Getting Started

This tutorial gets you started with Netpoll through some simple examples, includes how to use Server, Client and nocopy APIs.

1. Use Server

Here is a simple server demo, we will explain how it is constructed next.

1.1 Create Listener

First we need to get a Listener, it can be net.Listener or netpoll.Listener, which is no difference for server usage. Create a Listener as shown below:

package main

import "net"

func main() {
	listener, err := net.Listen(network, address)
	if err != nil {
		panic("create net listener failed")
	}
	...
}

or

package main

import "github.com/cloudwego/netpoll"

func main() {
	listener, err := netpoll.CreateListener(network, address)
	if err != nil {
		panic("create netpoll listener failed")
	}
	...
}

1.2 New EventLoop

EventLoop is an event-driven scheduler, a real NIO Server, responsible for connection management, event scheduling, etc.

params:

  • OnRequest is an interface that users should implement by themselves to process business logic. Code Comment describes its behavior in detail.
  • Option is used to customize the configuration when creating EventLoop, and the following example shows its usage. For more details, please refer to options.

The creation process is as follows:

package main

import (
	"time"
	"github.com/cloudwego/netpoll"
)

var eventLoop netpoll.EventLoop

func main() {
	...
	eventLoop, _ := netpoll.NewEventLoop(
		handle,
		netpoll.WithOnPrepare(prepare),
		netpoll.WithReadTimeout(time.Second),
	)
	...
}

1.3 Run Server

EventLoop provides services by binding Listener, as shown below. Serve function will block until an error occurs, such as a panic or the user actively calls Shutdown.

package main

import (
	"github.com/cloudwego/netpoll"
)

var eventLoop netpoll.EventLoop

func main() {
	...
	// start listen loop ...
	eventLoop.Serve(listener)
}

1.4 Shutdown Server

EventLoop provides the Shutdown function, which is used to stop the server gracefully. The usage is as follows.

package main

import (
	"context"
	"time"
	"github.com/cloudwego/netpoll"
)

var eventLoop netpoll.EventLoop

func main() {
	// stop server ...
	ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 5*time.Second)
	defer cancel()
	eventLoop.Shutdown(ctx)
}

2. Use Dialer

Netpoll also has the ability to be used on the Client side. It provides Dialer, similar to net.Dialer. Again, here is a simple client demo, and then we introduce it in detail.

2.1 The Fast Way

Similar to Net, Netpoll provides several public functions for directly dialing a connection. such as:

DialConnection(network, address string, timeout time.Duration) (connection Connection, err error)

DialTCP(ctx context.Context, network string, laddr, raddr *TCPAddr) (*TCPConnection, error)

DialUnix(network string, laddr, raddr *UnixAddr) (*UnixConnection, error)

2.2 Create Dialer

Netpoll also defines the Dialer interface. The usage is as follows: (of course, you can usually use the fast way)

package main

import (
	"github.com/cloudwego/netpoll"
)

func main() {
	// Dial a connection with Dialer.
	dialer := netpoll.NewDialer()
	conn, err := dialer.DialConnection(network, address, timeout)
	if err != nil {
		panic("dial netpoll connection failed")
	}
	...
}

3. Use Nocopy API

Connection provides Nocopy APIs - Reader and Writer, to avoid frequent copying. Let’s introduce their simple usage.

package main

type Connection interface {
	// Recommended nocopy APIs
	Reader() Reader
	Writer() Writer
	... // see code comments for more details
}

3.1 Simple Usage

Nocopy APIs is designed as a two-step operation.

On Reader, after reading data through Next, Peek, ReadString, etc., you still have to actively call Release to release the buffer(Nocopy reads the original address of the buffer, so you must take the initiative to confirm that the buffer is no longer used).

Similarly, on Writer, you first need to allocate a buffer to write data, and then call Flush to confirm that all data has been written. Writer also provides rich APIs to allocate buffers, such as Malloc, WriteString and so on.

The following shows some simple examples of reading and writing data. For more details, please refer to the code comments.

package main

import (
	"github.com/cloudwego/netpoll"
)

func main() {
	var conn netpoll.Connection
	var reader, writer = conn.Reader(), conn.Writer()

	// reading
	buf, _ := reader.Next(n)
	... parse the read data ...
	reader.Release()

	// writing
	var write_data []byte
	... make the write data ...
	alloc, _ := writer.Malloc(len(write_data))
	copy(alloc, write_data) // write data
	writer.Flush()
}

3.2 Advanced Usage

If you want to use the connection to send (or receive) multiple sets of data, then you will face the work of packing and unpacking the data.

On net, this kind of work is generally done by copying. An example is as follows:

package main

import (
	"net"
)

func main() {
	var conn net.Conn
	var buf = make([]byte, 8192)

	// reading
	for {
		n, _ := conn.Read(buf)
		... unpacking & handling ...
		var i int
		for i = 0; i <= n-pkgsize; i += pkgsize {
			pkg := append([]byte{}, buf[i:i+pkgsize]...)
			go func() {
				... handling pkg ...
			}
		}
		buf = append(buf[:0], buf[i:n]...)
	}

	// writing
	var write_datas <-chan []byte
	... packing write ...
	for {
		pkg := <-write_datas
		conn.Write(pkg)
	}
}

But, this is not necessary in Netpoll, nocopy APIs supports operations on the original address of the buffer, and realizes automatic recycling and reuse of resources through reference counting.

Examples are as follows(use function Reader.Slice and Writer.Append):

package main

import (
	"github.com/cloudwego/netpoll"
)

func main() {
	var conn netpoll.Connection

	// reading
	reader := conn.Reader()
	for {
		... unpacking & handling ...
		pkg, _ := reader.Slice(pkgsize)
		go func() {
			... handling pkg ...
			pkg.Release()
		}
	}

	// writing
	var write_datas <-chan netpoll.Writer
	... packing write ...
	writer := conn.Writer()
	for {
		select {
		case pkg := <-write_datas:
			writer.Append(pkg)
		default:
			if writer.MallocLen() > 0 {
				writer.Flush()
			}
		}
	}
}

Last modified August 2, 2023 : chore: update readme (#742) (945d264)