diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'java/core/src/main/java/com/google/protobuf/Service.java')
-rw-r--r-- | java/core/src/main/java/com/google/protobuf/Service.java | 86 |
1 files changed, 39 insertions, 47 deletions
diff --git a/java/core/src/main/java/com/google/protobuf/Service.java b/java/core/src/main/java/com/google/protobuf/Service.java index ba7b033e..d45cdaec 100644 --- a/java/core/src/main/java/com/google/protobuf/Service.java +++ b/java/core/src/main/java/com/google/protobuf/Service.java @@ -31,70 +31,63 @@ package com.google.protobuf; /** - * Abstract base interface for protocol-buffer-based RPC services. Services - * themselves are abstract classes (implemented either by servers or as - * stubs), but they subclass this base interface. The methods of this - * interface can be used to call the methods of the service without knowing - * its exact type at compile time (analogous to the Message interface). + * Abstract base interface for protocol-buffer-based RPC services. Services themselves are abstract + * classes (implemented either by servers or as stubs), but they subclass this base interface. The + * methods of this interface can be used to call the methods of the service without knowing its + * exact type at compile time (analogous to the Message interface). * - * <p>Starting with version 2.3.0, RPC implementations should not try to build - * on this, but should instead provide code generator plugins which generate - * code specific to the particular RPC implementation. This way the generated - * code can be more appropriate for the implementation in use and can avoid - * unnecessary layers of indirection. + * <p>Starting with version 2.3.0, RPC implementations should not try to build on this, but should + * instead provide code generator plugins which generate code specific to the particular RPC + * implementation. This way the generated code can be more appropriate for the implementation in use + * and can avoid unnecessary layers of indirection. * * @author kenton@google.com Kenton Varda */ public interface Service { - /** - * Get the {@code ServiceDescriptor} describing this service and its methods. - */ + /** Get the {@code ServiceDescriptor} describing this service and its methods. */ Descriptors.ServiceDescriptor getDescriptorForType(); /** - * <p>Call a method of the service specified by MethodDescriptor. This is - * normally implemented as a simple {@code switch()} that calls the standard - * definitions of the service's methods. + * Call a method of the service specified by MethodDescriptor. This is normally implemented as a + * simple {@code switch()} that calls the standard definitions of the service's methods. * * <p>Preconditions: + * * <ul> * <li>{@code method.getService() == getDescriptorForType()} - * <li>{@code request} is of the exact same class as the object returned by - * {@code getRequestPrototype(method)}. - * <li>{@code controller} is of the correct type for the RPC implementation - * being used by this Service. For stubs, the "correct type" depends - * on the RpcChannel which the stub is using. Server-side Service - * implementations are expected to accept whatever type of - * {@code RpcController} the server-side RPC implementation uses. + * <li>{@code request} is of the exact same class as the object returned by {@code + * getRequestPrototype(method)}. + * <li>{@code controller} is of the correct type for the RPC implementation being used by this + * Service. For stubs, the "correct type" depends on the RpcChannel which the stub is using. + * Server-side Service implementations are expected to accept whatever type of {@code + * RpcController} the server-side RPC implementation uses. * </ul> * * <p>Postconditions: + * * <ul> - * <li>{@code done} will be called when the method is complete. This may be - * before {@code callMethod()} returns or it may be at some point in - * the future. - * <li>The parameter to {@code done} is the response. It must be of the - * exact same type as would be returned by - * {@code getResponsePrototype(method)}. - * <li>If the RPC failed, the parameter to {@code done} will be - * {@code null}. Further details about the failure can be found by - * querying {@code controller}. + * <li>{@code done} will be called when the method is complete. This may be before {@code + * callMethod()} returns or it may be at some point in the future. + * <li>The parameter to {@code done} is the response. It must be of the exact same type as would + * be returned by {@code getResponsePrototype(method)}. + * <li>If the RPC failed, the parameter to {@code done} will be {@code null}. Further details + * about the failure can be found by querying {@code controller}. * </ul> */ - void callMethod(Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method, - RpcController controller, - Message request, - RpcCallback<Message> done); + void callMethod( + Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method, + RpcController controller, + Message request, + RpcCallback<Message> done); /** - * <p>{@code callMethod()} requires that the request passed in is of a - * particular subclass of {@code Message}. {@code getRequestPrototype()} - * gets the default instances of this type for a given method. You can then - * call {@code Message.newBuilderForType()} on this instance to - * construct a builder to build an object which you can then pass to - * {@code callMethod()}. + * {@code callMethod()} requires that the request passed in is of a particular subclass of {@code + * Message}. {@code getRequestPrototype()} gets the default instances of this type for a given + * method. You can then call {@code Message.newBuilderForType()} on this instance to construct a + * builder to build an object which you can then pass to {@code callMethod()}. * * <p>Example: + * * <pre> * MethodDescriptor method = * service.getDescriptorForType().findMethodByName("Foo"); @@ -107,11 +100,10 @@ public interface Service { Message getRequestPrototype(Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method); /** - * Like {@code getRequestPrototype()}, but gets a prototype of the response - * message. {@code getResponsePrototype()} is generally not needed because - * the {@code Service} implementation constructs the response message itself, - * but it may be useful in some cases to know ahead of time what type of - * object will be returned. + * Like {@code getRequestPrototype()}, but gets a prototype of the response message. {@code + * getResponsePrototype()} is generally not needed because the {@code Service} implementation + * constructs the response message itself, but it may be useful in some cases to know ahead of + * time what type of object will be returned. */ Message getResponsePrototype(Descriptors.MethodDescriptor method); } |