| 1 | //! Abstractions for asynchronous programming. |
| 2 | //! |
| 3 | //! This crate provides a number of core abstractions for writing asynchronous |
| 4 | //! code: |
| 5 | //! |
| 6 | //! - [Futures](crate::future) are single eventual values produced by |
| 7 | //! asynchronous computations. Some programming languages (e.g. JavaScript) |
| 8 | //! call this concept "promise". |
| 9 | //! - [Streams](crate::stream) represent a series of values |
| 10 | //! produced asynchronously. |
| 11 | //! - [Sinks](crate::sink) provide support for asynchronous writing of |
| 12 | //! data. |
| 13 | //! - [Executors](crate::executor) are responsible for running asynchronous |
| 14 | //! tasks. |
| 15 | //! |
| 16 | //! The crate also contains abstractions for [asynchronous I/O](crate::io) and |
| 17 | //! [cross-task communication](crate::channel). |
| 18 | //! |
| 19 | //! Underlying all of this is the *task system*, which is a form of lightweight |
| 20 | //! threading. Large asynchronous computations are built up using futures, |
| 21 | //! streams and sinks, and then spawned as independent tasks that are run to |
| 22 | //! completion, but *do not block* the thread running them. |
| 23 | //! |
| 24 | //! The following example describes how the task system context is built and used |
| 25 | //! within macros and keywords such as async and await!. |
| 26 | //! |
| 27 | //! ```rust |
| 28 | //! # use futures::channel::mpsc; |
| 29 | //! # use futures::executor; ///standard executors to provide a context for futures and streams |
| 30 | //! # use futures::executor::ThreadPool; |
| 31 | //! # use futures::StreamExt; |
| 32 | //! # |
| 33 | //! fn main() { |
| 34 | //! # { |
| 35 | //! let pool = ThreadPool::new().expect("Failed to build pool" ); |
| 36 | //! let (tx, rx) = mpsc::unbounded::<i32>(); |
| 37 | //! |
| 38 | //! // Create a future by an async block, where async is responsible for an |
| 39 | //! // implementation of Future. At this point no executor has been provided |
| 40 | //! // to this future, so it will not be running. |
| 41 | //! let fut_values = async { |
| 42 | //! // Create another async block, again where the Future implementation |
| 43 | //! // is generated by async. Since this is inside of a parent async block, |
| 44 | //! // it will be provided with the executor of the parent block when the parent |
| 45 | //! // block is executed. |
| 46 | //! // |
| 47 | //! // This executor chaining is done by Future::poll whose second argument |
| 48 | //! // is a std::task::Context. This represents our executor, and the Future |
| 49 | //! // implemented by this async block can be polled using the parent async |
| 50 | //! // block's executor. |
| 51 | //! let fut_tx_result = async move { |
| 52 | //! (0..100).for_each(|v| { |
| 53 | //! tx.unbounded_send(v).expect("Failed to send" ); |
| 54 | //! }) |
| 55 | //! }; |
| 56 | //! |
| 57 | //! // Use the provided thread pool to spawn the generated future |
| 58 | //! // responsible for transmission |
| 59 | //! pool.spawn_ok(fut_tx_result); |
| 60 | //! |
| 61 | //! let fut_values = rx |
| 62 | //! .map(|v| v * 2) |
| 63 | //! .collect(); |
| 64 | //! |
| 65 | //! // Use the executor provided to this async block to wait for the |
| 66 | //! // future to complete. |
| 67 | //! fut_values.await |
| 68 | //! }; |
| 69 | //! |
| 70 | //! // Actually execute the above future, which will invoke Future::poll and |
| 71 | //! // subsequently chain appropriate Future::poll and methods needing executors |
| 72 | //! // to drive all futures. Eventually fut_values will be driven to completion. |
| 73 | //! let values: Vec<i32> = executor::block_on(fut_values); |
| 74 | //! |
| 75 | //! println!("Values={:?}" , values); |
| 76 | //! # } |
| 77 | //! # std::thread::sleep(std::time::Duration::from_millis(500)); // wait for background threads closed: https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/1371 |
| 78 | //! } |
| 79 | //! ``` |
| 80 | //! |
| 81 | //! The majority of examples and code snippets in this crate assume that they are |
| 82 | //! inside an async block as written above. |
| 83 | |
| 84 | #![no_std ] |
| 85 | #![doc (test( |
| 86 | no_crate_inject, |
| 87 | attr( |
| 88 | deny(warnings, rust_2018_idioms, single_use_lifetimes), |
| 89 | allow(dead_code, unused_assignments, unused_variables) |
| 90 | ) |
| 91 | ))] |
| 92 | #![warn (missing_docs, unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)] |
| 93 | #![cfg_attr (docsrs, feature(doc_cfg))] |
| 94 | |
| 95 | #[cfg (all(feature = "bilock" , not(feature = "unstable" )))] |
| 96 | compile_error!("The `bilock` feature requires the `unstable` feature as an explicit opt-in to unstable features" ); |
| 97 | |
| 98 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 99 | pub use futures_core::future::{Future, TryFuture}; |
| 100 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 101 | pub use futures_util::future::{FutureExt, TryFutureExt}; |
| 102 | |
| 103 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 104 | pub use futures_core::stream::{Stream, TryStream}; |
| 105 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 106 | pub use futures_util::stream::{StreamExt, TryStreamExt}; |
| 107 | |
| 108 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 109 | pub use futures_sink::Sink; |
| 110 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 111 | pub use futures_util::sink::SinkExt; |
| 112 | |
| 113 | #[cfg (feature = "std" )] |
| 114 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 115 | pub use futures_io::{AsyncBufRead, AsyncRead, AsyncSeek, AsyncWrite}; |
| 116 | #[cfg (feature = "std" )] |
| 117 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 118 | pub use futures_util::{AsyncBufReadExt, AsyncReadExt, AsyncSeekExt, AsyncWriteExt}; |
| 119 | |
| 120 | // Macro reexports |
| 121 | pub use futures_core::ready; // Readiness propagation |
| 122 | pub use futures_util::pin_mut; |
| 123 | #[cfg (feature = "std" )] |
| 124 | #[cfg (feature = "async-await" )] |
| 125 | pub use futures_util::select; |
| 126 | #[cfg (feature = "async-await" )] |
| 127 | pub use futures_util::{join, pending, poll, select_biased, try_join}; // Async-await |
| 128 | |
| 129 | // Module reexports |
| 130 | #[doc (inline)] |
| 131 | pub use futures_util::{future, never, sink, stream, task}; |
| 132 | |
| 133 | #[cfg (feature = "std" )] |
| 134 | #[cfg (feature = "async-await" )] |
| 135 | pub use futures_util::stream_select; |
| 136 | |
| 137 | #[cfg (feature = "alloc" )] |
| 138 | #[doc (inline)] |
| 139 | pub use futures_channel as channel; |
| 140 | #[cfg (feature = "alloc" )] |
| 141 | #[doc (inline)] |
| 142 | pub use futures_util::lock; |
| 143 | |
| 144 | #[cfg (feature = "std" )] |
| 145 | #[doc (inline)] |
| 146 | pub use futures_util::io; |
| 147 | |
| 148 | #[cfg (feature = "executor" )] |
| 149 | #[cfg_attr (docsrs, doc(cfg(feature = "executor" )))] |
| 150 | pub mod executor { |
| 151 | //! Built-in executors and related tools. |
| 152 | //! |
| 153 | //! All asynchronous computation occurs within an executor, which is |
| 154 | //! capable of spawning futures as tasks. This module provides several |
| 155 | //! built-in executors, as well as tools for building your own. |
| 156 | //! |
| 157 | //! |
| 158 | //! This module is only available when the `executor` feature of this |
| 159 | //! library is activated. |
| 160 | //! |
| 161 | //! # Using a thread pool (M:N task scheduling) |
| 162 | //! |
| 163 | //! Most of the time tasks should be executed on a [thread pool](ThreadPool). |
| 164 | //! A small set of worker threads can handle a very large set of spawned tasks |
| 165 | //! (which are much lighter weight than threads). Tasks spawned onto the pool |
| 166 | //! with the [`spawn_ok`](ThreadPool::spawn_ok) function will run ambiently on |
| 167 | //! the created threads. |
| 168 | //! |
| 169 | //! # Spawning additional tasks |
| 170 | //! |
| 171 | //! Tasks can be spawned onto a spawner by calling its [`spawn_obj`] method |
| 172 | //! directly. In the case of `!Send` futures, [`spawn_local_obj`] can be used |
| 173 | //! instead. |
| 174 | //! |
| 175 | //! # Single-threaded execution |
| 176 | //! |
| 177 | //! In addition to thread pools, it's possible to run a task (and the tasks |
| 178 | //! it spawns) entirely within a single thread via the [`LocalPool`] executor. |
| 179 | //! Aside from cutting down on synchronization costs, this executor also makes |
| 180 | //! it possible to spawn non-`Send` tasks, via [`spawn_local_obj`]. The |
| 181 | //! [`LocalPool`] is best suited for running I/O-bound tasks that do relatively |
| 182 | //! little work between I/O operations. |
| 183 | //! |
| 184 | //! There is also a convenience function [`block_on`] for simply running a |
| 185 | //! future to completion on the current thread. |
| 186 | //! |
| 187 | //! [`spawn_obj`]: https://docs.rs/futures/0.3/futures/task/trait.Spawn.html#tymethod.spawn_obj |
| 188 | //! [`spawn_local_obj`]: https://docs.rs/futures/0.3/futures/task/trait.LocalSpawn.html#tymethod.spawn_local_obj |
| 189 | |
| 190 | pub use futures_executor::{ |
| 191 | block_on, block_on_stream, enter, BlockingStream, Enter, EnterError, LocalPool, |
| 192 | LocalSpawner, |
| 193 | }; |
| 194 | |
| 195 | #[cfg (feature = "thread-pool" )] |
| 196 | #[cfg_attr (docsrs, doc(cfg(feature = "thread-pool" )))] |
| 197 | pub use futures_executor::{ThreadPool, ThreadPoolBuilder}; |
| 198 | } |
| 199 | |
| 200 | #[cfg (feature = "compat" )] |
| 201 | #[cfg_attr (docsrs, doc(cfg(feature = "compat" )))] |
| 202 | pub mod compat { |
| 203 | //! Interop between `futures` 0.1 and 0.3. |
| 204 | //! |
| 205 | //! This module is only available when the `compat` feature of this |
| 206 | //! library is activated. |
| 207 | |
| 208 | pub use futures_util::compat::{ |
| 209 | Compat, Compat01As03, Compat01As03Sink, CompatSink, Executor01As03, Executor01CompatExt, |
| 210 | Executor01Future, Future01CompatExt, Sink01CompatExt, Stream01CompatExt, |
| 211 | }; |
| 212 | |
| 213 | #[cfg (feature = "io-compat" )] |
| 214 | #[cfg_attr (docsrs, doc(cfg(feature = "io-compat" )))] |
| 215 | pub use futures_util::compat::{AsyncRead01CompatExt, AsyncWrite01CompatExt}; |
| 216 | } |
| 217 | |
| 218 | pub mod prelude { |
| 219 | //! A "prelude" for crates using the `futures` crate. |
| 220 | //! |
| 221 | //! This prelude is similar to the standard library's prelude in that you'll |
| 222 | //! almost always want to import its entire contents, but unlike the |
| 223 | //! standard library's prelude you'll have to do so manually: |
| 224 | //! |
| 225 | //! ``` |
| 226 | //! # #[allow (unused_imports)] |
| 227 | //! use futures::prelude::*; |
| 228 | //! ``` |
| 229 | //! |
| 230 | //! The prelude may grow over time as additional items see ubiquitous use. |
| 231 | |
| 232 | pub use crate::future::{self, Future, TryFuture}; |
| 233 | pub use crate::sink::{self, Sink}; |
| 234 | pub use crate::stream::{self, Stream, TryStream}; |
| 235 | |
| 236 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 237 | #[allow (unreachable_pub)] |
| 238 | pub use crate::future::{FutureExt as _, TryFutureExt as _}; |
| 239 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 240 | pub use crate::sink::SinkExt as _; |
| 241 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 242 | #[allow (unreachable_pub)] |
| 243 | pub use crate::stream::{StreamExt as _, TryStreamExt as _}; |
| 244 | |
| 245 | #[cfg (feature = "std" )] |
| 246 | pub use crate::io::{AsyncBufRead, AsyncRead, AsyncSeek, AsyncWrite}; |
| 247 | |
| 248 | #[cfg (feature = "std" )] |
| 249 | #[doc (no_inline)] |
| 250 | #[allow (unreachable_pub)] |
| 251 | pub use crate::io::{ |
| 252 | AsyncBufReadExt as _, AsyncReadExt as _, AsyncSeekExt as _, AsyncWriteExt as _, |
| 253 | }; |
| 254 | } |
| 255 | |