public interface RpcController
RpcController
mediates a single method call. The primary purpose of the controller is
to provide a way to manipulate settings specific to the RPC implementation and to find out about
RPC-level errors.
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.
The methods provided by the RpcController
interface are intended to be a "least common
denominator" set of features which we expect all implementations to support. Specific
implementations may provide more advanced features (e.g. deadline propagation).
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
java.lang.String |
errorText()
If
failed() is true , returns a human-readable description of the error. |
boolean |
failed()
After a call has finished, returns true if the call failed.
|
boolean |
isCanceled()
If
true , indicates that the client canceled the RPC, so the server may as well give up
on replying to it. |
void |
notifyOnCancel(RpcCallback<java.lang.Object> callback)
Asks that the given callback be called when the RPC is canceled.
|
void |
reset()
Resets the RpcController to its initial state so that it may be reused in a new call.
|
void |
setFailed(java.lang.String reason)
Causes
failed() to return true on the client side. |
void |
startCancel()
Advises the RPC system that the caller desires that the RPC call be canceled.
|
void reset()
boolean failed()
failed()
most only be called on the client side, and
must not be called before a call has finished.java.lang.String errorText()
failed()
is true
, returns a human-readable description of the error.void startCancel()
void setFailed(java.lang.String reason)
failed()
to return true on the client side. reason
will be incorporated
into the message returned by errorText()
. If you find you need to return
machine-readable information about failures, you should incorporate it into your response
protocol buffer and should NOT call setFailed()
.boolean isCanceled()
true
, indicates that the client canceled the RPC, so the server may as well give up
on replying to it. This method must be called on the server side only. The server should still
call the final "done" callback.void notifyOnCancel(RpcCallback<java.lang.Object> callback)
null
. The callback will always be called exactly once. If the
RPC completes without being canceled, the callback will be called after completion. If the RPC
has already been canceled when NotifyOnCancel() is called, the callback will be called
immediately.
notifyOnCancel()
must be called no more than once per request. It must be called on
the server side only.