AspNetCore.Docs/aspnetcore/grpc/browser.md

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Use gRPC in browser apps jamesnk Learn how to configure gRPC services on ASP.NET Core to be callable from browser apps using gRPC-Web. >= aspnetcore-3.0 jamesnk 06/30/2020
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grpc/browser

Use gRPC in browser apps

By James Newton-King

Learn how to configure an existing ASP.NET Core gRPC service to be callable from browser apps, using the gRPC-Web protocol. gRPC-Web allows browser JavaScript and Blazor apps to call gRPC services. It's not possible to call an HTTP/2 gRPC service from a browser-based app. gRPC services hosted in ASP.NET Core can be configured to support gRPC-Web alongside HTTP/2 gRPC.

For instructions on adding a gRPC service to an existing ASP.NET Core app, see Add gRPC services to an ASP.NET Core app.

For instructions on creating a gRPC project, see xref:tutorials/grpc/grpc-start.

gRPC-Web in ASP.NET Core vs. Envoy

There are two choices for how to add gRPC-Web to an ASP.NET Core app:

  • Support gRPC-Web alongside gRPC HTTP/2 in ASP.NET Core. This option uses middleware provided by the Grpc.AspNetCore.Web package.
  • Use the Envoy proxy's gRPC-Web support to translate gRPC-Web to gRPC HTTP/2. The translated call is then forwarded onto the ASP.NET Core app.

There are pros and cons to each approach. If an app's environment is already using Envoy as a proxy, it might make sense to also use Envoy to provide gRPC-Web support. For a basic solution for gRPC-Web that only requires ASP.NET Core, Grpc.AspNetCore.Web is a good choice.

Configure gRPC-Web in ASP.NET Core

gRPC services hosted in ASP.NET Core can be configured to support gRPC-Web alongside HTTP/2 gRPC. gRPC-Web does not require any changes to services. The only modification is startup configuration.

To enable gRPC-Web with an ASP.NET Core gRPC service:

  • Add a reference to the Grpc.AspNetCore.Web package.
  • Configure the app to use gRPC-Web by adding UseGrpcWeb and EnableGrpcWeb to Startup.cs:

[!code-csharp]

The preceding code:

  • Adds the gRPC-Web middleware, UseGrpcWeb, after routing and before endpoints.
  • Specifies the endpoints.MapGrpcService<GreeterService>() method supports gRPC-Web with EnableGrpcWeb.

Alternatively, the gRPC-Web middleware can be configured so all services support gRPC-Web by default and EnableGrpcWeb isn't required. Specify new GrpcWebOptions { DefaultEnabled = true } when the middleware is added.

[!code-csharp]

[!NOTE] There is a known issue that causes gRPC-Web to fail when hosted by Http.sys in .NET Core 3.x.

A workaround to get gRPC-Web working on Http.sys is available here.

gRPC-Web and CORS

Browser security prevents a web page from making requests to a different domain than the one that served the web page. This restriction applies to making gRPC-Web calls with browser apps. For example, a browser app served by https://www.contoso.com is blocked from calling gRPC-Web services hosted on https://services.contoso.com. Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) can be used to relax this restriction.

To allow a browser app to make cross-origin gRPC-Web calls, set up CORS in ASP.NET Core. Use the built-in CORS support, and expose gRPC-specific headers with xref:Microsoft.AspNetCore.Cors.Infrastructure.CorsPolicyBuilder.WithExposedHeaders%2A.

[!code-csharp]

The preceding code:

  • Calls AddCors to add CORS services and configures a CORS policy that exposes gRPC-specific headers.
  • Calls UseCors to add the CORS middleware after routing and before endpoints.
  • Specifies the endpoints.MapGrpcService<GreeterService>() method supports CORS with RequiresCors.

gRPC-Web and streaming

Traditional gRPC over HTTP/2 supports streaming in all directions. gRPC-Web offers limited support for streaming:

  • gRPC-Web browser clients don't support calling client streaming and bidirectional streaming methods.
  • ASP.NET Core gRPC services hosted on Azure App Service and IIS don't support bidirectional streaming.

When using gRPC-Web, we only recommend the use of unary methods and server streaming methods.

Call gRPC-Web from the browser

Browser apps can use gRPC-Web to call gRPC services. There are some requirements and limitations when calling gRPC services with gRPC-Web from the browser:

  • The server must have been configured to support gRPC-Web.
  • Client streaming and bidirectional streaming calls aren't supported. Server streaming is supported.
  • Calling gRPC services on a different domain requires CORS to be configured on the server.

JavaScript gRPC-Web client

There is a JavaScript gRPC-Web client. For instructions on how to use gRPC-Web from JavaScript, see write JavaScript client code with gRPC-Web.

Configure gRPC-Web with the .NET gRPC client

The .NET gRPC client can be configured to make gRPC-Web calls. This is useful for Blazor WebAssembly apps, which are hosted in the browser and have the same HTTP limitations of JavaScript code. Calling gRPC-Web with a .NET client is the same as HTTP/2 gRPC. The only modification is how the channel is created.

To use gRPC-Web:

  • Add a reference to the Grpc.Net.Client.Web package.
  • Ensure the reference to Grpc.Net.Client package is 2.29.0 or greater.
  • Configure the channel to use the GrpcWebHandler:

[!code-csharp]

The preceding code:

  • Configures a channel to use gRPC-Web.
  • Creates a client and makes a call using the channel.

GrpcWebHandler has the following configuration options:

  • InnerHandler: The underlying xref:System.Net.Http.HttpMessageHandler that makes the gRPC HTTP request, for example, HttpClientHandler.
  • GrpcWebMode: An enumeration type that specifies whether the gRPC HTTP request Content-Type is application/grpc-web or application/grpc-web-text.
    • GrpcWebMode.GrpcWeb configures content to be sent without encoding. Default value.
    • GrpcWebMode.GrpcWebText configures content to be base64 encoded. Required for server streaming calls in browsers.
  • HttpVersion: HTTP protocol Version used to set HttpRequestMessage.Version on the underlying gRPC HTTP request. gRPC-Web doesn't require a specific version and doesn't override the default unless specified.

[!IMPORTANT] Generated gRPC clients have sync and async methods for calling unary methods. For example, SayHello is sync and SayHelloAsync is async. Calling a sync method in a Blazor WebAssembly app will cause the app to become unresponsive. Async methods must always be used in Blazor WebAssembly.

Additional resources