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//! Zero-cost Futures in Rust //! //! This library is an implementation of futures in Rust which aims to provide //! a robust implementation of handling asynchronous computations, ergonomic //! composition and usage, and zero-cost abstractions over what would otherwise //! be written by hand. //! //! Futures are a concept for an object which is a proxy for another value that //! may not be ready yet. For example issuing an HTTP request may return a //! future for the HTTP response, as it probably hasn't arrived yet. With an //! object representing a value that will eventually be available, futures allow //! for powerful composition of tasks through basic combinators that can perform //! operations like chaining computations, changing the types of futures, or //! waiting for two futures to complete at the same time. //! //! You can find extensive tutorials and documentations at [https://tokio.rs] //! for both this crate (asynchronous programming in general) as well as the //! Tokio stack to perform async I/O with. //! //! [https://tokio.rs]: https://tokio.rs //! //! ## Installation //! //! Add this to your `Cargo.toml`: //! //! ```toml //! [dependencies] //! futures = "0.1" //! ``` //! //! ## Examples //! //! Let's take a look at a few examples of how futures might be used: //! //! ``` //! extern crate futures; //! //! use std::io; //! use std::time::Duration; //! use futures::prelude::*; //! use futures::future::Map; //! //! // A future is actually a trait implementation, so we can generically take a //! // future of any integer and return back a future that will resolve to that //! // value plus 10 more. //! // //! // Note here that like iterators, we're returning the `Map` combinator in //! // the futures crate, not a boxed abstraction. This is a zero-cost //! // construction of a future. //! fn add_ten<F>(future: F) -> Map<F, fn(i32) -> i32> //! where F: Future<Item=i32>, //! { //! fn add(a: i32) -> i32 { a + 10 } //! future.map(add) //! } //! //! // Not only can we modify one future, but we can even compose them together! //! // Here we have a function which takes two futures as input, and returns a //! // future that will calculate the sum of their two values. //! // //! // Above we saw a direct return value of the `Map` combinator, but //! // performance isn't always critical and sometimes it's more ergonomic to //! // return a trait object like we do here. Note though that there's only one //! // allocation here, not any for the intermediate futures. //! fn add<'a, A, B>(a: A, b: B) -> Box<Future<Item=i32, Error=A::Error> + 'a> //! where A: Future<Item=i32> + 'a, //! B: Future<Item=i32, Error=A::Error> + 'a, //! { //! Box::new(a.join(b).map(|(a, b)| a + b)) //! } //! //! // Futures also allow chaining computations together, starting another after //! // the previous finishes. Here we wait for the first computation to finish, //! // and then decide what to do depending on the result. //! fn download_timeout(url: &str, //! timeout_dur: Duration) //! -> Box<Future<Item=Vec<u8>, Error=io::Error>> { //! use std::io; //! use std::net::{SocketAddr, TcpStream}; //! //! type IoFuture<T> = Box<Future<Item=T, Error=io::Error>>; //! //! // First thing to do is we need to resolve our URL to an address. This //! // will likely perform a DNS lookup which may take some time. //! let addr = resolve(url); //! //! // After we acquire the address, we next want to open up a TCP //! // connection. //! let tcp = addr.and_then(|addr| connect(&addr)); //! //! // After the TCP connection is established and ready to go, we're off to //! // the races! //! let data = tcp.and_then(|conn| download(conn)); //! //! // That all might take awhile, though, so let's not wait too long for it //! // to all come back. The `select` combinator here returns a future which //! // resolves to the first value that's ready plus the next future. //! // //! // Note we can also use the `then` combinator which is similar to //! // `and_then` above except that it receives the result of the //! // computation, not just the successful value. //! // //! // Again note that all the above calls to `and_then` and the below calls //! // to `map` and such require no allocations. We only ever allocate once //! // we hit the `Box::new()` call at the end here, which means we've built //! // up a relatively involved computation with only one box, and even that //! // was optional! //! //! let data = data.map(Ok); //! let timeout = timeout(timeout_dur).map(Err); //! //! let ret = data.select(timeout).then(|result| { //! match result { //! // One future succeeded, and it was the one which was //! // downloading data from the connection. //! Ok((Ok(data), _other_future)) => Ok(data), //! //! // The timeout fired, and otherwise no error was found, so //! // we translate this to an error. //! Ok((Err(_timeout), _other_future)) => { //! Err(io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Other, "timeout")) //! } //! //! // A normal I/O error happened, so we pass that on through. //! Err((e, _other_future)) => Err(e), //! } //! }); //! return Box::new(ret); //! //! fn resolve(url: &str) -> IoFuture<SocketAddr> { //! // ... //! # panic!("unimplemented"); //! } //! //! fn connect(hostname: &SocketAddr) -> IoFuture<TcpStream> { //! // ... //! # panic!("unimplemented"); //! } //! //! fn download(stream: TcpStream) -> IoFuture<Vec<u8>> { //! // ... //! # panic!("unimplemented"); //! } //! //! fn timeout(stream: Duration) -> IoFuture<()> { //! // ... //! # panic!("unimplemented"); //! } //! } //! # fn main() {} //! ``` //! //! Some more information can also be found in the [README] for now, but //! otherwise feel free to jump in to the docs below! //! //! [README]: https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/futures-rs#futures-rs #![no_std] #![deny(missing_docs, missing_debug_implementations)] #![doc(html_root_url = "https://docs.rs/futures/0.1")] #[macro_use] #[cfg(feature = "use_std")] extern crate std; macro_rules! if_std { ($($i:item)*) => ($( #[cfg(feature = "use_std")] $i )*) } #[macro_use] mod poll; pub use poll::{Poll, Async, AsyncSink, StartSend}; pub mod future; pub use future::{Future, IntoFuture}; pub mod stream; pub use stream::Stream; pub mod sink; pub use sink::Sink; #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "import through the future module instead")] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] #[doc(hidden)] pub use future::{done, empty, failed, finished, lazy}; #[doc(hidden)] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "import through the future module instead")] pub use future::{ Done, Empty, Failed, Finished, Lazy, AndThen, Flatten, FlattenStream, Fuse, IntoStream, Join, Join3, Join4, Join5, Map, MapErr, OrElse, Select, SelectNext, Then }; #[cfg(feature = "use_std")] mod lock; mod task_impl; mod resultstream; pub mod task; pub mod executor; #[cfg(feature = "use_std")] pub mod sync; #[cfg(feature = "use_std")] pub mod unsync; if_std! { #[doc(hidden)] #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "use sync::oneshot::channel instead")] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] pub use sync::oneshot::channel as oneshot; #[doc(hidden)] #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "use sync::oneshot::Receiver instead")] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] pub use sync::oneshot::Receiver as Oneshot; #[doc(hidden)] #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "use sync::oneshot::Sender instead")] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] pub use sync::oneshot::Sender as Complete; #[doc(hidden)] #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "use sync::oneshot::Canceled instead")] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] pub use sync::oneshot::Canceled; #[doc(hidden)] #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "import through the future module instead")] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] #[allow(deprecated)] pub use future::{BoxFuture, collect, select_all, select_ok}; #[doc(hidden)] #[deprecated(since = "0.1.4", note = "import through the future module instead")] #[cfg(feature = "with-deprecated")] pub use future::{SelectAll, SelectAllNext, Collect, SelectOk}; } /// A "prelude" for crates using the `futures` crate. /// /// This prelude is similar to the standard library's prelude in that you'll /// almost always want to import its entire contents, but unlike the standard /// library's prelude you'll have to do so manually. An example of using this is: /// /// ``` /// use futures::prelude::*; /// ``` /// /// We may add items to this over time as they become ubiquitous as well, but /// otherwise this should help cut down on futures-related imports when you're /// working with the `futures` crate! pub mod prelude { #[doc(no_inline)] pub use {Future, Stream, Sink, Async, AsyncSink, Poll, StartSend}; #[doc(no_inline)] pub use IntoFuture; }