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interceptor.h 11 kB

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  1. /*
  2. *
  3. * Copyright 2018 gRPC authors.
  4. *
  5. * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
  6. * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
  7. * You may obtain a copy of the License at
  8. *
  9. * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
  10. *
  11. * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
  12. * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
  13. * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
  14. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
  15. * limitations under the License.
  16. *
  17. */
  18. #ifndef GRPCPP_IMPL_CODEGEN_INTERCEPTOR_H
  19. #define GRPCPP_IMPL_CODEGEN_INTERCEPTOR_H
  20. // IWYU pragma: private, include <grpcpp/support/interceptor.h>
  21. #include <map>
  22. #include <memory>
  23. #include <string>
  24. #include <grpc/impl/codegen/grpc_types.h>
  25. #include <grpcpp/impl/codegen/byte_buffer.h>
  26. #include <grpcpp/impl/codegen/config.h>
  27. #include <grpcpp/impl/codegen/core_codegen_interface.h>
  28. #include <grpcpp/impl/codegen/metadata_map.h>
  29. #include <grpcpp/impl/codegen/string_ref.h>
  30. namespace grpc {
  31. class ChannelInterface;
  32. class Status;
  33. namespace experimental {
  34. /// An enumeration of different possible points at which the \a Intercept
  35. /// method of the \a Interceptor interface may be called. Any given call
  36. /// to \a Intercept will include one or more of these hook points, and
  37. /// each hook point makes certain types of information available to the
  38. /// interceptor.
  39. /// In these enumeration names, PRE_SEND means that an interception has taken
  40. /// place between the time the application provided a certain type of data
  41. /// (e.g., initial metadata, status) and the time that that data goes to the
  42. /// other side. POST_SEND means that the data has been committed for going to
  43. /// the other side (even if it has not yet been received at the other side).
  44. /// PRE_RECV means an interception between the time that a certain
  45. /// operation has been requested and it is available. POST_RECV means that a
  46. /// result is available but has not yet been passed back to the application.
  47. /// A batch of interception points will only contain either PRE or POST hooks
  48. /// but not both types. For example, a batch with PRE_SEND hook points will not
  49. /// contain POST_RECV or POST_SEND ops. Likewise, a batch with POST_* ops can
  50. /// not contain PRE_* ops.
  51. enum class InterceptionHookPoints {
  52. /// The first three in this list are for clients and servers
  53. PRE_SEND_INITIAL_METADATA,
  54. PRE_SEND_MESSAGE,
  55. POST_SEND_MESSAGE,
  56. PRE_SEND_STATUS, // server only
  57. PRE_SEND_CLOSE, // client only: WritesDone for stream; after write in unary
  58. /// The following three are for hijacked clients only. A batch with PRE_RECV_*
  59. /// hook points will never contain hook points of other types.
  60. PRE_RECV_INITIAL_METADATA,
  61. PRE_RECV_MESSAGE,
  62. PRE_RECV_STATUS,
  63. /// The following two are for all clients and servers
  64. POST_RECV_INITIAL_METADATA,
  65. POST_RECV_MESSAGE,
  66. POST_RECV_STATUS, // client only
  67. POST_RECV_CLOSE, // server only
  68. /// This is a special hook point available to both clients and servers when
  69. /// TryCancel() is performed.
  70. /// - No other hook points will be present along with this.
  71. /// - It is illegal for an interceptor to block/delay this operation.
  72. /// - ALL interceptors see this hook point irrespective of whether the
  73. /// RPC was hijacked or not.
  74. PRE_SEND_CANCEL,
  75. NUM_INTERCEPTION_HOOKS
  76. };
  77. /// Class that is passed as an argument to the \a Intercept method
  78. /// of the application's \a Interceptor interface implementation. It has five
  79. /// purposes:
  80. /// 1. Indicate which hook points are present at a specific interception
  81. /// 2. Allow an interceptor to inform the library that an RPC should
  82. /// continue to the next stage of its processing (which may be another
  83. /// interceptor or the main path of the library)
  84. /// 3. Allow an interceptor to hijack the processing of the RPC (only for
  85. /// client-side RPCs with PRE_SEND_INITIAL_METADATA) so that it does not
  86. /// proceed with normal processing beyond that stage
  87. /// 4. Access the relevant fields of an RPC at each interception point
  88. /// 5. Set some fields of an RPC at each interception point, when possible
  89. class InterceptorBatchMethods {
  90. public:
  91. virtual ~InterceptorBatchMethods() {}
  92. /// Determine whether the current batch has an interception hook point
  93. /// of type \a type
  94. virtual bool QueryInterceptionHookPoint(InterceptionHookPoints type) = 0;
  95. /// Signal that the interceptor is done intercepting the current batch of the
  96. /// RPC. Every interceptor must either call Proceed or Hijack on each
  97. /// interception. In most cases, only Proceed will be used. Explicit use of
  98. /// Proceed is what enables interceptors to delay the processing of RPCs
  99. /// while they perform other work.
  100. /// Proceed is a no-op if the batch contains PRE_SEND_CANCEL. Simply returning
  101. /// from the Intercept method does the job of continuing the RPC in this case.
  102. /// This is because PRE_SEND_CANCEL is always in a separate batch and is not
  103. /// allowed to be delayed.
  104. virtual void Proceed() = 0;
  105. /// Indicate that the interceptor has hijacked the RPC (only valid if the
  106. /// batch contains send_initial_metadata on the client side). Later
  107. /// interceptors in the interceptor list will not be called. Later batches
  108. /// on the same RPC will go through interception, but only up to the point
  109. /// of the hijacking interceptor.
  110. virtual void Hijack() = 0;
  111. /// Send Message Methods
  112. /// GetSerializedSendMessage and GetSendMessage/ModifySendMessage are the
  113. /// available methods to view and modify the request payload. An interceptor
  114. /// can access the payload in either serialized form or non-serialized form
  115. /// but not both at the same time.
  116. /// gRPC performs serialization in a lazy manner, which means
  117. /// that a call to GetSerializedSendMessage will result in a serialization
  118. /// operation if the payload stored is not in the serialized form already; the
  119. /// non-serialized form will be lost and GetSendMessage will no longer return
  120. /// a valid pointer, and this will remain true for later interceptors too.
  121. /// This can change however if ModifySendMessage is used to replace the
  122. /// current payload. Note that ModifySendMessage requires a new payload
  123. /// message in the non-serialized form. This will overwrite the existing
  124. /// payload irrespective of whether it had been serialized earlier. Also note
  125. /// that gRPC Async API requires early serialization of the payload which
  126. /// means that the payload would be available in the serialized form only
  127. /// unless an interceptor replaces the payload with ModifySendMessage.
  128. /// Returns a modifable ByteBuffer holding the serialized form of the message
  129. /// that is going to be sent. Valid for PRE_SEND_MESSAGE interceptions.
  130. /// A return value of nullptr indicates that this ByteBuffer is not valid.
  131. virtual ByteBuffer* GetSerializedSendMessage() = 0;
  132. /// Returns a non-modifiable pointer to the non-serialized form of the message
  133. /// to be sent. Valid for PRE_SEND_MESSAGE interceptions. A return value of
  134. /// nullptr indicates that this field is not valid.
  135. virtual const void* GetSendMessage() = 0;
  136. /// Overwrites the message to be sent with \a message. \a message should be in
  137. /// the non-serialized form expected by the method. Valid for PRE_SEND_MESSAGE
  138. /// interceptions. Note that the interceptor is responsible for maintaining
  139. /// the life of the message till it is serialized or it receives the
  140. /// POST_SEND_MESSAGE interception point, whichever happens earlier. The
  141. /// modifying interceptor may itself force early serialization by calling
  142. /// GetSerializedSendMessage.
  143. virtual void ModifySendMessage(const void* message) = 0;
  144. /// Checks whether the SEND MESSAGE op succeeded. Valid for POST_SEND_MESSAGE
  145. /// interceptions.
  146. virtual bool GetSendMessageStatus() = 0;
  147. /// Returns a modifiable multimap of the initial metadata to be sent. Valid
  148. /// for PRE_SEND_INITIAL_METADATA interceptions. A value of nullptr indicates
  149. /// that this field is not valid.
  150. virtual std::multimap<std::string, std::string>* GetSendInitialMetadata() = 0;
  151. /// Returns the status to be sent. Valid for PRE_SEND_STATUS interceptions.
  152. virtual Status GetSendStatus() = 0;
  153. /// Overwrites the status with \a status. Valid for PRE_SEND_STATUS
  154. /// interceptions.
  155. virtual void ModifySendStatus(const Status& status) = 0;
  156. /// Returns a modifiable multimap of the trailing metadata to be sent. Valid
  157. /// for PRE_SEND_STATUS interceptions. A value of nullptr indicates
  158. /// that this field is not valid.
  159. virtual std::multimap<std::string, std::string>*
  160. GetSendTrailingMetadata() = 0;
  161. /// Returns a pointer to the modifiable received message. Note that the
  162. /// message is already deserialized but the type is not set; the interceptor
  163. /// should static_cast to the appropriate type before using it. This is valid
  164. /// for PRE_RECV_MESSAGE and POST_RECV_MESSAGE interceptions; nullptr for not
  165. /// valid
  166. virtual void* GetRecvMessage() = 0;
  167. /// Returns a modifiable multimap of the received initial metadata.
  168. /// Valid for PRE_RECV_INITIAL_METADATA and POST_RECV_INITIAL_METADATA
  169. /// interceptions; nullptr if not valid
  170. virtual std::multimap<grpc::string_ref, grpc::string_ref>*
  171. GetRecvInitialMetadata() = 0;
  172. /// Returns a modifiable view of the received status on PRE_RECV_STATUS and
  173. /// POST_RECV_STATUS interceptions; nullptr if not valid.
  174. virtual Status* GetRecvStatus() = 0;
  175. /// Returns a modifiable multimap of the received trailing metadata on
  176. /// PRE_RECV_STATUS and POST_RECV_STATUS interceptions; nullptr if not valid
  177. virtual std::multimap<grpc::string_ref, grpc::string_ref>*
  178. GetRecvTrailingMetadata() = 0;
  179. /// Gets an intercepted channel. When a call is started on this interceptor,
  180. /// only interceptors after the current interceptor are created from the
  181. /// factory objects registered with the channel. This allows calls to be
  182. /// started from interceptors without infinite regress through the interceptor
  183. /// list.
  184. virtual std::unique_ptr<ChannelInterface> GetInterceptedChannel() = 0;
  185. /// On a hijacked RPC, an interceptor can decide to fail a PRE_RECV_MESSAGE
  186. /// op. This would be a signal to the reader that there will be no more
  187. /// messages, or the stream has failed or been cancelled.
  188. virtual void FailHijackedRecvMessage() = 0;
  189. /// On a hijacked RPC/ to-be hijacked RPC, this can be called to fail a SEND
  190. /// MESSAGE op
  191. virtual void FailHijackedSendMessage() = 0;
  192. };
  193. /// Interface for an interceptor. Interceptor authors must create a class
  194. /// that derives from this parent class.
  195. class Interceptor {
  196. public:
  197. virtual ~Interceptor() {}
  198. /// The one public method of an Interceptor interface. Override this to
  199. /// trigger the desired actions at the hook points described above.
  200. virtual void Intercept(InterceptorBatchMethods* methods) = 0;
  201. };
  202. } // namespace experimental
  203. } // namespace grpc
  204. #endif // GRPCPP_IMPL_CODEGEN_INTERCEPTOR_H