Serverside non-blocking IO in Swift
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Lightning is an HTTP Server and TCP Client/Server framework written in Swift and inspired by Node.js. It runs on both OS X and Linux. Like Node.js, Lightning uses an event-driven, non-blocking I/O model. In the same way that Node.js uses libuv to implement this model, Lightning uses libdispatch.
This makes Lightning fast, efficient, and most crutially single-threaded by default. You simply do not need to worry about locks/mutexes/semaphores/etc if you have server-side state. Of course, Lightning applications can make use of libdispatch to easily offload heavy processing to a background thread if necessary.
Lightning's event API embraces Functional Reactive Programming by generalizing the familiar concept of promises. This API is called StreamKit.
StreamKit's architecture is inspired by both ReactiveCocoa and RxSwift.
- Lightning should be easy to use out of the box.
- Lightning is optimized for maximum performance, which requires careful tuning of the internals.
- The modified API is meant to be more similar to the familiar concepts of Futures and Promises.
- We don't want to be opinionated about any one framework. We want it to be easy to integate Lightning with either ReactiveCocoa or RxSwift.
FRP, greatly simplies management of asynchronous events. The general concept is that we can build a spout which pushes out asynchronous events as they happen. Then we hookup a pipeline of transformations that operate on events and pass the transformed values along. We can even do things like merge streams in interesting ways! Take a look at some of these operations or watch this talk about how FRP is used at Netflix.
Lightning is available as a Swift 3/4 package. Simply add Lightning as a dependency to your Swift Package.
Swift 3
import PackageDescription
let package = Package(
name: "MyProject",
dependencies: [
.Package(url: "https://github.com/skylab-inc/Lightning.git", majorVersion: 0, minor: 3)
]
)
Swift 4
// swift-tools-version:4.0
// The swift-tools-version declares the minimum version of Swift required to build this package.
import PackageDescription
let package = Package(
name: "MyProject",
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/skylab-inc/Lightning.git", from: "0.3.0"),
]
)
import Lightning
import Foundation
// Create an API router.
let api = Router()
// Add a GET "/users" endpoint.
api.get("/users") { request in
return Response(status: .ok)
}
// NOTE: Equivalent to `api.post("/auth/login")`
let auth = api.subrouter("/auth")
auth.post("/login") { request in
return Response(status: .ok)
}
// Middleware to log all requests
// NOTE: Middleware is a simple as a map function or closure!
let app = Router()
app.map { request in
print(request)
return request
}
// Mount the API router under "/v1.0".
app.add("/v1.0", api)
// NOTE: Warnings on all unhandled requests. No more hanging clients!
app.any { _ in
return Response(status: .notFound)
}
// Start the application.
app.start(host: "0.0.0.0", port: 3000)
import Lightning
import Foundation
func handleRequest(request: Request) -> Response {
print(String(bytes: request.body, encoding: .utf8)!)
return try! Response(json: ["message": "Message received!"])
}
let server = HTTP.Server()
server.listen(host: "0.0.0.0", port: 3000).startWithNext { client in
let requestStream = client.read()
requestStream.map(handleRequest).onNext{ response in
client.write(response).start()
}
requestStream.onFailed { clientError in
print("Oh no, there was an error! \(clientError)")
}
requestStream.onCompleted {
print("Goodbye \(client)!")
}
requestStream.start()
}
RunLoop.runAll()
import Lightning
import Foundation
let server = try! TCP.Server()
try! server.bind(host: "0.0.0.0", port: 50000)
server.listen().startWithNext { connection in
let byteStream = connection.read()
let strings = byteStream.map { String(bytes: $0, encoding: .utf8)! }
strings.onNext { message in
print("Client \(connection) says \"\(message)\"!")
}
strings.onFailed { error in
print("Oh no, there was an error! \(error)")
}
strings.onCompleted {
print("Goodbye \(connection)!")
}
strings.start()
}
RunLoop.runAll()
Lightning is not meant to fulfill all of the roles of Node.js. Node.js is a JavaScript runtime, while Lightning is a TCP/Web server framework. The Swift compiler and package manager, combined with third-party Swift packages, make it unnecessary to build that functionality into Lightning.