This framework provides cross platform JSON-RPC (remote procedure call) support for C++. It is fully JSON-RPC 2.0 & 1.0 compatible.
5 good reasons for using libjson-rpc-cpp in your next RPC project
- Full JSON-RPC 2.0 & partial JSON-RPC 1.0 client and server Support.
- jsonrpcstub - a tool that generates stub-classes for your JSON-RPC client and server applications.
- Ready to use HTTP + TCP server and client to provide simple interfaces for your JSON-RPC application.
- Cross platform build support for Linux and OS X.
- Super liberal MIT-License.
Other good reasons to use libjson-rpc-cpp
- Easy to use cmake cross platform build system.
- Clean and simple architecture, which makes it easy to extend.
- Continuously tested under MacOS, and various linux distributions.
- Automated testing using
make test
. - Useful Examples provided. e.g. XBMC Remote using json-rpc client part and stub generator.
- The stubgenerator currently supports C++ and JavaScript.
Debian (stretch) and Ubuntu (15.10 or later)
sudo apt-get install libjsonrpccpp-dev libjsonrpccpp-tools
Fedora
sudo dnf install libjson-rpc-cpp-devel libjson-rpc-cpp-tools
Arch Linux
For Arch Linux there is a PKGBUILD provided in the AUR.
sudo aura -A libjson-rpc-cpp
Gentoo Linux
sudo emerge dev-cpp/libjson-rpc-cpp
Mac OS X
For OS X a Brew package is available:
brew install libjson-rpc-cpp
Windows
There is a ready to use compiled package here. Just download execute the installer EXE.
UNIX
For Debian and Arch GNU/Linux based systems, all dependencies are available via the package manager. For OS X all dependencies are available in Brew
git clone git://github.com/cinemast/libjson-rpc-cpp.git
mkdir -p libjson-rpc-cpp/build
cd libjson-rpc-cpp/build
cmake .. && make
sudo make install
sudo ldconfig #only required for linux
That's it!
If you are not happy with it, simply uninstall it from your system using (inside the build the directory):
sudo make uninstall
Build options:
Default configuration should be fine for most systems, but here are available compilation flags:
-DCOMPILE_TESTS=NO
disables unit test suite.-DCOMPILE_STUBGEN=NO
disables building the stubgenerator.-DCOMPILE_EXAMPLES=NO
disables examples.-DHTTP_SERVER=NO
disable the libmicrohttpd webserver.-DHTTP_CLIENT=NO
disable the curl client.-DREDIS_SERVER=NO
disable the redis server connector.-DREDIS_CLIENT=NO
disable the redis client connector.-DUNIX_DOMAIN_SOCKET_SERVER=YES
enable the unix domain socket server connector.-DUNIX_DOMAIN_SOCKET_CLIENT=YES
enable the unix domain socket client connector.-DFILE_DESCRIPTOR_SERVER=NO
disable the file descriptor server connector.-DFILE_DESCRIPTOR_CLIENT=NO
disable the file descriptor client connector.-DTCP_SOCKET_SERVER=NO
disable the tcp socket server connector.-DTCP_SOCKET_CLIENT=NO
disable the tcp socket client connector.
This example will show the most simple way to create a rpc server and client. If you only need the server, ignore step 4. If you only need the client, ignore step 3. You can find all resources of this sample in the src/examples
directory of this repository.
[
{
"name": "sayHello",
"params": {
"name": "Peter"
},
"returns" : "Hello Peter"
},
{
"name" : "notifyServer"
}
]
The type of a return value or parameter is defined by the literal assigned to it. In this example you can see how to specify methods and notifications.
Call jsonrpcstub:
jsonrpcstub spec.json --cpp-server=AbstractStubServer --cpp-client=StubClient
This generates a serverstub and a clientstub class.
Extend the abstract server stub and implement all pure virtual (abstract) methods defined in spec.json
.
#include "abstractstubserver.h"
#include <jsonrpccpp/server/connectors/httpserver.h>
using namespace jsonrpc;
using namespace std;
class MyStubServer : public AbstractStubServer
{
public:
MyStubServer(AbstractServerConnector &connector);
virtual void notifyServer();
virtual std::string sayHello(const std::string& name);
};
MyStubServer::MyStubServer(AbstractServerConnector &connector) :
AbstractStubServer(connector)
{
}
void MyStubServer::notifyServer()
{
cout << "Server got notified" << endl;
}
string MyStubServer::sayHello(const string &name)
{
return "Hello " + name;
}
int main()
{
HttpServer httpserver(8383);
MyStubServer s(httpserver);
s.StartListening();
getchar();
s.StopListening();
return 0;
}
In the main function the concrete server is instantiated and started. That is all for the server. Any JSON-RPC 2.0 compliant client can now connect to your server.
Compile the server with:
g++ main.cpp -ljsoncpp -lmicrohttpd -ljsonrpccpp-common -ljsonrpccpp-server -o sampleserver
#include <iostream>
#include "stubclient.h"
#include <jsonrpccpp/client/connectors/httpclient.h>
using namespace jsonrpc;
using namespace std;
int main()
{
HttpClient httpclient("http://localhost:8383");
StubClient c(httpclient);
try
{
cout << c.sayHello("Peter") << endl;
c.notifyServer();
}
catch (JsonRpcException e)
{
cerr << e.what() << endl;
}
}
Compile the client with:
g++ main.cpp -ljsoncpp -lcurl -ljsonrpccpp-common -ljsonrpccpp-client -o sampleclient
Please take a look at CONTRIBUTING.md
Changelogs can be found here.
We do our best to keep the API/ABI stable, to prevent problems when updating this framework. A compatiblity report can be found here.
This framework is licensed under MIT. All of this libraries dependencies are licensed under MIT compatible licenses.
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If you use this library and find it useful, I would be very pleased if you let me know about it.