(context, req, reqOpt...)
}
Last modified
January 18, 2024
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