The English version of quarkus.io is the official project site. Translated sites are community supported on a best-effort basis.

Implementing a gRPC Service

gRPC service implementations exposed as CDI beans are automatically registered and served by quarkus-grpc.

Implementing a gRPC service requires the gRPC classes to be generated. Place your proto files in src/main/proto and run mvn compile.

Generated Code

Quarkus generates a few implementation classes for services declared in the proto file:

  1. A service interface using the Mutiny API

    • the class name is ${JAVA_PACKAGE}.${NAME_OF_THE_SERVICE}

  2. An implementation base class using the gRPC API

    • the class name is structured as follows: ${JAVA_PACKAGE}.${NAME_OF_THE_SERVICE}Grpc.${NAME_OF_THE_SERVICE}ImplBase

For example, if you use the following proto file snippet:

option java_package = "hello"; (1)

service Greeter { (2)
    rpc SayHello (HelloRequest) returns (HelloReply) {}
}
1 hello is the java package for the generated classes.
2 Greeter is the service name.

Then the service interface is hello.Greeter and the implementation base is the abstract static nested class: hello.GreeterGrpc.GreeterImplBase.

You’ll need to implement the service interface or extend the base class with your service implementation bean as described in the following sections.

Implementing a Service with the Mutiny API

To implement a gRPC service using the Mutiny API, create a class that implements the service interface. Then, implement the methods defined in the service interface. If you don’t want to implement a service method just throw an java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException from the method body (the exception will be automatically converted to the appropriate gRPC exception). Finally, implement the service and add the @GrpcService annotation:

import io.quarkus.grpc.GrpcService;
import hello.Greeter;

@GrpcService (1)
public class HelloService implements Greeter { (2)

    @Override
    public Uni<HelloReply> sayHello(HelloRequest request) {
        return Uni.createFrom().item(() ->
                HelloReply.newBuilder().setMessage("Hello " + request.getName()).build()
        );
    }
}
1 A gRPC service implementation bean must be annotated with the @GrpcService annotation and should not declare any other CDI qualifier. All gRPC services have the jakarta.inject.Singleton scope. Additionally, the request context is always active during a service call.
2 hello.Greeter is the generated service interface.
The service implementation bean can also extend the Mutiny implementation base, where the class name is structured as follows: Mutiny${NAME_OF_THE_SERVICE}Grpc.${NAME_OF_THE_SERVICE}ImplBase.

Implementing a Service with the default gRPC API

To implement a gRPC service using the default gRPC API, create a class that extends the default implementation base. Then, override the methods defined in the service interface. Finally, implement the service and add the @GrpcService annotation:

import io.quarkus.grpc.GrpcService;

@GrpcService
public class HelloService extends GreeterGrpc.GreeterImplBase {

    @Override
    public void sayHello(HelloRequest request, StreamObserver<HelloReply> responseObserver) {
        String name = request.getName();
        String message = "Hello " + name;
        responseObserver.onNext(HelloReply.newBuilder().setMessage(message).build());
        responseObserver.onCompleted();
    }
}

Blocking Service Implementation

By default, all the methods from a gRPC service run on the event loop. As a consequence, you must not block. If your service logic must block, annotate the method with io.smallrye.common.annotation.Blocking:

@Override
@Blocking
public Uni<HelloReply> sayHelloBlocking(HelloRequest request) {
    // Do something blocking before returning the Uni
}

Handling Streams

gRPC allows receiving and returning streams:

service Streaming {
    rpc Source(Empty) returns (stream Item) {} // Returns a stream
    rpc Sink(stream Item) returns (Empty) {}   // Reads a stream
    rpc Pipe(stream Item) returns (stream Item) {}  // Reads a streams and return a streams
}

Using Mutiny, you can implement these as follows:

import io.quarkus.grpc.GrpcService;

@GrpcService
public class StreamingService implements Streaming {

    @Override
    public Multi<Item> source(Empty request) {
        // Just returns a stream emitting an item every 2ms and stopping after 10 items.
        return Multi.createFrom().ticks().every(Duration.ofMillis(2))
                .select().first(10)
                .map(l -> Item.newBuilder().setValue(Long.toString(l)).build());
    }

    @Override
    public Uni<Empty> sink(Multi<Item> request) {
        // Reads the incoming streams, consume all the items.
        return request
                .map(Item::getValue)
                .map(Long::parseLong)
                .collect().last()
                .map(l -> Empty.newBuilder().build());
    }

    @Override
    public Multi<Item> pipe(Multi<Item> request) {
        // Reads the incoming stream, compute a sum and return the cumulative results
        // in the outbound stream.
        return request
                .map(Item::getValue)
                .map(Long::parseLong)
                .onItem().scan(() -> 0L, Long::sum)
                .onItem().transform(l -> Item.newBuilder().setValue(Long.toString(l)).build());
    }
}

Health Check

For the implemented services, Quarkus gRPC exposes health information in the following format:

syntax = "proto3";

package grpc.health.v1;

message HealthCheckRequest {
  string service = 1;
}

message HealthCheckResponse {
  enum ServingStatus {
    UNKNOWN = 0;
    SERVING = 1;
    NOT_SERVING = 2;
  }
  ServingStatus status = 1;
}

service Health {
  rpc Check(HealthCheckRequest) returns (HealthCheckResponse);

  rpc Watch(HealthCheckRequest) returns (stream HealthCheckResponse);
}

Clients can specify the fully qualified service name to get the health status of a specific service or skip specifying the service name to get the general status of the gRPC server.

For more details, check out the gRPC documentation

Additionally, if Quarkus SmallRye Health is added to the application, a readiness check for the state of the gRPC services will be added to the MicroProfile Health endpoint response, that is /q/health.

Reflection Service

Quarkus gRPC Server implements the reflection service. This service allows tools like grpcurl or grpcox to interact with your services.

The reflection service is enabled by default in dev mode. In test or production mode, you need to enable it explicitly by setting quarkus.grpc.server.enable-reflection-service to true.

Quarkus exposes both the reflection service v1 and v1alpha.

Scaling

By default, quarkus-grpc starts a single gRPC server running on a single event loop.

If you wish to scale your server, you can set the number of server instances by setting quarkus.grpc.server.instances.

Server Configuration

Configuration property fixed at build time - All other configuration properties are overridable at runtime

Configuration property

类型

默认

Do we use separate HTTP server to serve gRPC requests. Set this to false if you want to use new Vert.x gRPC support, which uses existing Vert.x HTTP server.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_USE_SEPARATE_SERVER

Show more

boolean

true

Configure XDS usage, if enabled

类型

默认

Explicitly enable use of XDS.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_XDS_ENABLED

Show more

boolean

false

Use secure credentials.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_XDS_SECURE

Show more

boolean

false

Explicitly enable use of in-process.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_IN_PROCESS_ENABLED

Show more

boolean

false

Set in-process name.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_IN_PROCESS_NAME

Show more

string

quarkus-grpc

The gRPC Server port.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_PORT

Show more

int

9000

The gRPC Server port used for tests.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_TEST_PORT

Show more

int

9001

The gRPC server host.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_HOST

Show more

string

0.0.0.0

The gRPC handshake timeout.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_HANDSHAKE_TIMEOUT

Show more

Duration 

The max inbound message size in bytes.

When using a single server (using quarkus.grpc.server.use-separate-server=false), the default value is 256KB. When using a separate server (using quarkus.grpc.server.use-separate-server=true), the default value is 4MB.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_MAX_INBOUND_MESSAGE_SIZE

Show more

int

The max inbound metadata size in bytes

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_MAX_INBOUND_METADATA_SIZE

Show more

int

The classpath path or file path to a server certificate or certificate chain in PEM format.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_CERTIFICATE

Show more

path

The classpath path or file path to the corresponding certificate private key file in PEM format.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_KEY

Show more

path

An optional keystore that holds the certificate information instead of specifying separate files. The keystore can be either on classpath or an external file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_KEY_STORE

Show more

path

An optional parameter to specify the type of the keystore file. If not given, the type is automatically detected based on the file name.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_KEY_STORE_TYPE

Show more

string

A parameter to specify the password of the keystore file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_KEY_STORE_PASSWORD

Show more

string

A parameter to specify the alias of the keystore file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_KEY_STORE_ALIAS

Show more

string

A parameter to specify the alias password of the keystore file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_KEY_STORE_ALIAS_PASSWORD

Show more

string

An optional trust store which holds the certificate information of the certificates to trust

The trust store can be either on classpath or an external file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_TRUST_STORE

Show more

path

An optional parameter to specify type of the trust store file. If not given, the type is automatically detected based on the file name.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_TRUST_STORE_TYPE

Show more

string

A parameter to specify the password of the trust store file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_TRUST_STORE_PASSWORD

Show more

string

The cipher suites to use. If none is given, a reasonable default is selected.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_CIPHER_SUITES

Show more

list of string

Sets the ordered list of enabled SSL/TLS protocols.

If not set, it defaults to "TLSv1.3, TLSv1.2". The following list of protocols are supported: TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3. To only enable TLSv1.3, set the value to to "TLSv1.3".

Note that setting an empty list, and enabling SSL/TLS is invalid. You must at least have one protocol.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_PROTOCOLS

Show more

list of string

TLSv1.3,TLSv1.2

Configures the engine to require/request client authentication. NONE, REQUEST, REQUIRED

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_SSL_CLIENT_AUTH

Show more

none, request, required

none

Disables SSL, and uses plain text instead. If disabled, configure the ssl configuration.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_PLAIN_TEXT

Show more

boolean

true

Whether ALPN should be used.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_ALPN

Show more

boolean

true

The path to the certificate file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_TRANSPORT_SECURITY_CERTIFICATE

Show more

string

The path to the private key file.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_TRANSPORT_SECURITY_KEY

Show more

string

Enables the gRPC Reflection Service. By default, the reflection service is only exposed in dev mode. This setting allows overriding this choice and enable the reflection service every time.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_ENABLE_REFLECTION_SERVICE

Show more

boolean

false

Number of gRPC server verticle instances. This is useful for scaling easily across multiple cores. The number should not exceed the amount of event loops.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_INSTANCES

Show more

int

1

Sets a custom keep-alive duration. This configures the time before sending a keepalive ping when there is no read activity.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_NETTY_KEEP_ALIVE_TIME

Show more

Duration 

Sets a custom permit-keep-alive duration. This configures the most aggressive keep-alive time clients are permitted to configure. The server will try to detect clients exceeding this rate and when detected will forcefully close the connection.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_NETTY_PERMIT_KEEP_ALIVE_TIME

Show more

Duration 

Sets whether to allow clients to send keep-alive HTTP/2 PINGs even if there are no outstanding RPCs on the connection.

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_NETTY_PERMIT_KEEP_ALIVE_WITHOUT_CALLS

Show more

boolean

gRPC compression, e.g. "gzip"

Environment variable: QUARKUS_GRPC_SERVER_COMPRESSION

Show more

string

About the Duration format

To write duration values, use the standard java.time.Duration format. See the Duration#parse() Java API documentation for more information.

You can also use a simplified format, starting with a number:

  • If the value is only a number, it represents time in seconds.

  • If the value is a number followed by ms, it represents time in milliseconds.

In other cases, the simplified format is translated to the java.time.Duration format for parsing:

  • If the value is a number followed by h, m, or s, it is prefixed with PT.

  • If the value is a number followed by d, it is prefixed with P.

When you disable quarkus.grpc.server.use-separate-server, you are then using the new Vert.x gRPC server implementation which uses the existing HTTP server. Which means that the server port is now 8080 (or the port configured with quarkus.http.port). Also, most of the other configuration properties are no longer applied, since it’s the HTTP server that should already be properly configured.
When you enable quarkus.grpc.server.xds.enabled, it’s the xDS that should handle most of the configuration above.

Example of Configuration

Enabling TLS

To enable TLS, use the following configuration.

Note that all paths in the configuration may either specify a resource on the classpath (typically from src/main/resources or its subfolder) or an external file.

quarkus.grpc.server.ssl.certificate=tls/server.pem
quarkus.grpc.server.ssl.key=tls/server.key
When SSL/TLS is configured, plain-text is automatically disabled.

TLS with Mutual Auth

To use TLS with mutual authentication, use the following configuration:

quarkus.grpc.server.ssl.certificate=tls/server.pem
quarkus.grpc.server.ssl.key=tls/server.key
quarkus.grpc.server.ssl.trust-store=tls/ca.jks
quarkus.grpc.server.ssl.trust-store-password=*****
quarkus.grpc.server.ssl.client-auth=REQUIRED

Server Interceptors

gRPC server interceptors let you perform logic, such as authentication, before your service is invoked.

You can implement a gRPC server interceptor by creating an @ApplicationScoped bean implementing io.grpc.ServerInterceptor:

@ApplicationScoped
// add @GlobalInterceptor for interceptors meant to be invoked for every service
public class MyInterceptor implements ServerInterceptor {

    @Override
    public <ReqT, RespT> ServerCall.Listener<ReqT> interceptCall(ServerCall<ReqT, RespT> serverCall,
            Metadata metadata, ServerCallHandler<ReqT, RespT> serverCallHandler) {
        // ...
    }
}

It’s also possible to annotate a producer method as a global interceptor:

import io.quarkus.grpc.GlobalInterceptor;

import jakarta.enterprise.inject.Produces;

public class MyProducer {
    @GlobalInterceptor
    @Produces
    public MyInterceptor myInterceptor() {
        return new MyInterceptor();
    }
}
Check the ServerInterceptor JavaDoc to properly implement your interceptor.

To apply an interceptor to all exposed services, annotate it with @io.quarkus.grpc.GlobalInterceptor. To apply an interceptor to a single service, register it on the service with @io.quarkus.grpc.RegisterInterceptor:

import io.quarkus.grpc.GrpcService;
import io.quarkus.grpc.RegisterInterceptor;

@GrpcService
@RegisterInterceptor(MyInterceptor.class)
public class StreamingService implements Streaming {
    // ...
}

When you have multiple server interceptors, you can order them by implementing the jakarta.enterprise.inject.spi.Prioritized interface. Please note that all the global interceptors are invoked before the service-specific interceptors.

@ApplicationScoped
public class MyInterceptor implements ServerInterceptor, Prioritized {

    @Override
    public <ReqT, RespT> ServerCall.Listener<ReqT> interceptCall(ServerCall<ReqT, RespT> serverCall,
            Metadata metadata, ServerCallHandler<ReqT, RespT> serverCallHandler) {
        // ...
    }

    @Override
    public int getPriority() {
        return 10;
    }
}

Interceptors with the highest priority are called first. The default priority, used if the interceptor does not implement the Prioritized interface, is 0.

Testing your services

The easiest way to test a gRPC service is to use a gRPC client as described in Consuming a gRPC Service.

Please note that in the case of using a client to test an exposed service that does not use TLS, there is no need to provide any configuration. E.g. to test the HelloService defined above, one could create the following test:

public class HelloServiceTest implements Greeter {

    @GrpcClient
    Greeter client;

    @Test
    void shouldReturnHello() {
        CompletableFuture<String> message = new CompletableFuture<>();
        client.sayHello(HelloRequest.newBuilder().setName("Quarkus").build())
                .subscribe().with(reply -> message.complete(reply.getMessage()));
        assertThat(message.get(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS)).isEqualTo("Hello Quarkus");
    }
}

Trying out your services manually

In the dev mode, you can try out your gRPC services in the Quarkus Dev UI. Just go to http://localhost:8080/q/dev-ui and click on Services under the gRPC tile.

Please note that your application needs to expose the "normal" HTTP port for the Dev UI to be accessible. If your application does not expose any HTTP endpoints, you can create a dedicated profile with a dependency on quarkus-vertx-http:

    <profiles>
        <profile>
            <id>development</id>
            <dependencies>
                <dependency>
                    <groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
                    <artifactId>quarkus-vertx-http</artifactId>
                </dependency>
            </dependencies>
        </profile>
    </profiles>

Having it, you can run the dev mode with: mvn quarkus:dev -Pdevelopment.

If you use Gradle, you can simply add a dependency for the quarkusDev task:

dependencies {
    quarkusDev 'io.quarkus:quarkus-vertx-http'
}

gRPC Server metrics

Enabling metrics collection

gRPC server metrics are automatically enabled when the application also uses the quarkus-micrometer extension. Micrometer collects the metrics of all the gRPC services implemented by the application.

As an example, if you export the metrics to Prometheus, you will get:

# HELP grpc_server_responses_sent_messages_total The total number of responses sent
# TYPE grpc_server_responses_sent_messages_total counter
grpc_server_responses_sent_messages_total{method="SayHello",methodType="UNARY",service="helloworld.Greeter",} 6.0
# HELP grpc_server_processing_duration_seconds The total time taken for the server to complete the call
# TYPE grpc_server_processing_duration_seconds summary
grpc_server_processing_duration_seconds_count{method="SayHello",methodType="UNARY",service="helloworld.Greeter",statusCode="OK",} 6.0
grpc_server_processing_duration_seconds_sum{method="SayHello",methodType="UNARY",service="helloworld.Greeter",statusCode="OK",} 0.016216771
# HELP grpc_server_processing_duration_seconds_max The total time taken for the server to complete the call
# TYPE grpc_server_processing_duration_seconds_max gauge
grpc_server_processing_duration_seconds_max{method="SayHello",methodType="UNARY",service="helloworld.Greeter",statusCode="OK",} 0.007985236
# HELP grpc_server_requests_received_messages_total The total number of requests received
# TYPE grpc_server_requests_received_messages_total counter
grpc_server_requests_received_messages_total{method="SayHello",methodType="UNARY",service="helloworld.Greeter",} 6.0

The service name, method and type can be found in the tags.

Disabling metrics collection

To disable the gRPC server metrics when quarkus-micrometer is used, add the following property to the application configuration:

quarkus.micrometer.binder.grpc-server.enabled=false

Use virtual threads

To use virtual threads in your gRPC service implementation, check the dedicated guide.

gRPC Server authorization

Quarkus includes built-in security to allow authorization using annotations when the Vert.x gRPC support, which uses existing Vert.x HTTP server, is enabled.

Add the Quarkus Security extension

Security capabilities are provided by the Quarkus Security extension, therefore make sure your pom.xml file contains following dependency:

pom.xml
<dependency>
    <groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
    <artifactId>quarkus-security</artifactId>
</dependency>

To add the Quarkus Security extension to an existing Maven project, run the following command from your project base directory:

CLI
quarkus extension add security
Maven
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions='security'
Gradle
./gradlew addExtension --extensions='security'

Overview of supported authentication mechanisms

Some supported authentication mechanisms are built into Quarkus, while others require you to add an extension. The following table maps specific authentication requirements to a supported mechanism that you can use in Quarkus:

Table 1. Authentication requirements and mechanisms
Authentication requirement Authentication mechanism

Username and password

Basic authentication

Client certificate

Mutual TLS authentication

Custom requirements

Custom authentication

Bearer access token

OIDC Bearer token authentication, JWT, OAuth2

Do not forget to install at least one extension that provides an IdentityProvider based on selected authentication requirements. Please refer to the Basic authentication guide for example how to provide the IdentityProvider based on username and password.

If you use separate HTTP server to serve gRPC requests, Custom authentication is your only option. Set the quarkus.grpc.server.use-separate-server configuration property to false so that you can use other mechanisms.

Secure gRPC service

The gRPC services can be secured with the standard security annotations like in the example below:

package org.acme.grpc.auth;

import hello.Greeter;
import io.quarkus.grpc.GrpcService;
import jakarta.annotation.security.RolesAllowed;

@GrpcService
public class HelloService implements Greeter {

    @RolesAllowed("admin")
    @Override
    public Uni<HelloReply> sayHello(HelloRequest request) {
        return Uni.createFrom().item(() ->
                HelloReply.newBuilder().setMessage("Hello " + request.getName()).build()
        );
    }
}

Most of the examples of the supported mechanisms sends authentication headers, please refer to the gRPC Headers section of the Consuming a gRPC Service guide for more information about the gRPC headers.

Basic authentication

Quarkus Security provides built-in authentication support for the Basic authentication.

quarkus.grpc.server.use-separate-server=false
quarkus.http.auth.basic=true (1)
1 Enable the Basic authentication.
package org.acme.grpc.auth;

import static org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.is;

import org.acme.proto.Greeter;
import org.acme.proto.HelloRequest;
import io.grpc.Metadata;
import io.quarkus.grpc.GrpcClient;
import io.quarkus.grpc.GrpcClientUtils;
import java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture;
import java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException;

import io.quarkus.test.junit.QuarkusTest;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;

@QuarkusTest
public class GreeterServiceTest {

    private static final Metadata.Key<String> AUTHORIZATION = Metadata.Key.of("Authorization", Metadata.ASCII_STRING_MARSHALLER);

    @GrpcClient
    Greeter greeterClient;

    @Test
    void shouldReturnHello() throws ExecutionException, InterruptedException, TimeoutException {
        Metadata headers = new Metadata();

        // Set the headers - Basic auth for testing
        headers.put(AUTHORIZATION, "Basic YWxpY2U6YWxpY2U="); // alice:alice with "admin" role
        var client = GrpcClientUtils.attachHeaders(greeterClient, headers);

        // Call the client
        CompletableFuture<String> message = new CompletableFuture<>();
        client.sayHello(HelloRequest.newBuilder().setName("Quarkus").build())
                .subscribe().with(reply -> message.complete(reply.getMessage()));

        // Get the values
        String theValue = message.get(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS);

        // Assert
        assertThat(theValue, is("Hello Quarkus"));
    }
}

Mutual TLS authentication

Quarkus provides mutual TLS (mTLS) authentication so that you can authenticate users based on their X.509 certificates. The simplest way to enforce authentication for all your gRPC services is described in the TLS with Mutual Auth section of this guide. However, the Quarkus Security supports role mapping that you can use to perform even more fine-grained access control.

quarkus.grpc.server.use-separate-server=false
quarkus.http.insecure-requests=disabled
quarkus.http.ssl.certificate.files=tls/server.pem
quarkus.http.ssl.certificate.key-files=tls/server.key
quarkus.http.ssl.certificate.trust-store-file=tls/ca.jks
quarkus.http.ssl.certificate.trust-store-password=**********
quarkus.http.ssl.client-auth=required
quarkus.http.auth.certificate-role-properties=role-mappings.txt     (1)
quarkus.native.additional-build-args=-H:IncludeResources=.*\\.txt
1 Adds certificate role mapping.
Example of the role mapping file
testclient=admin (1)
1 Map the testclient certificate CN (Common Name) to the SecurityIdentity role admin.

Custom authentication

You can always implement one or more GrpcSecurityMechanism bean if above-mentioned mechanisms provided by Quarkus do no meet your needs.

Example of custom GrpcSecurityMechanism
package org.acme.grpc.auth;

import jakarta.inject.Singleton;

import io.grpc.Metadata;
import io.quarkus.security.credential.PasswordCredential;
import io.quarkus.security.identity.request.AuthenticationRequest;
import io.quarkus.security.identity.request.UsernamePasswordAuthenticationRequest;

@Singleton
public class CustomGrpcSecurityMechanism implements GrpcSecurityMechanism {

    private static final Metadata.Key<String> AUTHORIZATION = Metadata.Key.of("Authorization", Metadata.ASCII_STRING_MARSHALLER);

    @Override
    public boolean handles(Metadata metadata) {
        String authString = metadata.get(AUTHORIZATION);
        return authString != null && authString.startsWith("Custom ");
    }

    @Override
    public AuthenticationRequest createAuthenticationRequest(Metadata metadata) {
        final String authString = metadata.get(AUTHORIZATION);
        final String userName;
        final String password;
        // here comes your application logic that transforms 'authString' to user name and password
        return new UsernamePasswordAuthenticationRequest(userName, new PasswordCredential(password));
    }
}

Related content