github.com/titbtcqash/go-ethereum@v1.9.7/rpc/doc.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2015 The go-ethereum Authors 2 // This file is part of the go-ethereum library. 3 // 4 // The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify 5 // it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by 6 // the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or 7 // (at your option) any later version. 8 // 9 // The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 10 // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 11 // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 12 // GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. 13 // 14 // You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License 15 // along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. 16 17 /* 18 19 Package rpc implements bi-directional JSON-RPC 2.0 on multiple transports. 20 21 It provides access to the exported methods of an object across a network or other I/O 22 connection. After creating a server or client instance, objects can be registered to make 23 them visible as 'services'. Exported methods that follow specific conventions can be 24 called remotely. It also has support for the publish/subscribe pattern. 25 26 RPC Methods 27 28 Methods that satisfy the following criteria are made available for remote access: 29 30 - method must be exported 31 - method returns 0, 1 (response or error) or 2 (response and error) values 32 - method argument(s) must be exported or builtin types 33 - method returned value(s) must be exported or builtin types 34 35 An example method: 36 37 func (s *CalcService) Add(a, b int) (int, error) 38 39 When the returned error isn't nil the returned integer is ignored and the error is sent 40 back to the client. Otherwise the returned integer is sent back to the client. 41 42 Optional arguments are supported by accepting pointer values as arguments. E.g. if we want 43 to do the addition in an optional finite field we can accept a mod argument as pointer 44 value. 45 46 func (s *CalcService) Add(a, b int, mod *int) (int, error) 47 48 This RPC method can be called with 2 integers and a null value as third argument. In that 49 case the mod argument will be nil. Or it can be called with 3 integers, in that case mod 50 will be pointing to the given third argument. Since the optional argument is the last 51 argument the RPC package will also accept 2 integers as arguments. It will pass the mod 52 argument as nil to the RPC method. 53 54 The server offers the ServeCodec method which accepts a ServerCodec instance. It will read 55 requests from the codec, process the request and sends the response back to the client 56 using the codec. The server can execute requests concurrently. Responses can be sent back 57 to the client out of order. 58 59 An example server which uses the JSON codec: 60 61 type CalculatorService struct {} 62 63 func (s *CalculatorService) Add(a, b int) int { 64 return a + b 65 } 66 67 func (s *CalculatorService) Div(a, b int) (int, error) { 68 if b == 0 { 69 return 0, errors.New("divide by zero") 70 } 71 return a/b, nil 72 } 73 74 calculator := new(CalculatorService) 75 server := NewServer() 76 server.RegisterName("calculator", calculator") 77 78 l, _ := net.ListenUnix("unix", &net.UnixAddr{Net: "unix", Name: "/tmp/calculator.sock"}) 79 for { 80 c, _ := l.AcceptUnix() 81 codec := v2.NewJSONCodec(c) 82 go server.ServeCodec(codec, 0) 83 } 84 85 Subscriptions 86 87 The package also supports the publish subscribe pattern through the use of subscriptions. 88 A method that is considered eligible for notifications must satisfy the following 89 criteria: 90 91 - method must be exported 92 - first method argument type must be context.Context 93 - method argument(s) must be exported or builtin types 94 - method must have return types (rpc.Subscription, error) 95 96 An example method: 97 98 func (s *BlockChainService) NewBlocks(ctx context.Context) (rpc.Subscription, error) { 99 ... 100 } 101 102 When the service containing the subscription method is registered to the server, for 103 example under the "blockchain" namespace, a subscription is created by calling the 104 "blockchain_subscribe" method. 105 106 Subscriptions are deleted when the user sends an unsubscribe request or when the 107 connection which was used to create the subscription is closed. This can be initiated by 108 the client and server. The server will close the connection for any write error. 109 110 For more information about subscriptions, see https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/wiki/RPC-PUB-SUB. 111 112 Reverse Calls 113 114 In any method handler, an instance of rpc.Client can be accessed through the 115 ClientFromContext method. Using this client instance, server-to-client method calls can be 116 performed on the RPC connection. 117 */ 118 package rpc