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tarpc: Tim & Adam's RPC lib

Travis-CI Status Software License Latest Version Join the chat at https://gitter.im/tarpc/Lobby

Disclaimer: This is not an official Google product.

tarpc is an RPC framework for rust with a focus on ease of use. Defining a service can be done in just a few lines of code, and most of the boilerplate of writing a server is taken care of for you.

Documentation

What is an RPC framework?

"RPC" stands for "Remote Procedure Call," a function call where the work of producing the return value is being done somewhere else. When an rpc function is invoked, behind the scenes the function contacts some other process somewhere and asks them to evaluate the function instead. The original function then returns the value produced by the other process.

RPC frameworks are a fundamental building block of most microservices-oriented architectures. Two well-known ones are gRPC and Cap'n Proto.

tarpc differentiates itself from other RPC frameworks by defining the schema in code, rather than in a separate language such as .proto. This means there's no separate compilation process, and no cognitive context switching between different languages. Additionally, it works with the community-backed library serde: any serde-serializable type can be used as arguments to tarpc fns.

Usage

Add to your Cargo.toml dependencies:

tarpc = "0.18.0"

The service! macro expands to a collection of items that form an rpc service. In the above example, the macro is called within the hello_service module. This module will contain a Client stub and Service trait. There is These generated types make it easy and ergonomic to write servers without dealing with serialization directly. Simply implement one of the generated traits, and you're off to the races!

Example

For this example, in addition to tarpc, also add two other dependencies to your Cargo.toml:

futures-preview = { version = "0.3.0-alpha.16", features = ["compat"] }
tokio = "0.1"

In the following example, we use an in-process channel for communication between client and server. In real code, you will likely communicate over the network. For a more real-world example, see example-service.

First, let's set up the dependencies and service definition.

#![feature(arbitrary_self_types, async_await, proc_macro_hygiene)]
# extern crate futures;

use futures::{
    compat::Executor01CompatExt,
    future::{self, Ready},
    prelude::*,
};
use tarpc::{
    client, context,
    server::{self, Handler},
};
use std::io;

// This is the service definition. It looks a lot like a trait definition.
// It defines one RPC, hello, which takes one arg, name, and returns a String.
tarpc::service! {
    /// Returns a greeting for name.
    rpc hello(name: String) -> String;
}

This service definition generates a trait called Service. Next we need to implement it for our Server struct.

# #![feature(arbitrary_self_types, async_await, proc_macro_hygiene)]
# extern crate futures;
#
# use futures::{
#     compat::Executor01CompatExt,
#     future::{self, Ready},
#     prelude::*,
# };
# use tarpc::{
#     client, context,
#     server::{self, Handler},
# };
# use std::io;
#
# // This is the service definition. It looks a lot like a trait definition.
# // It defines one RPC, hello, which takes one arg, name, and returns a String.
# tarpc::service! {
#     /// Returns a greeting for name.
#     rpc hello(name: String) -> String;
# }
#
// This is the type that implements the generated Service trait. It is the business logic
// and is used to start the server.
#[derive(Clone)]
struct HelloServer;

impl Service for HelloServer {
    // Each defined rpc generates two items in the trait, a fn that serves the RPC, and
    // an associated type representing the future output by the fn.

    type HelloFut = Ready<String>;

    fn hello(self, _: context::Context, name: String) -> Self::HelloFut {
        future::ready(format!("Hello, {}!", name))
    }
}

Next let's write a function to start our server. While this example uses an in-process channel, tarpc also ships a transport that uses bincode over TCP.

# #![feature(arbitrary_self_types, async_await, proc_macro_hygiene)]
# extern crate futures;
#
# use futures::{
#     compat::Executor01CompatExt,
#     future::{self, Ready},
#     prelude::*,
# };
# use tarpc::{
#     client, context,
#     server::{self, Handler},
# };
# use std::io;
#
# // This is the service definition. It looks a lot like a trait definition.
# // It defines one RPC, hello, which takes one arg, name, and returns a String.
# tarpc::service! {
#     /// Returns a greeting for name.
#     rpc hello(name: String) -> String;
# }
#
# // This is the type that implements the generated Service trait. It is the business logic
# // and is used to start the server.
# #[derive(Clone)]
# struct HelloServer;
#
# impl Service for HelloServer {
#     // Each defined rpc generates two items in the trait, a fn that serves the RPC, and
#     // an associated type representing the future output by the fn.
#
#     type HelloFut = Ready<String>;
#
#     fn hello(self, _: context::Context, name: String) -> Self::HelloFut {
#         future::ready(format!("Hello, {}!", name))
#     }
# }
#
async fn run() -> io::Result<()> {
    let (client_transport, server_transport) = tarpc::transport::channel::unbounded();

    let server = server::new(server::Config::default())
        // incoming() takes a stream of transports such as would be returned by
        // TcpListener::incoming (but a stream instead of an iterator).
        .incoming(stream::once(future::ready(Ok(server_transport))))
        // serve is generated by the service! macro. It takes as input any type implementing
        // the generated Service trait.
        .respond_with(serve(HelloServer));

    tokio::spawn(server.unit_error().boxed().compat());

    // new_stub is generated by the service! macro. Like Server, it takes a config and any
    // Transport as input, and returns a Client, also generated by the macro.
    // by the service mcro.
    let mut client = new_stub(client::Config::default(), client_transport).await?;

    // The client has an RPC method for each RPC defined in service!. It takes the same args
    // as defined, with the addition of a Context, which is always the first arg. The Context
    // specifies a deadline and trace information which can be helpful in debugging requests.
    let hello = client.hello(context::current(), "Stim".to_string()).await?;

    println!("{}", hello);

    Ok(())
}

Lastly, we'll call run() from main. Before running a tarpc server or client, call tarpc::init() to initialize the executor tarpc uses internally to run background tasks for the client and server.

# #![feature(arbitrary_self_types, async_await, proc_macro_hygiene)]
# extern crate futures;
#
# use futures::{
#     compat::Executor01CompatExt,
#     future::{self, Ready},
#     prelude::*,
# };
# use tarpc::{
#     client, context,
#     server::{self, Handler},
# };
# use std::io;
#
# // This is the service definition. It looks a lot like a trait definition.
# // It defines one RPC, hello, which takes one arg, name, and returns a String.
# tarpc::service! {
#     /// Returns a greeting for name.
#     rpc hello(name: String) -> String;
# }
#
# // This is the type that implements the generated Service trait. It is the business logic
# // and is used to start the server.
# #[derive(Clone)]
# struct HelloServer;
#
# impl Service for HelloServer {
#     // Each defined rpc generates two items in the trait, a fn that serves the RPC, and
#     // an associated type representing the future output by the fn.
#
#     type HelloFut = Ready<String>;
#
#     fn hello(self, _: context::Context, name: String) -> Self::HelloFut {
#         future::ready(format!("Hello, {}!", name))
#     }
# }
#
# async fn run() -> io::Result<()> {
#     let (client_transport, server_transport) = tarpc::transport::channel::unbounded();
#
#     let server = server::new(server::Config::default())
#         // incoming() takes a stream of transports such as would be returned by
#         // TcpListener::incoming (but a stream instead of an iterator).
#         .incoming(stream::once(future::ready(Ok(server_transport))))
#         // serve is generated by the service! macro. It takes as input any type implementing
#         // the generated Service trait.
#         .respond_with(serve(HelloServer));
#
#     tokio::spawn(server.unit_error().boxed().compat());
#
#     // new_stub is generated by the service! macro. Like Server, it takes a config and any
#     // Transport as input, and returns a Client, also generated by the macro.
#     // by the service mcro.
#     let mut client = new_stub(client::Config::default(), client_transport).await?;
#
#     // The client has an RPC method for each RPC defined in service!. It takes the same args
#     // as defined, with the addition of a Context, which is always the first arg. The Context
#     // specifies a deadline and trace information which can be helpful in debugging requests.
#     let hello = client.hello(context::current(), "Stim".to_string()).await?;
#
#     println!("{}", hello);
#
#     Ok(())
# }
#
fn main() {
    tarpc::init(tokio::executor::DefaultExecutor::current().compat());
    tokio::run(run()
            .map_err(|e| eprintln!("Oh no: {}", e))
            .boxed()
            .compat(),
    );
}

Service Documentation

Use cargo doc as you normally would to see the documentation created for all items expanded by a service! invocation.

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An RPC framework for Rust with a focus on ease of use.

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