I have posted an complete example for asynchronous streaming API, hope it 
helps

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/grpc-io/2wyoDZT5eao



On Thursday, 27 April 2017 01:35:04 UTC+5:30, Vijay Pai wrote:
>
> Hi there,
> Many of the test codes use C++ async streaming; for example 
> test/cpp/end2end/async_end2end_test or test/cpp/qps/qps_worker .
>
> On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:25 AM Anirudh Kasturi <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> Hello folks,
>>
>> Can you please give me pointers to an example that has an AsyncStreaming 
>> Client?  
>>
>  
>
>> Also, when the client is streaming data to the server, we will be 
>> basically streaming multiple messages.  Is there a default timeout when the 
>> channel sees no more messages for a certain amount of time so that we can 
>> shut it down?
>>
>
> There is no default timeout - the point of the async API is to give the 
> program maximum control. You can set a deadline on the Next operation by 
> using CompletionQueue::AsyncNext rather than just plain next. You can also 
> shut down the stream any time you want.
>  
>
>> I would like to understand the state machine of the client async 
>> streamin.  How does the client keeps streaming messages to the server and 
>> when does it go to the FINISH state?
>>
>
> Can you describe this further? From your paragraph above, it seems like 
> you are doing client-side 1-directional streaming, but the next sentence 
> looks like bidirectional streaming. If it's bidirectional streaming, your 
> flow will look something like:
>
> 1. Initiate the RPC with its completion queue and tag
> 2. Do CompletionQueue::Next (or AsyncNext) for completion queue tags
> 3. When you get your desired tag back, the RPC is initiated
> 4. At that point, you can issue a Read, a Write, or one of each 
> concurrently. If you do one of each concurrently, make sure that they get 
> different tags
> 5. Do CompletionQueue::Next and process the tags that come off it
> 6. Loop to step 4 as long as you want to
> 7. When you are done with Writes on this stream, initiate a WritesDone. 
> It's actually done when its CQ tag comes back
> 8. When you are fully done with this stream, initiate a Finish. It's 
> actually done when its CQ tag comes back
>
> The process is similar for client-side 1-directional streaming, but 
> obviously without Reads during the main loop and with an actual response 
> object on the Finish (and not just a status).
>
>  For each message the client sends the server has a response.  In that 
>> case is it better to use pure async or asycn streaming?
>>
>
> It is not always the case that the server will have a response for every 
> client send. If you mean that that's how your application is structured, 
> then that will allow you to make a pretty straightforward state machine for 
> your structures that control the stream. In general, sync streaming is 
> easier for most cases (since no completion queue manipulation) but hits 
> scalability limits since each stream gets its own thread and its own 
> completion queue. I would think that sync streaming will be a better choice 
> up to a few thousand concurrent streams; after that async streaming would 
> be preferable so that you can control threading from the application.
>  
>
>>
>> Best,
>> Anirudh
>>
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