4 releases (1 stable)

1.0.0 May 7, 2021
0.9.2 Aug 10, 2020
0.9.1 Aug 4, 2020
0.9.0 Aug 3, 2020

#784 in Asynchronous

MPL-2.0 license

33KB
240 lines

plumbing

Plumbing is a library that manages pipelining requests through an asynchronous request/reply system, such as an HTTP Keep-Alive connection or Redis interactions via the Redis Protocol.

The core of plumbing is the Pipeline struct, which manages a single request / response connection. This connection consists of a pair of Sink and Stream, and should be set up such that each request sent through the Sink will eventually result in a response being sent back through the Stream. One example of how to create such a pair is:

  • Open a TCP connection in tokio, get a TcpStream.
  • Use TcpStream::into_split to split the stream into a reader and a writer
  • Use tokio_util::codec to wrap these streams in an Encoder and Decoder for your protocol. This Encoder and Decoder serve as the Sink and Stream for the Pipeline.

Requests submitted to the Pipeline will return a Resolver, which is a Future that will resolve to the response for that request. Any number of Resolvers can simultaneously exist, and the responses will be delivered to each one in order, as they arrive through the underlying Stream.

Pipelines are backpressure sensitive and don't do their own buffering, so submitting new requests will block if the underlying stream stops accepting them. Similarly, each Resolver must be polled to retrieve their responses; subsequent Resolvers will block until prior Resolvers have received responses (or been dropped). Depending on your system, this means you may need to take care that both the send or flush end is polled concurrently with the receiving end.

plumbing is currently #![no_std]; it only requires alloc in order to function.

Example

This example uses a tokio task to create a fake, single-key database, and then uses plumbing to manage some simple writes and reads to it.

mod fake_db {
    use futures::{channel::mpsc, stream::StreamExt, SinkExt};
    use tokio::task;

    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub struct FakeDb {
        counter: i32,
    }

    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum Request {
        Incr(i32),
        Decr(i32),
        Set(i32),
        Get,
    }

    #[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
    pub enum Response {
        Ok,
        Value(i32),
    }

    pub fn create_db() -> (mpsc::Sender<Request>, mpsc::Receiver<Response>) {
        let (send_req, mut recv_req) = mpsc::channel(0);
        let (mut send_resp, recv_resp) = mpsc::channel(0);

        let _task = task::spawn(async move {
            let mut database = FakeDb { counter: 0 };

            while let Some(request) = recv_req.next().await {
                match request {
                    Request::Incr(count) => {
                        database.counter += count;
                        send_resp.send(Response::Ok).await.unwrap();
                    }
                    Request::Decr(count) => {
                        database.counter -= count;
                        send_resp.send(Response::Ok).await.unwrap();
                    }
                    Request::Set(value) => {
                        database.counter = value;
                        send_resp.send(Response::Ok).await.unwrap();
                    }
                    Request::Get => {
                        let response = Response::Value(database.counter);
                        send_resp.send(response).await.unwrap();
                    }
                }
            }
        });

        (send_req, recv_resp)
    }
}

use fake_db::{Request, Response, create_db};
use futures::{
    future,
    sink::SinkExt,
    FutureExt,
};
use plumbing::Pipeline;
use std::error::Error;

#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> {
    let (send, recv) = create_db();
    // Because the send channel can only handle 1 item at a time, we want
    // to buffer requests
    let send = send.buffer(20);

    let mut pipeline = Pipeline::new(send, recv);

    // Basic interaction
    let fut = pipeline.submit(Request::Set(10)).await?;

    // If we're buffering requests or responses, we may need to make sure
    // they both
    let (_, response) = future::join(pipeline.flush(), fut).await;
    assert_eq!(response.unwrap(), Response::Ok);

    let fut = pipeline.submit(Request::Get).await?;
    let (_, response) = future::join(pipeline.flush(), fut).await;
    assert_eq!(response.unwrap(), Response::Value(10));

    // pipeline several requests together
    let write1 = pipeline.submit(Request::Incr(20)).await?;
    let write2 = pipeline.submit(Request::Decr(5)).await?;
    let read = pipeline.submit(Request::Get).await?;

    // We need to make sure all of these are polled
    let (_, _, _, response) = future::join4(pipeline.flush(), write1, write2, read).await;
    assert_eq!(response.unwrap(), Response::Value(25));

    // Alternatively, if we drop the futures returned by submit, the responses
    // associated with them will be silently discarded. We can use this to
    // keep only the responses we're interested in.
    let _ = pipeline.submit(Request::Set(0)).await?;
    let _ = pipeline.submit(Request::Incr(12)).await?;
    let _ = pipeline.submit(Request::Decr(2)).await?;
    let read1 = pipeline.submit(Request::Get).await?;

    let _ = pipeline.submit(Request::Decr(2)).await?;
    let _ = pipeline.submit(Request::Decr(2)).await?;
    let read2 = pipeline.submit(Request::Get).await?;

    let (_, resp1, resp2) = future::join3(pipeline.flush(), read1, read2).await;
    assert_eq!(resp1.unwrap(), Response::Value(10));
    assert_eq!(resp2.unwrap(), Response::Value(6));

    Ok(())
}

License: MPL-2.0

Dependencies

~0.9–1.6MB
~31K SLoC