Skip to content

A multiprocess drop-in replacement for Rust channels

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

servo/ipc-channel

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

ipc-channel

📚 Documentation 📚

Overview

ipc-channel is an implementation of the Rust channel API (a form of communicating sequential processes, CSP) over the native OS abstractions. Under the hood, this API uses Mach ports on the Mac and file descriptor passing over Unix sockets on Linux. The serde library is used to serialize values for transport over the wire.

As much as possible, ipc-channel has been designed to be a drop-in replacement for Rust channels. The mapping from the Rust channel APIs to ipc-channel APIs is as follows:

  • channel()ipc::channel().unwrap()
  • Sender<T>ipc::IpcSender<T> (requires T: Serialize)
  • Receiver<T>ipc::IpcReceiver<T> (requires T: Deserialize)

Note that both IpcSender<T> and IpcReceiver<T> implement Serialize and Deserialize, so you can send IPC channels over IPC channels freely, just as you can with Rust channels.

The easiest way to make your types implement Serialize and Deserialize is to use the serde_macros crate from crates.io as a plugin and then annotate the types you want to send with #[derive(Deserialize, Serialize]). In many cases, that's all you need to do—the compiler generates all the tedious boilerplate code needed to save and restore instances of your types.

In order to bootstrap an IPC connection across processes, you create an instance of the IpcOneShotServer type, register a global name, pass that name into the client process (perhaps with an environment variable or command line flag), and connect to the server in the client. See cross_process_embedded_senders() in test.rs for an example of how to do this using Unix fork() to spawn the process.

Major missing features

  • Servers only accept one client at a time. This is fine if you simply want to use this API to split your application up into a fixed number of mutually untrusting processes, but it's not suitable for implementing a system service. An API for multiple clients may be added later if demand exists for it.

About

A multiprocess drop-in replacement for Rust channels

Resources

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages