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Really fast data de-/serialisation and remote procedure calling, for when your process has other things to do than data serialisation.

Benchmark

The main point about Cannon is speed. This is achieved by cutting some corners.

io = IO::Memory.new
data = [ 5, 6, 7 ]

Benchmark.ips do |x|
  x.report("encode") do
    Cannon.encode(io, data)
    io.rewind
  end

  x.report("decode") do
    Cannon.decode(io, typeof(data))
    io.rewind
  end
end

On my i5 6600K (Skylake) I get numbers like these:

encode  96.84M ( 10.33ns) (± 4.19%)       fastest
decode  27.07M ( 36.95ns) (± 3.79%)  3.58× slower

Usage

(Tip: You can find all of these in the samples/ directory)

Many common data types have support built-in:

require "cannon" # Require the shard

# Data de-/serialization.  Cannon operates on IOs
io = IO::Memory.new # Use an in-memory store for this

original = [ 5, 6, 7 ] # Some data to serialize
Cannon.encode io, original # Write `data` into `io`
io.rewind # Don't forget to rewind the stream
copy = Cannon.decode io, typeof(data) # And read it back

pp original, copy # original == copy

Your own data structures can also be serialized. Either by implementing #to_cannon_io(io) and .from_cannon_io(io) yourself, or simply use Cannon::Auto.

require "cannon"

class Session
  include Cannon::Auto # Magic include

  property username : String
  property email : String

  def initialize(@username, @email)
  end
end

io = IO::Memory.new # Like in the example above
original = Session.new("alice", "alice@example.com")
Cannon.encode io, original
io.rewind
decoded = Cannon.decode io, Session

pp original, decoded

Even better, if your data structure is a struct, @[Packed] and only uses simple types, use Cannon::FastAuto.

require "cannon"

@[Packed] # Go with packed if you want to go fast!
struct Addition
  include Cannon::FastAuto # Faster magic include

  property a : Int32
  property b : Int32

  def initialize(@a, @b)
  end
end

io = IO::Memory.new # Like in the example above
original = Addition.new(4, 5)
Cannon.encode io, original
io.rewind
copy = Cannon.decode io, Addition

pp original, copy

Cutting corners

You'd be surprised how much Cannon actually supports. Here are some tricks done to speed things up:

However, there are things to keep in mind:

Simple data structures

Simple data structures can be read and written directly. Their constructor, if any, will most likely not be invoked at all, they just exist.

Requirements are as follows:

Do not falter: If your data-structure does not fit these, you can still use it just fine! It just means it will be fast, but not blazing fast :)

RPC

Cannon also comes with a RPC module. It does the heavy lifting for you, so that you can focus on actually writing code. And it's fast too!

Want to see some real code? Look into samples/rpc/!

Services

The RPC module works on a service methodology. A server provides one, or more services for a client to consume. In Cannon, both ends can provide services for the other to consume.

For this to work, you need three components per Service:

  1. The description module, which describes the interface through abstract methods.
  2. The service class, which includes Cannon::Rpc::Service. This object lives on the server. There can be one or more instances of each service. Each instance has its own unique identifier, or id, which is a UInt32. A service can be owned by a client, more on that below.
  3. The client class, which includes Cannon::Rpc::RemoteService. This object lives on the client. It's bound to a Cannon::Rpc::Connection and the remote services id.

In real usage, you'll probably have two kinds of services: First, those used by every client, and second, those used exclusively by one (or few) client(s).

Singleton services

Singleton services have no owner (Its owner is nil), and are registered to well-known a identifiers. Usually, only one instance of this service exists on the server.

You can make your life easy by including Cannon::Rpc::SingletonService into the description module of the service. This module is instantiated with an identifier. When you now derive your service and client classes from it, they'll automatically bind to the singletons service identifier.

Instance services

The second kind of services are instance services. These are used exclusively by one client, or by few clients. If there's only one client, you can give the client ownership over that service instance.

When a client owns a service, it may release it (remove it) later on. This can be done through the #release_now! method of a client class. Or you just forget about the client, wait until it's garbage-collected, and it'll automatically be released remotely for you. The same happens when a connection is closed automatically, too.

The client

The client is more or less auto-generated from the description module using Cannon::Rpc::RemoteService. An actually complete example is this:

class MyServiceClient
  include Cannon::Rpc::RemoteService(MyServiceDescription)
end

That's it! The class will get a #initializer which you pass the Connection first and the service id (optional if it's a singleton service). The implemented abstract methods from the description module will point at the remote service, and function like normal methods to you.

If you don't care about the methods results anyway, use the _without_response version, which is also generated for each method.

  my_client.greet("Alice") # Wait for response
  my_client.greet_without_response("Alice") # Don't wait

Getting the calling connection

One last thing: If you need to know which Connection exactly is making the call in your service class, just add an argument of type Connection to the end of the argument list. For the client, this argument will "disappear". The service instance will have it "injected".

Gotchas and Troubleshooting

Type your method arguments and result

It's really important to type your methods. It's acceptable to not type the result, in which case it's treated as Nil, and thus will silently drop anything returned from the method.

# Won't work
abstract def add(a, b)
abstract def greet(user : String, email)
abstract def return_something_important

# Will work fine
abstract def add(a : Int32 | Float32, b : Int32) : Float64
abstract def greet(user : String, email : String?) : String
abstract def return_something_important : Hash(String, Int32)

You can't just pass a Service instance around

Right now, you can't pass a Service or RemoteService instance around. Pass around its service_id instead, and rebuild the client on the other end.

# Won't compile
def create_chat_room(name : String) : ChatRoomService
  ChatRoomService.new(name)
end

# Will work fine
def create_chat_room_service(name : String) : UInt32
  manager.add ChatRoomService.new(name)
end

Then, add a wrapper method to your client doing the conversion for you:

class ChatClient
  # ...

  def create_chat_room(name : String) : ChatRoomClient
    ChatRoomClient.new connection, create_chat_room_service(name)
  end
end

When to use The Cannon

  1. Speed is your primary concern
  2. You don't care about inter-operability
  3. You're fine with sacrificing structure

Installation

Add this to your application's shard.yml:

dependencies:
  cannon:
    github: Papierkorb/cannon

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/Papierkorb/cannon/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request

License

This library is licensed under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 ("MPL-2").

For a copy of the full license text see the included LICENSE file.

For a legally non-binding explanation visit: tl;drLegal

Contributors

Still looking down here?

Have nice day!