Awesome
<div align="center"> <h1>Fermyon Spin</h1> <picture> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)" srcset="./docs/static/image/logo-dark.png"> <img alt="spin logo" src="./docs/static/image/logo.png" width="300" height="128"> </picture> <p>Spin is a framework for building, deploying, and running fast, secure, and composable cloud microservices with WebAssembly.</p> <a href="https://github.com/fermyon/spin/actions/workflows/build.yml"><img src="https://github.com/fermyon/spin/actions/workflows/build.yml/badge.svg" alt="build status" /></a> <a href="https://discord.gg/eGN8saYqCk"><img alt="Discord" src="https://img.shields.io/discord/926888690310053918?label=Discord"></a> </div>What is Spin?
Spin is an open source framework for building and running fast, secure, and composable cloud microservices with WebAssembly. It aims to be the easiest way to get started with WebAssembly microservices, and takes advantage of the latest developments in the WebAssembly component model and Wasmtime runtime.
Spin offers a simple CLI that helps you create, distribute, and execute applications, and in the next sections we will learn more about Spin applications and how to get started.
Getting started
See the Install Spin page of the Spin documentation for a detailed guide on installing and configuring Spin, but in short run the following commands:
curl -fsSL https://developer.fermyon.com/downloads/install.sh | bash
sudo mv ./spin /usr/local/bin/spin
Alternatively, you could build Spin from source.
To get started writing apps, follow the quickstart guide, and then follow the Rust, JavaScript, Python, or Go language guides, and the guide on writing Spin applications.
Usage
Below is an example of using the spin
CLI to create a new Spin application. To run the example you will need to install the wasm32-wasip1
target for Rust.
$ rustup target add wasm32-wasip1
First, run the spin new
command to create a Spin application from a template.
# Create a new Spin application named 'hello-rust' based on the Rust http template, accepting all defaults
$ spin new --accept-defaults -t http-rust hello-rust
Running the spin new
command created a hello-rust
directory with all the necessary files for your application. Change to the hello-rust
directory and build the application with spin build
, then run it locally with spin up
:
# Compile to Wasm by executing the `build` command.
$ spin build
Executing the build command for component hello-rust: cargo build --target wasm32-wasip1 --release
Finished release [optimized] target(s) in 0.03s
Successfully ran the build command for the Spin components.
# Run the application locally.
$ spin up
Logging component stdio to ".spin/logs/"
Serving http://127.0.0.1:3000
Available Routes:
hello-rust: http://127.0.0.1:3000 (wildcard)
That's it! Now that the application is running, use your browser or cURL in another shell to try it out:
# Send a request to the application.
$ curl -i 127.0.0.1:3000
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
foo: bar
content-length: 14
date: Thu, 13 Apr 2023 17:47:24 GMT
Hello, Fermyon
You can make the app do more by editting the src/lib.rs
file in the hello-rust
directory using your favorite editor or IDE. To learn more about writing Spin applications see Writing Applications in the Spin documentation. To learn how to publish and distribute your application see the Publishing and Distribution guide in the Spin documentation.
For more information on the cli commands and subcommands see the CLI Reference.
Language Support for Spin Features
The table below summarizes the feature support in each of the language SDKs.
Feature | Rust SDK Supported? | TypeScript SDK Supported? | Python SDK Supported? | Tiny Go SDK Supported? | C# SDK Supported? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Triggers | |||||
HTTP | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported |
Redis | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Not Supported |
APIs | |||||
Outbound HTTP | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported |
Configuration Variables | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported |
Key Value Storage | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Not Supported |
SQLite Storage | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Not Supported |
MySQL | Supported | Supported | Not Supported | Supported | Not Supported |
PostgreSQL | Supported | Supported | Not Supported | Supported | Supported |
Outbound Redis | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported |
Serverless AI | Supported | Supported | Supported | Supported | Not Supported |
Extensibility | |||||
Authoring Custom Triggers | Supported | Not Supported | Not Supported | Not Supported | Not Supported |
Getting Involved and Contributing
We are delighted that you are interested in making Spin better! Thank you!
Each Monday at 2:30om UTC and 9:00pm UTC (alternating), we meet to discuss Spin issues, roadmap, and ideas in our Spin Project Meetings. Subscribe to this Google Calendar for meeting dates.
The Spin Project Meeting agenda is a public document. The document contains a rolling agenda with the date and time of each meeting, the Zoom link, and topics of discussion for the day. You will also find the meeting minutes for each meeting and the link to the recording. If you have something you would like to demo or discuss at the project meeting, we encourage you to add it to the agenda.
You can find the contributing guide here.
Fermyon also hosts a Discord server, where we discuss anything Spin: Discord server.
Stay in Touch
Follow us on Twitter: @spinframework
You can join the Spin community in our Discord server where you can ask questions, get help, and show off the cool things you are doing with Spin!