Skip to content

Maaarcocr/picol

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

14 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

picol

picol (piccolo = small in italian) is a very small async runtime which wants to be single threaded and built on top of io-uring.

state

picol (as of now) is mostly an experiment. I've been building it for learning purposes and I do not much about how to best build an async runtime, nor about io-uring.

how it works

picol runs everything in a single thread, no background threads are used. When you want to for example read from a file, you would call the read function. This in turns, create a new future, which on the first time it gets polled would spawn a new async task, whose job would be to enqueue a new read submission to io-uring. After this, another task (with low priority) is enqueued which will wait on as many io-uring submission as there have been.

The idea around having a low priority task is that I think it's good to do as much CPU work before waiting for IO (the IO operations will be carried on by the kernel in the meantime, do not block on them to be done). Maybe it's a bad idea, but for now it's what I'm exploring!

what can it do?

Reading and writing from a file

use picol::{block_on};

fn main() {
    // Run the future on the current thread.
    block_on(async {
        let task1 = async {
            println!("Task1 start");
            let mut fs = picol::fs::File::open("examples/hello_world.rs").await;
            let buf = vec![0u8; 10];
            let r = fs.read(buf).await;
            let s = std::str::from_utf8(&r).unwrap();
            println!("Task1: {}", s);

        };
        let task2 = async {
            println!("Task2 start");
            let mut fs = picol::fs::File::open("examples/hello_world.rs").await;
            let buf = vec![0u8; 10];
            let r = fs.read(buf).await;
            let s = std::str::from_utf8(&r).unwrap();
            println!("Task2: {}", s);
        };
        futures_lite::future::zip(task1, task2).await;
    });
}

Basic tcp operations

use picol::{block_on, spawn};

fn main() {
    block_on(async {
        let tcp_listener = picol::net::tcp_listener::TcpListener::bind("0.0.0.0:8080").unwrap();
        loop {
            let tcp_stream = tcp_listener.accept().await.unwrap();
            println!("tcp_stream accepted");
            spawn(async move {
                loop {
                    let buf = vec![0u8; 1024];
                    let (_, buf) = tcp_stream.read(buf).await.unwrap();
                    println!("read {}", std::str::from_utf8(&buf).unwrap());
                    tcp_stream.write(buf).await.unwrap();
                }
            }).detach();
        }
    })
}

thank you notes

This work could have not happened without the amazing crates created by the smol runtime team. Also, thank you to Katharina Fey, from whom I've learn almost everything I needed to make this work, at the RustNation UK workshop in 2023.

About

a small and single threaded async runtime built on top of io-uring

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages