We have our own system. While we would love to open source it in principle,
it is currently tightly coupled to our internal datacenter and machine
configurations, so we can't really release the code as-is. I personally
hope that we manage to get it out eventually but I have no idea if or when
it
Google uses its own internal RPC implementation, and I don't think we can
endorse a particular third-party one as better than the others. I'd tell
you which one I personally found most beneficial, but I have no experience
with any of them.
Cheers,
Alek
On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 10:18 AM, J.V. wrot
thanks, which product(s) does Google use internally or find most beneficial?
Kenton Varda wrote:
> You could look at one of the open source RPC implementations listed here:
>
> http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/wiki/ThirdPartyAddOns#RPC_Implementations
>
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You could look at one of the open source RPC implementations listed here:
http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/wiki/ThirdPartyAddOns#RPC_Implementations
Network communication is non-trivial. Trying to demonstrate it with an
example would make for a very big example of which only a few lines of code
We use protobuf in Drizzle as a mechanism to serialize information into
files on disk. We are also send some of the messages over the network -
depending on what it is.
If you need a transport mechanism, I suggest checking out setting up a
gearman server (https://edge.launchpad.net/gearmand/+down
I can't imagine any other use than using it to send data over the
network and use on the other end.
In fact is this not what it was invented for (communication).
On 30 jun, 16:07, Kenton Varda wrote:
> There are tons of resources on the internet and in books explaining how to
> do network progra
There are tons of resources on the internet and in books explaining how to
do network programming in Java. Sorry, but this is really outside the scope
of protocol buffers.
On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 2:46 PM, JavaSrvcs wrote:
>
> Is there a full compilable example (in Java) on how to do this ?
> Wh
Is there a full compilable example (in Java) on how to do this ?
What sort of service would I need to be running on a server to send
data (and have the server receive and convert the flat byte array into
a Java object).
On Jun 30, 2:32 pm, Kenton Varda wrote:
> Protocol Buffers provides a way to
Protocol Buffers provides a way to convert between flat byte arrays and
structured data. This is obviously useful for network communication, but
protocol buffers does not provide any explicit networking support. It's up
to you to take the byte array generated by protocol buffers and send it over
I was led to believe that protocol buffers could be used for PC to PC
communication, is there a way to do this, and if so, where can I find
the examples?
The example I am looking at provided writes to a file.
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