Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
184 lines (143 loc) · 7.7 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

184 lines (143 loc) · 7.7 KB

elli

Copyright (c) 2012-2016 Knut Nesheim, 2016-2018 elli-lib team

Version: 3.0.0

Authors: Knut Nesheim, elli-lib team.

Erlang web server for HTTP APIs

Features

Here's the features Elli does have:

  • Rack-style request-response. Your handler function gets a complete request and returns a complete response. There's no messaging, no receiving data directly from the socket, no writing responses directly to the socket. It's a very simple and straightforward API. Have a look at elli_example_callback for examples.

  • Middlewares allow you to add useful features like compression, encoding, stats, but only have it used when needed. No features you don't use on the critical path.

  • Short-circuiting of responses using exceptions, allows you to use "assertions" that return for example 403 permission denied. is_allowed(Req) orelse throw({403, [], <<"Permission denied">>}).

  • Every client connection gets its own process, isolating the failure of a request from another. For the duration of the connection, only one process is involved, resulting in very robust and efficient code.

  • Binaries everywhere for strings.

  • Instrumentation inside the core of the webserver, triggering user callbacks. For example when a request completes, the user callback gets the request_complete event which contains timings of all the different parts of handling a request. There's also events for clients unexpectedly closing a connection, crashes in the user callback, etc.

  • Keep alive, using one Erlang process per connection only active when there is a request from the client. Number of connections is only limited by RAM and CPU.

  • Chunked transfer in responses for real-time push to clients

  • Basic pipelining. HTTP verbs that does not have side-effects(GET and HEAD) can be pipelined, ie. a client supporting pipelining can send multiple requests down the line and expect the responses to appear in the same order as requests. Elli processes the requests one at a time in order, future work could make it possible to process them in parallel.

  • SSL using built-in Erlang/OTP ssl, nice for low volume admin interfaces, etc. For high volume, you should probably go with nginx, stunnel or ELB if you're on AWS.

  • Implement your own connection handling, for WebSockets, streaming uploads, etc. See elli_example_callback_handover.

Extensions

About

From operating and debugging high-volume, low-latency apps we have gained some valuable insight into what we want from a webserver. We want simplicity, robustness, performance, ease of debugging, visibility into strange client behaviour, really good instrumentation and good tests. We are willing to sacrifice almost everything, even basic features to achieve this.

With this in mind we looked at the big names in the Erlang community: Yaws, Mochiweb, Misultin and Cowboy. We found Mochiweb to be the best match. However, we also wanted to see if we could take the architecture of Mochiweb and improve on it. elli takes the acceptor-turns-into-request-handler idea found in Mochiweb, the binaries-only idea from Cowboy and the request-response idea from WSGI/Rack (with chunked transfer being an exception).

On top of this we built a handler that allows us to write HTTP middleware modules to add practical features, like compression of responses, HTTP access log with timings, a real-time statistics dashboard and chaining multiple request handlers.

Aren't there enough webservers in the Erlang community already?

There are a few very mature and robust projects with steady development, one recently ceased development and one new kid on the block with lots of interest. As elli is not a general purpose webserver, but more of a specialized tool, we believe it has a very different target audience and would not attract effort or users away from the big names.

Why another webserver? Isn't this just the NIH syndrome?

Yaws, Mochiweb, Misultin, and Cowboy are great projects, hardened over time and full of very useful features for web development. If you value developer productivity, Yaws is an excellent choice. If you want a fast and lightweight server, Mochiweb and Cowboy are excellent choices.

Having used and studied all of these projects, we believed that if we merged some of the existing ideas and added some ideas from other communities, we could create a core that was better for our use cases.

It started out as an experiment to see if it is at all possible to significantly improve and it turns out that for our particular use cases, there is enough improvement to warrant a new project.

What makes Elli different?

Elli has a very simple architecture. It avoids using more processes and messages than absolutely necessary. It uses binaries for strings. The request-response programming model allows middlewares to do much heavy lifting, so the core can stay very simple. It has been instrumented so as a user you can understand where time is spent. When things go wrong, like the client closed the connection before you could send a response, you are notified about these things so you can better understand your client behaviour.

Performance

"Hello World!" micro-benchmarks are really useful when measuring the performance of the webserver itself, but the numbers usually do more harm than good when released. I encourage you to run your own benchmarks, on your own hardware. Mark Nottingham has some very good pointers about benchmarking HTTP servers.

Modules

elli
elli_example_callback
elli_example_callback_handover
elli_handler
elli_http
elli_middleware
elli_middleware_compress
elli_request
elli_sendfile
elli_tcp
elli_test
elli_util