This PR adds all the guides from [Visual Guides](https://bytebytego.com/guides/) section on bytebytego to the repository with proper links. - [x] Markdown files for guides and categories are placed inside `data/guides` and `data/categories` - [x] Guide links in readme are auto-generated using `scripts/readme.ts`. Everytime you run the script `npm run update-readme`, it reads the categories and guides from the above mentioned folders, generate production links for guides and categories and populate the table of content in the readme. This ensures that any future guides and categories will automatically get added to the readme. - [x] Sorting inside the readme matches the actual category and guides sorting on production
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title, description, image, createdAt, draft, categories, tags
| title | description | image | createdAt | draft | categories | tags | |||
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| How does gRPC work? | Learn how gRPC works, its data flow, and performance benefits. | https://assets.bytebytego.com/diagrams/0210-grpc.png | 2024-01-28 | false |
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RPC (Remote Procedure Call) is called “remote” because it enables communications between remote services when services are deployed to different servers under microservice architecture. From the user’s point of view, it acts like a local function call.
The diagram above illustrates the overall data flow for gRPC.
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Step 1: A REST call is made from the client. The request body is usually in JSON format.
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Steps 2 - 4: The order service (gRPC client) receives the REST call, transforms it, and makes an RPC call to the payment service. gPRC encodes the client stub into a binary format and sends it to the low-level transport layer.
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Step 5: gRPC sends the packets over the network via HTTP2. Because of binary encoding and network optimizations, gRPC is said to be 5X faster than JSON.
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Steps 6 - 8: The payment service (gRPC server) receives the packets from the network, decodes them, and invokes the server application.
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Steps 9 - 11: The result is returned from the server application, and gets encoded and sent to the transport layer.
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Steps 12 - 14: The order service receives the packets, decodes them, and sends the result to the client application.
