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Tenorite

Tenorite aims to simplify building concurrent systems with Rust. By building simple abstractions over the solid foundation offered by Rust and Tokio, Tenorite helps builds asynchronous workers that can service requests from other threads using a client/server model.

Example repository

Check out the example repo to get an idea for how a TenoriteService can be built and used.

Service Design

Tenorite services are created by feeding custom types into the generic type parameters of the Tenorite core components. The general design flow involves building a 4 data types and a worker, which are then bound together into an easy to use service by implementing the TenoriteSerivce trait.

Service
  - Request
  - Response
  - Error
  - Worker
  - Config

Request, Response, Error and Config

These structures are defined for each service. All of these types must meet the Send + 'static trait bounds. Request, Response and Error must also implement the Clone trait so that TenoriteCaller can be cloned to share handles to the service.

Here's the example set of these types based on the example repo:

#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub enum ExampleRequest {
    Set { key: String, value: String },
    Get { key: String },
    Delete { key: String },
}

#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub enum ExampleResponse {
    EmptyResponse,
    StringResponse(String),
}

#[derive(Debug, Clone, thiserror::Error)]
pub enum ExampleError {
    #[error("Invalid key!")]
    InvalidKey(String),
    #[error("Unexpected error!")]
    Unexpected,
}

pub struct ExampleConfig {
    pub data: std::collections::HashMap<String, String>,
}

Worker type

The TenoriteWorker trait is fulfilled to provide the service/worker implementation that will run within it's own tokio task. In the case of the example project, it fully implements the "HashMap-as-a-Service" worker:

pub struct ExampleWorker {}

#[async_trait]
impl TenoriteWorker<ExampleRequest, ExampleResponse, ExampleError,
                    ExampleConfig>
    for ExampleWorker
{
    async fn task(
        mut receiver: tenorite::Receiver<
            TenoriteRequest<ExampleRequest, ExampleResponse, ExampleError>,
        >,
        mut config: ExampleConfig,
    ) {
        while let Some(request) = receiver.recv().await {
            println!("[ExampleTask] Received Request: {:?}",
                     request.request);

            use ExampleRequest::*;
            use ExampleResponse::*;
            let response = match request.request {
                Set { key, value } => {
                    config.data.insert(key, value);
                    Ok(EmptyResponse)
                }
                Get { key } => match config.data.get(&key) {
                    Some(value) => Ok(StringResponse(value.to_string())),
                    None => Err(ExampleError::InvalidKey(key)),
                },
                Delete { key } => match config.data.remove(&key) {
                    Some(_) => Ok(EmptyResponse),
                    None => Err(ExampleError::InvalidKey(key))
                }
            };

            match request.client.send(response) {
                Err(_result) => {
                    panic!("Error!!!!!")
                }
                _ => {}
            }
        }
    }
}

Service type

The Service doesn't require much effort to build, simply include the needed types!

pub struct ExampleService {}

impl TenoriteService<ExampleRequest, ExampleResponse, ExampleError,
                     ExampleWorker, ExampleConfig>
    for ExampleService
{
}

Service Usage

Using a service built with this pattern is even easier than building the services! Instantiate instances of the custom Service and Config structs, then start the worker task providing a queue size (32 here) and the Config structure. This function returns a JoinHandle for the worker thread and a TenoriteCaller structure that is used to make requests to the worker. This caller handle can be cloned to share with other threads.

Using

let service = ExampleService {};
let config = ExampleConfig {
    data: HashMap::new(),
};
let (task, caller) = service.start_task(32, config);

The calling pattern is simple, modeled to flow as if you were calling an ordinary async function in Rust. In this case, an async function that takes a single ExampleRequest parameter and returns a Result<ExampleResponse, TenoriteError> enumeration. If the service bubbles up the ExampleError structure, the error will be returned within the ServiceError(Error) variant.

let key = "test".to_string();
let value = "weeee".to_string();
let request = ExampleRequest::Set { key, value };
let response = caller.send_request(request).await;

Lastly, when all of the caller handles fall out of scope and are dropped, the Worker thread will terminate.

task.await;