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| Posted by Eugene Wissner | PermalinkReply |
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Eugene Wissner
| https://github.com/caraus-ecms/tanya
Ok there are not so many event loops in D and here an another one and its name is "tanya".
I want it to become not an event loop only but a general purpose library that has an event loop.
What once started as a libev rewrite, hasn't much common with libev now except some general concepts like watchers.
Regarding libev:
1) tanya is very, very basic and it hasn't a lot of important features yet like signals, UDP, threads and so on. I had to begin somewhere and stripped out everything that isn't relevant for a basic event loop. Features will be added with the time.
2) Only epoll is currently supported. But I tried to create an API that can be easily extended, so you have to extend one class and implement a few methods to add other backends.
3) In another thread chmike (many thanks again!) pointed me to Windows IOCP. I'm not completely sure I understand how the completion ports work, but I implemented the loop in the way that you haven't to care about file descriptors and sockets but get notified if the data are really available. And you write aswell not to a socket but into a buffer, and the event loop takes care of passing it then to the socket. I hope it can make the work with the loop more pleasant and can make it possible to create a performant Windows implementation.
Other points:
1) The library is 100% @nogc. I know there were some discussions that this @nogc is pure marketing thing, but I find it helpful that the compiler can say if you allocate somewhere in a language where GC allocations can happen behind the scenes.
2) The loop throws a few exceptions that should be freed, but I'm thinking to switch to some data type "either exception or return value" and make the loop nothrow. It has nothing to do with @nogc. It is just kind of not very cool if an exception can kill the event loop if something goes wrong.
3) The library isn't thread safe. I will work on it later.
4) libev wasn't the only source of inspiration. tanya is a mix of libev and asyncio and asynchronous. I took over the concept of protocols and transports from asyncio/asynchronous since I believe they make the writing of applications really pleasant. The difference is that they aren't a kind of "wrapper" around the actual event loop, but are first-class citizens. It could make it difficult to write such wrappers like that ones that exist for libasync, but on the other side it kills some unneeded abstractions and makes the code structure simplier, that could also give some additional performance.
5) I tried to write unittests and short descriptions everywhere, so there is some documentation and examples. For an usage example skip the crap I'm writing here and look at the end of this message.
There are already some "extras":
tanya.memory: has a simple allocator (Ullocator) that uses mmap/munmap (tested on Linux, will theoretically work on other platforms aswell). "allocator" package has some functions like "finalize" that can be used in @nogc code instead of dispose or "resizeArray" that is similar to shrinkArray/expandArray from std.experimental.allocator, but doesn't take a delta as argument but just the length, that the array should have. The allocator was the most difficult part of the library for me, but very interesting. I had to rewrite it 3 times till I got something working. I just advice everyone to write their own malloc/free implementaion, it is a frustrating, but awsome experience!
tanya.container: Queue, Singly-linked list and In-/Output Buffer (useful in C-style functions that take a void pointer and the length as argument and return bytes read/written). I wrote them for the event loop, not sure they are good as general-purpose containers, but I would be anyway interested to make them suitable for other use-cases. They are also differently concepted than phobos containers. Phobos containers as far as I've seen are containers that implement ranges functionality in substructs/subclasses. tanya's containers are a mix of containers and ranges.
tanya.math: has "pow" function that calculates x**y mod z. The algorithm is similar to the one used by phobos. The return type and arguments are currently ulong but it will change, I will need larger numbers probably.
tanya.random: has an "Entropy" class that can generate 64-byte blocks of random data (uses getrandom syscall). The generic logic is stolen from mbedtls.
tanya.crypto.padding: implements some algorithms to pad 128/192/258-byte blocks of data. But you cannot remove the padding :) Sorry, it will be added soon. Just started.
I made some tests with an echo-client written in Go (just found one benchmarking one-page Go echo-client in the internet). Here is an usage example, just to give some feeling how the library works (Examples and description will be added to the repository soon):
import tanya.memory;
import tanya.event.loop;
import tanya.event.protocol;
import tanya.event.transport;
import tanya.event.watcher;
import core.stdc.stdio;
import std.exception;
import core.stdc.string;
import core.sys.posix.netinet.in_;
import core.sys.posix.fcntl;
import core.sys.posix.unistd : close;
class EchoProtocol : TransmissionControlProtocol
{
@nogc:
private DuplexTransport transport;
void received(ubyte[] data)
{
transport.write(data);
printf("%.*s", data.length, data.ptr);
}
void connected(DuplexTransport transport)
{
this.transport = transport;
printf("Got connection.\n");
}
void disconnected()
{
printf("Disconnected.\n");
}
}
void main()
{
sockaddr_in addr;
int s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
auto loop = getDefaultLoop();
// Echo server
printf("Listening on port 8192\n");
addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
addr.sin_port = htons(cast(ushort)8192);
addr.sin_addr.s_addr = INADDR_ANY;
if (bind(s, cast(sockaddr *)&addr, addr.sizeof) != 0)
{
throw make!Exception(defaultAllocator, "bind");
}
fcntl(s, F_SETFL, fcntl(s, F_GETFL, 0) | O_NONBLOCK);
listen(s, 5);
auto io = make!ConnectionWatcher(defaultAllocator,
() => cast(Protocol) make!EchoProtocol(defaultAllocator),
s);
loop.start(io);
loop.run();
shutdown(s, SHUT_RDWR);
close(s);
}
Sorry for that sockaddr_in stuff, I want to add a Socket class in the next commits, that would eliminate the need of this impossible boilerplate.
So far.. I would say it is the first test release and I'm beginning with testing and continue to write. Enjoy, I hope it doesn't leak too much memory...
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