jayce / shiny

Alternative server framework for Go using I/O multiplexing

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✨ shiny ✨

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Shiny is an alternative server framework for Go that uses I/O multiplexing. It makes direct epoll and kqueue syscalls rather than the standard Go net package.

This is similar to the way that libuv, libevent, haproxy, nginx, redis, and other high performance servers work.

The goal of this project is to create a simple server framework for Go that performs on par with Redis and Haproxy for packet handling, but without having to interop with Cgo. My hope is to use this as a foundation for Tile38 and other projects. Early benchmarks are exceeding my expectations.

This project is a work in progress. The API will likely change between now and Tile38 v2.0 release.

Features

  • Simple API. Only one entrypoint and four event functions
  • Low memory usage
  • Very fast single-threaded support
  • Support for non-epoll/kqueue operating systems by simulating events with the net package.

Getting Started

Installing

To start using Shiny, install Go and run go get:

$ go get -u github.com/tidwall/shiny

This will retrieve the library.

Usage

There's only the one function:

func Serve(net, addr string,
    handle func(id int, data []byte, ctx interface{}) (send []byte, keepopen bool),
    accept func(id int, addr string, wake func(), ctx interface{}) (send []byte, keepopen bool),
    closed func(id int, err error, ctx interface{}),
    ticker func(ctx interface{}) (keepserving bool),
    ctx interface{}) error
  • All events are executed in the same thread as the Serve call.
  • handle, accept, and closed events have an id param which is a unique number assigned to the client socket.
  • data represents a network packet.
  • ctx is a user-defined context or nil.
  • wake is a function that when called will trigger the handle event with zero data for the specified id. It can be called safely from other Goroutines.
  • ticker is an event that fires between 1 and 1/20 of a second, depending on the packet traffic.

Example

Please check out the examples subdirectory for a simplified redis clone and an echo server.

Here's a basic echo server:

package main

import (
	"flag"
	"fmt"
	"log"

	"github.com/tidwall/shiny"
)

var shutdown bool
var started bool
var port int

func main() {
	flag.IntVar(&port, "port", 9999, "server port")
	flag.Parse()
	log.Fatal(shiny.Serve("tcp", fmt.Sprintf(":%d", port),
		handle, accept, closed, ticker, nil))
}

// handle - the incoming client socket data.
func handle(id int, data []byte, ctx interface{}) (send []byte, keepopen bool) {
	if shutdown {
		return nil, false
	}
	keepopen = true
	if string(data) == "shutdown\r\n" {
		shutdown = true
	} else if string(data) == "quit\r\n" {
		keepopen = false
	}
	return data, keepopen
}

// accept - a new client socket has opened.
// 'wake' is a function that when called will fire a 'handle' event
// for the specified ID, and is goroutine-safe.
func accept(id int, addr string, wake func(), ctx interface{}) (send []byte, keepopen bool) {
	if shutdown {
		return nil, false
	}
	// this is a good place to create a user-defined socket context.
	return []byte(
		"Welcome to the echo server!\n" +
			"Enter 'quit' to close your connection or " +
			"'shutdown' to close the server.\n"), true
}

// closed - a client socket has closed
func closed(id int, err error, ctx interface{}) {
	// teardown the socket context here
}

// ticker - a ticker that fires between 1 and 1/20 of a second
// depending on the traffic.
func ticker(ctx interface{}) (keepserving bool) {
	if shutdown {
		// do server teardown here
		return false
	}
	if !started {
		fmt.Printf("echo server started on port %d\n", port)
		started = true
	}
	// perform various non-socket io related operations here
	return true
}

Run the example:

$ go run examples/echo-server/main.go

Connect to the server:

$ telnet localhost 9999

Performance

The benchmarks below use pipelining which allows for combining multiple Redis commands into a single packet.

Redis

$ redis-server --port 6379 --appendonly no
redis-benchmark -p 6379 -t ping,set,get -q -P 128
PING_INLINE: 961538.44 requests per second
PING_BULK: 1960784.38 requests per second
SET: 943396.25 requests per second
GET: 1369863.00 requests per second

Shiny

$ go run examples/redis-server/main.go --port 6380 --appendonly no
redis-benchmark -p 6380 -t ping,set,get -q -P 128
PING_INLINE: 3846153.75 requests per second
PING_BULK: 4166666.75 requests per second
SET: 3703703.50 requests per second
GET: 3846153.75 requests per second

Running on a MacBook Pro 15" 2.8 GHz Intel Core i7 using Go 1.7

Contact

Josh Baker @tidwall

License

Shiny source code is available under the MIT License.

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Alternative server framework for Go using I/O multiplexing

License:MIT License


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