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GrpcDotNetNamedPipes

NuGet

Named pipe transport for gRPC in C#/.NET.

This is not an official Google product.

Supported platforms

  • .NET Framework 4.6.2+ (Windows)
  • .NET 6+ (Windows, macOS, Linux)

Usage

Suppose you have a Greeter service as described in the gRPC on .NET Core intro.

Server:

var server = new NamedPipeServer("MY_PIPE_NAME");
Greeter.BindService(server.ServiceBinder, new GreeterService());
server.Start();

Client:

var channel = new NamedPipeChannel(".", "MY_PIPE_NAME");
var client = new Greeter.GreeterClient(channel);

var response = await client.SayHelloAsync(
	new HelloRequest { Name = "World" });

Console.WriteLine(response.Message);

Why named pipes?

Named pipes are suitable for inter-process communication (IPC).

Since the introduction of this project, ASP.NET Core has added support for gRPC over Unix Domain Sockets and over Named Pipes. Here is a handy matrix to help you decide what's right for you:

GrpcDotNetNamedPipes ASP.NET UDS ASP.NET Named Pipes ASP.NET HTTP
.NET Platform .NET Framework 4.6.2
.NET 5
.NET 5 .NET 8 (server)
.NET 5 (client)
.NET 5
OS Windows 7
Mac
Linux
Windows 10
Mac
Linux
Windows 7 Windows 7
Mac
Linux
No firewall warnings ✔️ ✔️ ✔️
No network adapter ✔️ ✔️ ✔️
Access controls ✔️ ✔️
Binary size (trimmed) ~ 300 KB ~ 7 MB ~ 7 MB ~ 7 MB
Startup time < 25ms < 25ms < 25ms ~ 250ms
Large message throughput ~ 500MB/s ~ 400MB/s ~ 100MB/s ~ 100MB/s
Streaming messages ~ 400k/s ~ 500k/s ~ 500k/s ~ 400k/s
Method calls ~ 8000/s ~ 4000/s ~ 5000/s ~ 2500/s
Compatible with gRPC-Go ✔️ ✔️ ✔️
Official Microsoft support ✔️ ✔️ ✔️

Performance numbers are based on tests running on Windows 11 with .NET 8.

Caveats

This implementation currently uses a custom wire protocol so it won't be compatible with other gRPC named pipe implementations.

Linux and macOS support is provided for universal compatibility but may not be as optimized as Windows.