# async_executors [![standard-readme compliant](https://img.shields.io/badge/readme%20style-standard-brightgreen.svg?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/RichardLitt/standard-readme) [![Build Status](https://api.travis-ci.org/najamelan/async_executors.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/najamelan/async_executors) [![Docs](https://docs.rs/async_executors/badge.svg)](https://docs.rs/async_executors) [![crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/async_executors.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/async_executors) > Abstract over different executors. _async_executors_ aims to help you write executor agnostic libraries. We express common executor functionality in traits and implement it for the most used executors. This way libraries can require the exact functionality they need and client code can use any executor they choose as long as it can provide the required functionality. Available traits are grouped in the [`iface`] module. We also implement [`Spawn`](futures_util::task::Spawn) and/or [`LocalSpawn`](futures_util::task::LocalSpawn) traits from _futures_. All supported executors are turned on with features, see below. ## Table of Contents - [Install](#install) - [Upgrade](#upgrade) - [Dependencies](#dependencies) - [Security](#security) - [Features](#features) - [General Features](#general-features) - [Executor Specific](#executor-specific) - [Usage](#usage) - [Basic Example](#basic-example) - [API](#api) - [Contributing](#contributing) - [Code of Conduct](#code-of-conduct) - [License](#license) ## Install With [cargo add](https://github.com/killercup/cargo-edit): `cargo add async_executors` With [cargo yaml](https://gitlab.com/storedbox/cargo-yaml): ```yaml dependencies: async_executors: ^0.7 ``` With Cargo.toml ```toml [dependencies] async_executors = "0.7" ``` ### Upgrade Please check out the [changelog](https://github.com/najamelan/async_executors/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) when upgrading. ### Dependencies This crate has few dependencies. Cargo will automatically handle it's dependencies for you. The only hard dependencies are `futures-task` and `futures-util`. The rest are the optional dependencies to turn on support for each executor. ## Features This crate has a lot of features. Lets go over them: ### General features - `tracing`: when enabled, all traits are re-implemented for [`tracing-futures::Instrumented`] and [`tracing-futures::WithDispatch`]. - `timer` : Turns on the _futures-timer_ crate. This enables executors to async sleep. On _tokio_, alternatively you can enable `tokio_timer` to enable the tokio native timer. _async_std_, when not on wasm, provides a timer without needing this feature. ### Executor specific: - `async_global` : Turns on the executor from [_async-global-executor_](https://docs.rs/async-global-executor). Supports Wasm, `!Send` tasks. - `async_global_tokio`: Makes sure a tokio reactor is running for tasks spawned on [`AsyncGlobal`]. [`AsyncGlobal`] will implement the [`TokioIo`] trait. - `async_std` : Turns on the executor from the [_async-std_](https://docs.rs/async-std) crate. Supports Wasm and `!Send` tasks. - `async_std_tokio` : Makes sure a tokio reactor is running for tasks spawned on [`AsyncStd`]. [`AsyncStd`] will implement the [`TokioIo`] trait. - `glommio` : Turns on the executor from the [_glommio_](https://docs.rs/glommio) crate. Single threaded, Linux 5.8+ only. Supports `!Send` tasks. - `tokio_ct` : Tokio Current thread, enables a single threaded runtime from the [_tokio_](https://docs.rs/tokio) crate. Supports `!Send` tasks. - `tokio_tp` : Tokio threadpool, enables a threadpool runtime from the [_tokio_](https://docs.rs/tokio) crate. - `tokio_timer` : Will enable the `time` feature on _tokio_ and call `enable_time()` on any tokio runtimes you create. For tokio runtimes, this takes precedence over the `timer` feature. - `tokio_io` : Will enable the `net` and `process` features on _tokio_ and call `enable_reactor()` on any tokio runtimes you create. [`TokioCt`] and [`TokioTp`] will implement the [`TokioIo`] trait. - `localpool` : Enables the single threaded executor from [_futures-executor_](http://docs.rs/futures-executor). Supports `!Send` tasks. `LocalPool` and `LocalSpawner` will be re-exported from this crate and have our traits implemented. - `threadpool` : Enables the treadpool executor from [_futures-executor_](http://docs.rs/futures-executor). `ThreadPool` will be re-exported from this crate and have our traits implemented. - `bindgen` : Enables the single threaded executor from [_wasm-bindgen-futures_](https://docs.rs/wasm-bindgen-futures). Wasm only. Supports `!Send` tasks. ## Security The crate itself uses `#[ forbid(unsafe_code) ]`. Our dependencies use unsafe. ## Performance Most wrappers are very thin but the `Spawn` and `LocalSpawn` traits do imply boxing the future. With executors boxing futures to put them in a queue you probably get 2 heap allocations per spawn. `JoinHandle` uses the native `JoinHandle` types from _tokio_ and _async-std_ to avoid the overhead from `RemoteHandle`, but for _async-std_, wrap the future in `Abortable` to create consistent behavior across all executors. The `JoinHandle` provided cancels it's future on drop unless you call `detach` on it. `SpawnHandle` and `LocalSpawnHandle` require boxing the future twice, just like `Spawn` and `LocalSpawn`. Existing benchmarks for all executors can be found in [executor_benchmarks](https://github.com/najamelan/executor_benchmarks). ## Usage ### For API providers When writing a library that needs to spawn, you probably shouldn't lock your clients into one framework or another. It's usually not appropriate to setup your own thread pool for spawning futures. It belongs to the application developer to decide where futures are spawned and it might not be appreciated if libraries bring in extra dependencies on a framework. In order to get round this you can take an executor in as a parameter from client code and spawn your futures on the provided executor. Currently the only two traits that are kind of widely available for this are `Spawn` and `LocalSpawn` from the _futures_ library. Unfortunately, other executor providers do not implement these traits. So by publishing an API that relies on these traits, you would have been restricting the clients to use the executors from _futures_, or start implementing their own wrappers that implement the traits. _Async_executors_ has wrappers providing impls on various executors, namely _tokio_, _async_std_, _wasm_bindgen_, ... As such you can just use the trait bounds and refer your users to this crate if they want to use any of the supported executors. All wrappers also implement `Clone`, `Debug` and the zero sized ones also `Copy`. You can express you will need to clone in your API: `impl Spawn + Clone`. Note that you should never use `block_on` inside async contexts. Depending on the executor, this might hang or panic. Some backends we use like _tokio_ and `RemoteHandle` from _futures_ use `catch_unwind`, so try to keep futures unwind safe. #### Spawning with handles You can use the `SpawnHandle` and `LocalSpawnHandle` traits as bounds for obtaining join handles. ##### Example ```rust, ignore use { async_executors :: { JoinHandle, SpawnHandle, SpawnHandleExt } , std :: { sync::Arc } , futures :: { FutureExt, executor::{ ThreadPool, block_on } } , }; // Example of a library function that needs an executor. Just use impl Trait. // fn needs_exec( exec: impl SpawnHandle<()> ) { let handle = exec.spawn_handle( async {} ); } // A type that needs to hold on to an executor during it's lifetime. Here it // must be heap allocated. // struct SomeObj{ exec: Arc< dyn SpawnHandle > } impl SomeObj { pub fn new( exec: Arc< dyn SpawnHandle > ) -> SomeObj { SomeObj{ exec } } fn run( &self ) -> JoinHandle { self.exec.spawn_handle( async{ 5 } ).expect( "spawn" ) } } fn main() { let exec = ThreadPool::new().expect( "build threadpool" ); let obj = SomeObj::new( Arc::new(exec) ); let x = block_on( obj.run() ); assert_eq!( x, 5 ); } ``` As you can see from the above example, the output of the future is a type parameter on `SpawnHandle`. This is necessary because putting it on the method would make the trait no longer object safe, which means it couldn't be stored unless as a type parameter. The best way to define a combination of abilities you need is by making your own trait alias (here shown with a macro from the [trait_set](https://docs.rs/trait-set/) crate, but you can write it out yourself with a blanket implementation if you want): ```rust, ignore use async_executors::*; trait_set::trait_set! { pub trait LibExec = SpawnHandle<()> + SpawnHandle + Timer + YieldNow + Clone; } pub fn lib_function( _exec: impl LibExec ) {} ``` All implementers of `SpawnHandle` must support any output type. Thus adding more `SpawnHandle` bounds to `LibExec` should not be a breaking change. ### For API consumers You can basically pass the wrapper types provided in _async_executors_ to API's that take any of the following. Traits are also implemented for `Rc`, `Arc`, `&`, `&mut`, `Box` and `Instrumented` and `WithDispatch` from _tracing-futures_ wrappers: - `impl Spawn` - `impl LocalSpawn` - `impl SpawnHandle` - `impl LocalSpawnHandle` - `impl SpawnBlocking` - `impl YieldNow` - `impl Timer` - `impl TokioIo` All wrappers also implement `Clone`, `Debug` and the zero sized ones also `Copy`. Some executors are a bit special, so make sure to check the API docs for the one you intend to use. Some also provide extra methods like `block_on` which will call a framework specific `block_on` rather than the one from _futures_. #### Example ```rust, ignore use { async_executors :: { AsyncStd, SpawnHandle, TokioTp } , std :: { convert::TryFrom } , }; fn needs_exec( exec: impl SpawnHandle<()> + SpawnHandle ){}; // AsyncStd is zero sized, so it's easy to instantiate. // needs_exec( AsyncStd ); // We need a builder type for tokio, as we guarantee by the type of TokioTp that it // will be a threadpool. // let tp = TokioTp::new().expect( "build threadpool" ); needs_exec( tp ); ``` For more examples, check out the [examples directory](https://github.com/najamelan/async_executors/tree/master/examples). If you want to get a more polished API for adhering to structured concurrency, check out [_async_nursery_](https://crates.io/crates/async_nursery). ## API API documentation can be found on [docs.rs](https://docs.rs/async_executors). ## Contributing Please check out the [contribution guidelines](https://github.com/najamelan/async_executors/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md). ### Testing Run `ci/test.bash` and `ci/wasm.bash` to run all tests. ### Code of conduct Any of the behaviors described in [point 4 "Unacceptable Behavior" of the Citizens Code of Conduct](https://github.com/stumpsyn/policies/blob/master/citizen_code_of_conduct.md#4-unacceptable-behavior) are not welcome here and might get you banned. If anyone including maintainers and moderators of the project fail to respect these/your limits, you are entitled to call them out. ## License [Unlicence](https://unlicense.org/)