package eio_main

  1. Overview
  2. Docs
Effect-based direct-style IO mainloop for OCaml

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

eio-0.10.tbz
sha256=390f7814507b8133d6c25e3a67a742d731c7ca66252b287b1fb0e3ad4d10eecc
sha512=9c0c9088b178df9799aaae9deb803a802228f1329cbe452479c90e80a13985d9c364ea86ee14e4e759133940f9f6065c7e8ece509d176fb1e347c5320f00a494

README.md.html

README.md

API reference | #eio Matrix chat | Dev meetings

Eio -- Effects-Based Parallel IO for OCaml

Eio provides an effects-based direct-style IO stack for OCaml 5.0. For example, you can use Eio to read and write files, make network connections, or perform CPU-intensive calculations, running multiple operations at the same time. It aims to be easy to use, secure, well documented, and fast. A generic cross-platform API is implemented by optimised backends for different platforms. Eio replaces existing concurrency libraries such as Lwt (Eio and Lwt libraries can also be used together).

Contents

Motivation

The Unix library provided with OCaml uses blocking IO operations, and is not well suited to concurrent programs such as network services or interactive applications. For many years, the solution to this has been libraries such as Lwt and Async, which provide a monadic interface. These libraries allow writing code as if there were multiple threads of execution, each with their own stack, but the stacks are simulated using the heap.

OCaml 5.0 adds support for "effects", removing the need for monadic code here. Using effects brings several advantages:

  1. It's faster, because no heap allocations are needed to simulate a stack.

  2. Concurrent code can be written in the same style as plain non-concurrent code.

  3. Because a real stack is used, backtraces from exceptions work as expected.

  4. Other features of the language (such as try ... with ...) can be used in concurrent code.

Additionally, modern operating systems provide high-performance alternatives to the old Unix select call. For example, Linux's io_uring system has applications write the operations they want to perform to a ring buffer, which Linux handles asynchronously.

Due to this, we anticipate many OCaml users will want to rewrite their IO code once OCaml 5.0 is released. It would be very beneficial to use this opportunity to standardise a single concurrency API for OCaml, and we hope that Eio will be that API.

Current Status

See Eio 1.0 progress tracking for the current status. Please try porting your programs to use Eio and submit PRs or open issues when you find problems. Remember that you can always fall back to using Lwt libraries to provide missing features if necessary.

See Awesome Multicore OCaml for links to work migrating other projects to Eio.

Structure of the Code

  • Eio provides concurrency primitives (promises, etc.) and a high-level, cross-platform OS API.

  • Eio_posix provides a cross-platform backend for these APIs for POSIX-type systems.

  • Eio_linux provides a Linux io-uring backend for these APIs, plus a low-level API that can be used directly (in non-portable code).

  • Eio_main selects an appropriate backend (e.g. eio_linux or eio_posix), depending on your platform.

Getting OCaml 5.0

You'll need OCaml 5.0.0 or later. You can either install it yourself or build the included Dockerfile.

To install it yourself:

  1. Make sure you have opam 2.1 or later (run opam --version to check).

  2. Use opam to install OCaml 5.0.0:

    opam switch create 5.0.0
    

Getting Eio

Install eio_main (and utop if you want to try it interactively):

opam install eio_main utop

If you want to install the latest unreleased development version of Eio, see HACKING.md.

Running Eio

Try out the examples interactively by running utop in the shell.

First require the eio_main library. It's also convenient to open the Eio.Std module, as follows. (The leftmost # shown below is the Utop prompt, so enter the text after the prompt and return after each line.)

# #require "eio_main";;
# open Eio.Std;;

This function writes a greeting to stdout using Eio.Flow:

let main ~stdout =
  Eio.Flow.copy_string "Hello, world!\n" stdout

We use Eio_main.run to run the event loop and call main from there:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  main ~stdout:(Eio.Stdenv.stdout env);;
Hello, world!
- : unit = ()

Note that:

  • The env argument represents the standard environment of a Unix process, allowing it to interact with the outside world. A program will typically start by extracting from env whatever things the program will need and then calling main with them.

  • The type of the main function here tells us that this program only interacts via stdout.

  • Eio_main.run automatically calls the appropriate run function for your platform. For example, on Linux this will call Eio_linux.run. For non-portable code you can use the platform-specific library directly.

This example can also be built using dune; see examples/hello.

Testing with Mocks

Because external resources are provided to main as arguments, we can easily replace them with mocks for testing. For example, instead of giving main the real standard output, we can have it write to a buffer:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _env ->
  let buffer = Buffer.create 20 in
  main ~stdout:(Eio.Flow.buffer_sink buffer);
  traceln "Main would print %S" (Buffer.contents buffer);;
+Main would print "Hello, world!\n"
- : unit = ()

Eio.traceln provides convenient printf-style debugging, without requiring you to plumb stderr through your code. It uses the Format module, so you can use the extended formatting directives here too.

The Eio_mock library provides some convenient pre-built mocks:

# #require "eio.mock";;
# Eio_main.run @@ fun _env ->
  let mock_stdout = Eio_mock.Flow.make "mock-stdout" in
  main ~stdout:mock_stdout;;
+mock-stdout: wrote "Hello, world!\n"
- : unit = ()

Fibers

Here's an example running two threads of execution concurrently using Eio.Fiber:

let main _env =
  Fiber.both
    (fun () -> for x = 1 to 3 do traceln "x = %d" x; Fiber.yield () done)
    (fun () -> for y = 1 to 3 do traceln "y = %d" y; Fiber.yield () done);;
# Eio_main.run main;;
+x = 1
+y = 1
+x = 2
+y = 2
+x = 3
+y = 3
- : unit = ()

The two fibers run on a single core, so only one can be running at a time. Calling an operation that performs an effect (such as yield) can switch to a different thread.

Tracing

The library can write traces in CTF format, showing when threads (fibers) are created, when they run, and how they interact. We can run the previous code with tracing enabled (writing to a new trace.ctf file) like this:

# let () =
    Eio_unix.Ctf.with_tracing "trace.ctf" @@ fun () ->
    Eio_main.run main;;
+x = 1
+y = 1
+x = 2
+y = 2
+x = 3
+y = 3

The trace can be viewed using mirage-trace-viewer. This should work even while the program is still running. The file is a ring buffer, so when it gets full, old events will start to be overwritten with new ones.

This shows the two counting threads as two horizonal lines. The white regions indicate when each thread was running. Note that the output from traceln appears in the trace as well as on the console.

The Meio (Monitoring for Eio) project provides an interactive console-based UI for exploring running fibers, using the new runtime events support in OCaml 5.1.

Cancellation

Every fiber has a cancellation context. If one of the Fiber.both fibers fails, the other is cancelled:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _env ->
  Fiber.both
    (fun () -> for x = 1 to 3 do traceln "x = %d" x; Fiber.yield () done)
    (fun () -> failwith "Simulated error");;
+x = 1
Exception: Failure "Simulated error".

What happened here was:

  1. Fiber.both created a new cancellation context for the child fibers.

  2. The first fiber ran, printed x = 1 and yielded.

  3. The second fiber raised an exception.

  4. Fiber.both caught the exception and cancelled the context.

  5. The first thread's yield raised a Cancelled exception there.

  6. Once both threads had finished, Fiber.both re-raised the original exception.

There is a tree of cancellation contexts for each domain, and every fiber is in one context. When an exception is raised, it propagates towards the root until handled, cancelling the other branches as it goes. You should assume that any operation that can switch fibers can also raise a Cancelled exception if an uncaught exception reaches one of its ancestor cancellation contexts.

If you want to make an operation non-cancellable, wrap it with Cancel.protect (this creates a new context that isn't cancelled with its parent).

Racing

Fiber.first returns the result of the first fiber to finish, cancelling the other one:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _env ->
  let x =
    Fiber.first
      (fun () ->
        traceln "first fiber delayed...";
        Fiber.yield ();
        traceln "delay over";
        "a"
      )
      (fun () -> "b")
  in
  traceln "x = %S" x;;
+first fiber delayed...
+x = "b"
- : unit = ()

Note: using Fiber.first to ensure that exactly one of two actions is performed is not reliable. There is usually a possibility that both actions succeed at the same time (and one result is thrown away). For example, if you ask Eio read from two sockets with io_uring then the kernel may have already performed both reads by the time it tells Eio about the first one.

Switches

A switch is used to group fibers together, so they can be waited on together. This is a form of structured concurrency. For example:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _env ->
  Switch.run (fun sw ->
    Fiber.fork ~sw
      (fun () -> for i = 1 to 3 do traceln "i = %d" i; Fiber.yield () done);
    traceln "First thread forked";
    Fiber.fork ~sw
      (fun () -> for j = 1 to 3 do traceln "j = %d" j; Fiber.yield () done);
    traceln "Second thread forked; top-level code is finished"
  );
  traceln "Switch is finished";;
+i = 1
+First thread forked
+j = 1
+Second thread forked; top-level code is finished
+i = 2
+j = 2
+i = 3
+j = 3
+Switch is finished
- : unit = ()

Switch.run fn creates a new switch sw and runs fn sw. fn may spawn new fibers and attach them to the switch. It may also attach other resources such as open file handles. Switch.run waits until fn and all other attached fibers have finished, and then releases any attached resources (e.g. closing all attached file handles).

If you call a function without giving it access to a switch, then when the function returns you can be sure that any fibers it spawned have finished, and any files it opened have been closed. This works because Eio does not provide e.g. a way to open a file without attaching it to a switch. If a function doesn't have a switch and wants to open a file, it must use Switch.run to create one. But then the function can't return until Switch.run does, at which point the file is closed.

So, a Switch.run puts a bound on the lifetime of things created within it, leading to clearer code and avoiding resource leaks. The Fiber.fork call above creates a new fiber that continues running after fork returns, so it needs to take a switch argument.

Every switch also creates a new cancellation context. You can use Switch.fail to mark the switch as failed and cancel all fibers within it. The exception (or exceptions) passed to fail will be raised by run when the fibers have exited.

Performance

As mentioned above, Eio allows you to supply your own implementations of its abstract interfaces. This is in contrast to OCaml's standard library, which only operates on OS file descriptors. You might wonder what the performance impact of this is. Here's a simple implementation of cat using the standard OCaml functions:

# let () =
    let buf = Bytes.create 4096 in
    let rec copy () =
      match input stdin buf 0 4096 with
      | 0 -> ()
      | got ->
        output stdout buf 0 got;
        copy ()
    in
    copy ();;

And here is the equivalent using Eio:

# let () =
    Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
    Eio.Flow.copy
      (Eio.Stdenv.stdin env)
      (Eio.Stdenv.stdout env);;

Testing on a fresh 10G file with pv on my machine gives:

$ truncate -s 10G dummy

$ cat_ocaml_unix.exe <dummy | pv >/dev/null
10.0GiB 0:00:04 [2.33GiB/s]

$ cat                <dummy | pv >/dev/null
10.0GiB 0:00:04 [2.42GiB/s]

$ cat_ocaml_eio.exe  <dummy | pv >/dev/null
10.0GiB 0:00:03 [3.01GiB/s]

Eio.Flow.copy src dst asks dst to copy from src. As dst here wraps a Unix file descriptor, it first calls the probe method on the src object to check whether it does too. Discovering that src is also wrapping a file descriptor, it switches to a faster code path optimised for that case. On my machine, this code path uses the Linux-specific splice system call for maximum performance.

Note that not all cases are well-optimised yet, but the idea is for each backend to choose the most efficient way to implement the operation.

Networking

Eio provides an API for networking. Here is a server connection handler that handles an incoming connection by sending the client a message:

let handle_client flow _addr =
  traceln "Server: got connection from client";
  Eio.Flow.copy_string "Hello from server" flow

We can test it using a mock flow:

# Eio_mock.Backend.run @@ fun () ->
  let flow = Eio_mock.Flow.make "flow" in
  let addr = `Tcp (Eio.Net.Ipaddr.V4.loopback, 37568) in
  handle_client flow addr;;
+Server: got connection from client
+flow: wrote "Hello from server"
- : unit = ()

Note: Eio_mock.Backend.run can be used instead of Eio_main.run for tests that don't access the outside environment at all. It doesn't support multiple domains, but this allows it to detect deadlocks automatically (a multi-domain loop has to assume it might get an event from another domain, and so must keep waiting).

Here is a client that connects to address addr using network net and reads a message:

let run_client ~net ~addr =
  traceln "Client: connecting to server";
  Switch.run @@ fun sw ->
  let flow = Eio.Net.connect ~sw net addr in
  let b = Buffer.create 100 in
  Eio.Flow.copy flow (Eio.Flow.buffer_sink b);
  traceln "Client: received %S" (Buffer.contents b)

Note: the flow is attached to sw and will be closed automatically when it finishes.

This can also be tested on its own using a mock network:

# Eio_mock.Backend.run @@ fun () ->
  let net = Eio_mock.Net.make "mocknet" in
  let flow = Eio_mock.Flow.make "flow" in
  Eio_mock.Net.on_connect net [`Return flow];
  Eio_mock.Flow.on_read flow [
    `Return "(packet 1)";
    `Yield_then (`Return "(packet 2)");
    `Raise End_of_file;
  ];
  let addr = `Tcp (Eio.Net.Ipaddr.V4.loopback, 8080) in
  run_client ~net ~addr;;
+Client: connecting to server
+mocknet: connect to tcp:127.0.0.1:8080
+flow: read "(packet 1)"
+flow: read "(packet 2)"
+Client: received "(packet 1)(packet 2)"
+flow: closed
- : unit = ()

Eio.Net.run_server runs a loop accepting clients and handling them (concurrently):

let run_server socket =
  Eio.Net.run_server socket handle_client
    ~on_error:(traceln "Error handling connection: %a" Fmt.exn)

Note: when handle_client finishes, run_server closes the flow automatically.

We can now run the client and server together using the real network (in a single process):

let main ~net ~addr =
  Switch.run @@ fun sw ->
  let server = Eio.Net.listen net ~sw ~reuse_addr:true ~backlog:5 addr in
  Fiber.fork_daemon ~sw (fun () -> run_server server);
  run_client ~net ~addr

Fiber.fork_daemon creates a new fiber and then cancels it when the switch finishes. We need that here because otherwise the server would keep waiting for new connections and the test would never finish.

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  main
    ~net:(Eio.Stdenv.net env)
    ~addr:(`Tcp (Eio.Net.Ipaddr.V4.loopback, 8080));;
+Client: connecting to server
+Server: got connection from client
+Client: received "Hello from server"
- : unit = ()

See examples/net for a more complete example.

Design Note: Capabilities

Eio follows the principles of capability-based security. The key idea here is that the lambda calculus already contains a perfectly good security system: a function can only access things that are in its scope. If we can avoid breaking this model (for example, by adding global variables to our language) then we can reason about the security properties of code quite easily.

Consider the network example in the previous section. Imagine this is a large program and we want to know:

  1. Does this program modify the filesystem?

  2. Does this program send telemetry data over the network?

In a capability-safe language, we don't have to read the entire code-base to find the answers:

  • All authority starts at the (privileged) Eio_main.run function with the env parameter, so we must check this code.

  • Only env's network access is used, so we know this program doesn't access the filesystem, answering question 1 immediately.

  • To check whether telemetry is sent, we need to follow the net authority as it is passed to main.

  • main uses net to open a listening socket on the loopback interface, which it passes to run_server. run_server does not get the full net access, so we probably don't need to read that code; however, we might want to check whether we granted other parties access to this port on our loopback network.

  • run_client does get net, so we do need to read that. We could make that code easier to audit by passing it (fun () -> Eio.Net.connect net addr) instead of net . Then we could see that run_client could only connect to our loopback address.

Since OCaml is not a capability language, code can ignore Eio and use the non-capability APIs directly. However, it still makes non-malicious code easier to understand and test, and may allow for an extension to the language in the future.

The Lambda Capabilities blog post provides a more detailed introduction to capabilities, written for functional programmers.

Buffered Reading and Parsing

Reading from an Eio flow directly may give you more or less data than you wanted. For example, if you want to read a line of text from a TCP stream, the flow will tend to give you the data in packet-sized chunks, not lines. To solve this, you can wrap the flow with a buffer and read from that.

Here's a simple command-line interface that reads stdin one line at a time:

let cli ~stdin ~stdout =
  let buf = Eio.Buf_read.of_flow stdin ~initial_size:100 ~max_size:1_000_000 in
  while true do
    let line = Eio.Buf_read.line buf in
    traceln "> %s" line;
    match line with
    | "h" | "help" -> Eio.Flow.copy_string "It's just an example\n" stdout
    | x -> Eio.Flow.copy_string (Fmt.str "Unknown command %S\n" x) stdout
  done

Let's try it with some test data (you could use the real stdin if you prefer):

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  cli
    ~stdin:(Eio.Flow.string_source "help\nexit\nquit\nbye\nstop\n")
    ~stdout:(Eio.Stdenv.stdout env);;
+> help
It's just an example
+> exit
Unknown command "exit"
+> quit
Unknown command "quit"
+> bye
Unknown command "bye"
+> stop
Unknown command "stop"
Exception: End_of_file.

Buf_read.of_flow allocates an internal buffer (with the given initial_size). When you try to read a line from it, it will take a whole line from the buffer if possible. If not, it will ask the underlying flow for the next chunk of data, until it has enough.

For high performance applications, you should use a larger initial buffer so that fewer reads on the underlying flow are needed.

If the user enters a line that doesn't fit in the buffer then the buffer will be enlarged as needed. However, it will raise an exception if the buffer would need to grow above max_size. This is useful when handling untrusted input, since otherwise when you try to read one line an attacker could just keep sending e.g. 'x' characters until your service ran out of memory and crashed.

As well as calling individual parsers (like line) directly, you can also build larger parsers from smaller ones. For example:

open Eio.Buf_read.Syntax

type message = { src : string; body : string }

let message =
  let+ src = Eio.Buf_read.(string "FROM:" *> line)
  and+ body = Eio.Buf_read.take_all in
  { src; body }
# Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  let flow = Eio.Flow.string_source "FROM:Alice\nHello!\n" in
  match Eio.Buf_read.parse message flow ~max_size:1024 with
  | Ok { src; body } -> traceln "%s sent %S" src body
  | Error (`Msg err) -> traceln "Parse failed: %s" err;;
+Alice sent "Hello!\n"
- : unit = ()

Buffered Writing

For performance, it's often useful to batch up writes and send them all in one go. For example, consider sending an HTTP response without buffering:

let send_response socket =
  Eio.Flow.copy_string "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n" socket;
  Eio.Flow.copy_string "\r\n" socket;
  Fiber.yield ();       (* Simulate delayed generation of body *)
  Eio.Flow.copy_string "Body data" socket
# Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  send_response (Eio_mock.Flow.make "socket");;
+socket: wrote "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n"
+socket: wrote "\r\n"
+socket: wrote "Body data"
- : unit = ()

The socket received three writes, perhaps sending three separate packets over the network. We can wrap a flow with Eio.Buf_write to avoid this:

module Write = Eio.Buf_write

let send_response socket =
  Write.with_flow socket @@ fun w ->
  Write.string w "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n";
  Write.string w "\r\n";
  Fiber.yield ();       (* Simulate delayed generation of body *)
  Write.string w "Body data"
# Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  send_response (Eio_mock.Flow.make "socket");;
+socket: wrote "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n"
+              "\r\n"
+socket: wrote "Body data"
- : unit = ()

Now the first two writes were combined and sent together.

Error Handling

Errors interacting with the outside world are indicated by the Eio.Io (err, context) exception. This is roughly equivalent to the Unix.Unix_error exception from the OCaml standard library.

The err field describes the error using nested error codes, allowing you to match on either specific errors or whole classes of errors at once. For example:

let test r =
  try Eio.Buf_read.line r
  with
  | Eio.Io (Eio.Net.E Connection_reset Eio_unix.Unix_error _, _) -> "Unix connection reset"
  | Eio.Io (Eio.Net.E Connection_reset _, _) -> "Connection reset"
  | Eio.Io (Eio.Net.E _, _) -> "Some network error"
  | Eio.Io _ -> "Some I/O error"

For portable code, you will want to avoid matching backend-specific errors, so you would avoid the first case. The Eio.Io type is extensible, so libraries can also add additional top-level error types if needed.

Io errors also allow adding extra context information to the error. For example, this HTTP GET function adds the URL to any IO error:

let get ~net ~host ~path =
  try
    Eio.Net.with_tcp_connect net ~host ~service:"http" @@ fun _flow ->
    "..."
  with Eio.Io _ as ex ->
    let bt = Printexc.get_raw_backtrace () in
    Eio.Exn.reraise_with_context ex bt "fetching http://%s/%s" host path;;

If we test it using a mock network that returns a timeout, we get a useful error message telling us the IP address and port of the failed attempt, extended with the hostname we used to get that, and then extended again by our get function with the full URL:

# Eio_mock.Backend.run @@ fun () ->
  let net = Eio_mock.Net.make "mocknet" in
  Eio_mock.Net.on_getaddrinfo net [`Return [`Tcp (Eio.Net.Ipaddr.V4.loopback, 80)]];
  Eio_mock.Net.on_connect net [`Raise (Eio.Net.err (Connection_failure Timeout))];
  get ~net ~host:"example.com" ~path:"index.html";;
+mocknet: getaddrinfo ~service:http example.com
+mocknet: connect to tcp:127.0.0.1:80
Exception:
Eio.Io Net Connection_failure Timeout,
  connecting to tcp:127.0.0.1:80,
  connecting to "example.com":http,
  fetching http://example.com/index.html

To get more detailed information, you can enable backtraces by setting OCAMLRUNPARAM=b or by calling Printexc.record_backtrace true, as usual.

When writing MDX tests that depend on getting the exact error output, it can be annoying to have the full backend-specific error displayed:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let net = Eio.Stdenv.net env in
  Switch.run @@ fun sw ->
  Eio.Net.connect ~sw net (`Tcp (Eio.Net.Ipaddr.V4.loopback, 1234));;
Exception:
Eio.Io Net Connection_failure Refused Unix_error (Connection refused, "connect", ""),
  connecting to tcp:127.0.0.1:1234

If we ran this using another backend, the Unix_error part might change. To avoid this problem, you can use Eio.Exn.Backend.show to hide the backend-specific part of errors:

# Eio.Exn.Backend.show := false;;
- : unit = ()

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let net = Eio.Stdenv.net env in
  Switch.run @@ fun sw ->
  Eio.Net.connect ~sw net (`Tcp (Eio.Net.Ipaddr.V4.loopback, 1234));;
Exception:
Eio.Io Net Connection_failure Refused _,
  connecting to tcp:127.0.0.1:1234

We'll leave it like that for the rest of this file, so the examples can be tested automatically by MDX.

Filesystem Access

Access to the filesystem is performed using Eio.Path. An 'a Path.t is a pair of a capability to a base directory (of type 'a) and a string path relative to that. To append to the string part, it's convenient to use the / operator:

let ( / ) = Eio.Path.( / )

env provides two initial paths:

  • cwd restricts access to files beneath the current working directory.

  • fs provides full access (just like OCaml's stdlib).

You can save a whole file using Path.save:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let path = Eio.Stdenv.cwd env / "test.txt" in
  traceln "Saving to %a" Eio.Path.pp path;
  Eio.Path.save ~create:(`Exclusive 0o600) path "line one\nline two\n";;
+Saving to <cwd:test.txt>
- : unit = ()

For more control, use Path.open_out (or with_open_out) to get a flow.

To load a file, you can use load to read the whole thing into a string, Path.open_in (or with_open_in) to get a flow, or Path.with_lines to stream the lines (a convenience function that uses Buf_read.lines):

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let path = Eio.Stdenv.cwd env / "test.txt" in
  Eio.Path.with_lines path (fun lines ->
     Seq.iter (traceln "Processing %S") lines
  );;
+Processing "line one"
+Processing "line two"
- : unit = ()

Access to cwd only grants access to that sub-tree:

let try_save path data =
  match Eio.Path.save ~create:(`Exclusive 0o600) path data with
  | () -> traceln "save %a : ok" Eio.Path.pp path
  | exception ex -> traceln "%a" Eio.Exn.pp ex

let try_mkdir path =
  match Eio.Path.mkdir path ~perm:0o700 with
  | () -> traceln "mkdir %a : ok" Eio.Path.pp path
  | exception ex -> traceln "%a" Eio.Exn.pp ex
# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let cwd = Eio.Stdenv.cwd env in
  try_mkdir (cwd / "dir1");
  try_mkdir (cwd / "../dir2");
  try_mkdir (cwd / "/tmp/dir3");;
+mkdir <cwd:dir1> : ok
+Eio.Io Fs Permission_denied _, creating directory <cwd:../dir2>
+Eio.Io Fs Permission_denied _, creating directory <cwd:/tmp/dir3>
- : unit = ()

The checks also apply to following symlinks:

# Unix.symlink "dir1" "link-to-dir1"; Unix.symlink "/tmp" "link-to-tmp";;
- : unit = ()

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let cwd = Eio.Stdenv.cwd env in
  try_save (cwd / "dir1/file1") "A";
  try_save (cwd / "link-to-dir1/file2") "B";
  try_save (cwd / "link-to-tmp/file3") "C";;
+save <cwd:dir1/file1> : ok
+save <cwd:link-to-dir1/file2> : ok
+Eio.Io Fs Permission_denied _, opening <cwd:link-to-tmp/file3>
- : unit = ()

You can use open_dir (or with_open_dir) to create a restricted capability to a subdirectory:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let cwd = Eio.Stdenv.cwd env in
  Eio.Path.with_open_dir (cwd / "dir1") @@ fun dir1 ->
  try_save (dir1 / "file4") "D";
  try_save (dir1 / "../file5") "E";;
+save <dir1:file4> : ok
+Eio.Io Fs Permission_denied _, opening <dir1:../file5>
- : unit = ()

You only need to use open_dir if you want to create a new sandboxed environment. You can use a single base directory object to access all paths beneath it, and this allows following symlinks within that subtree.

A program that operates on the current directory will probably want to use cwd, whereas a program that accepts a path from the user will probably want to use fs, perhaps with open_dir to constrain all access to be within that directory.

Running processes

Spawning a child process can be done using the Eio.Process module:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let proc_mgr = Eio.Stdenv.process_mgr env in
  Eio.Process.run proc_mgr ["echo"; "hello"];;
hello
- : unit = ()

There are various optional arguments for setting the process's current directory or connecting up the standard streams. For example, we can use tr to convert some text to upper-case:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let proc_mgr = Eio.Stdenv.process_mgr env in
  Eio.Process.run proc_mgr ["tr"; "a-z"; "A-Z"]
    ~stdin:(Eio.Flow.string_source "One two three\n");;
ONE TWO THREE
- : unit = ()

If you want to capture the output of a process, you can provide a suitable Eio.Flow.sink as the stdout argument, or use the parse_out convenience wrapper:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let proc_mgr = Eio.Stdenv.process_mgr env in
  Eio.Process.parse_out proc_mgr Eio.Buf_read.line ["echo"; "hello"];;
- : string = "hello"

All process functions either return the exit status or check that it was zero (success):

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let proc_mgr = Eio.Stdenv.process_mgr env in
  Eio.Process.parse_out proc_mgr Eio.Buf_read.take_all ["sh"; "-c"; "exit 3"];;
Exception:
Eio.Io Process Child_error Exited 3,
  running command: sh -c "exit 3"

Process.spawn and Process.await give more control over the process's lifetime and exit status, and Eio_unix.Process gives more control over passing file descriptors (on systems that support them).

Time

The standard environment provides a clock with the usual POSIX time:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let clock = Eio.Stdenv.clock env in
  traceln "The time is now %f" (Eio.Time.now clock);
  Eio.Time.sleep clock 1.0;
  traceln "The time is now %f" (Eio.Time.now clock);;
+The time is now 1623940778.270336
+The time is now 1623940779.270336
- : unit = ()

You might like to replace this clock with a mock for tests. In fact, this README does just that! See doc/prelude.ml for the fake clock used in the example above.

Multicore Support

Fibers are scheduled cooperatively within a single domain, but you can also create new domains that run in parallel. This is useful to perform CPU-intensive operations quickly. For example, let's say we have a CPU intensive task:

let sum_to n =
  traceln "Starting CPU-intensive task...";
  let total = ref 0 in
  for i = 1 to n do
    total := !total + i
  done;
  traceln "Finished";
  !total

We can use Eio.Domain_manager to run this in a separate domain:

let main ~domain_mgr =
  let test n =
    traceln "sum 1..%d = %d" n
      (Eio.Domain_manager.run domain_mgr
        (fun () -> sum_to n))
  in
  Fiber.both
    (fun () -> test 100000)
    (fun () -> test 50000)
# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  main ~domain_mgr:(Eio.Stdenv.domain_mgr env);;
+Starting CPU-intensive task...
+Starting CPU-intensive task...
+Finished
+sum 1..50000 = 1250025000
+Finished
+sum 1..100000 = 5000050000
- : unit = ()

Notes:

  • traceln can be used safely from multiple domains. It takes a mutex, so that trace lines are output atomically.

  • The exact traceln output of this example is non-deterministic, because the OS is free to schedule domains as it likes.

  • You must ensure that the function passed to run doesn't have access to any non-threadsafe values. The type system does not check this.

  • run waits for the domain to finish, but it allows other fibers to run while waiting. This is why we use Fiber.both to create multiple fibers.

For more information, see the Multicore Guide.

Synchronisation Tools

Eio provides several sub-modules for communicating between fibers, and these work even when the fibers are running in different domains.

Promises

Promises are a simple and reliable way to communicate between fibers. One fiber can wait for a promise and another can resolve it:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  let promise, resolver = Promise.create () in
  Fiber.both
    (fun () ->
      traceln "Waiting for promise...";
      let x = Promise.await promise in
      traceln "x = %d" x
    )
    (fun () ->
      traceln "Resolving promise";
      Promise.resolve resolver 42
    );;
+Waiting for promise...
+Resolving promise
+x = 42
- : unit = ()

A promise is initially "unresolved", and can only be resolved once. Awaiting a promise that is already resolved immediately returns the resolved value.

Promises are one of the easiest tools to use safely: it doesn't matter whether you wait on a promise before or after it is resolved, and multiple fibers can wait for the same promise and will get the same result. Promises are thread-safe; you can wait for a promise in one domain and resolve it in another.

Promises are also useful for integrating with callback-based libraries. For example:

let wrap fn x =
  let promise, resolver = Promise.create () in
  fn x
    ~on_success:(Promise.resolve_ok resolver)
    ~on_error:(Promise.resolve_error resolver);
  Promise.await_exn promise

Example: Concurrent Cache

Here's an example using promises to cache lookups, with the twist that another user might ask the cache for the value while it's still adding it. We don't want to start a second fetch in that case, so instead we just store promises in the cache:

let make_cache fn =
  let tbl = Hashtbl.create 10 in
  fun key ->
    match Hashtbl.find_opt tbl key with
    | Some p -> Promise.await_exn p
    | None ->
      let p, r = Promise.create () in
      Hashtbl.add tbl key p;
      match fn key with
      | v -> Promise.resolve_ok r v; v
      | exception ex -> Promise.resolve_error r ex; raise ex

Notice that we store the new promise in the cache immediately, without doing anything that might switch to another fiber.

We can use it like this:

# let fetch url =
    traceln "Fetching %S..." url;
    Fiber.yield ();             (* Simulate work... *)
    traceln "Got response for %S" url;
    if url = "http://example.com" then "<h1>Example.com</h1>"
    else failwith "404 Not Found";;
val fetch : string -> string = <fun>

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  let c = make_cache fetch in
  let test url =
    traceln "Requesting %s..." url;
    match c url with
    | page -> traceln "%s -> %s" url page
    | exception ex -> traceln "%s -> %a" url Fmt.exn ex
  in
  Fiber.List.iter test [
    "http://example.com";
    "http://example.com";
    "http://bad.com";
    "http://bad.com";
  ];;
+Requesting http://example.com...
+Fetching "http://example.com"...
+Requesting http://example.com...
+Requesting http://bad.com...
+Fetching "http://bad.com"...
+Requesting http://bad.com...
+Got response for "http://example.com"
+http://example.com -> <h1>Example.com</h1>
+Got response for "http://bad.com"
+http://bad.com -> Failure("404 Not Found")
+http://example.com -> <h1>Example.com</h1>
+http://bad.com -> Failure("404 Not Found")
- : unit = ()

Fiber.List.iter is like List.iter but doesn't wait for each job to finish before starting the next. Notice that we made four requests, but only started two download operations.

This version of the cache remembers failed lookups too. You could modify it to remove the entry on failure, so that all clients currently waiting still fail, but any future client asking for the failed resource will trigger a new download.

This cache is not thread-safe. You will need to add a mutex if you want to share it between domains.

Streams

A stream is a bounded queue. Reading from an empty stream waits until an item is available. Writing to a full stream waits for space.

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  let stream = Eio.Stream.create 2 in
  Fiber.both
    (fun () ->
       for i = 1 to 5 do
         traceln "Adding %d..." i;
         Eio.Stream.add stream i
       done
    )
    (fun () ->
       for i = 1 to 5 do
         let x = Eio.Stream.take stream in
         traceln "Got %d" x;
         Fiber.yield ()
       done
    );;
+Adding 1...
+Adding 2...
+Adding 3...
+Got 1
+Adding 4...
+Got 2
+Adding 5...
+Got 3
+Got 4
+Got 5
- : unit = ()

Here, we create a stream with a maximum size of 2 items. The first fiber added 1 and 2 to the stream, but had to wait before it could insert 3.

A stream with a capacity of 1 acts like a mailbox. A stream with a capacity of 0 will wait until both the sender and receiver are ready.

Streams are thread-safe and can be used to communicate between domains.

Example: Worker Pool

A useful pattern is a pool of workers reading from a stream of work items. Client fibers submit items to a stream and workers process the items:

let handle_job request =
  Fiber.yield ();       (* (simulated work) *)
  Printf.sprintf "Processed:%d" request

let rec run_worker id stream =
  let request, reply = Eio.Stream.take stream in
  traceln "Worker %s processing request %d" id request;
  Promise.resolve reply (handle_job request);
  run_worker id stream

let submit stream request =
  let reply, resolve_reply = Promise.create () in
  Eio.Stream.add stream (request, resolve_reply);
  Promise.await reply

Each item in the stream is a request payload and a resolver for the reply promise.

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let domain_mgr = Eio.Stdenv.domain_mgr env in
  Switch.run @@ fun sw ->
  let stream = Eio.Stream.create 0 in
  let spawn_worker name =
    Fiber.fork_daemon ~sw (fun () ->
       Eio.Domain_manager.run domain_mgr (fun () ->
          traceln "Worker %s ready" name;
          run_worker name stream
       )
    )
  in
  spawn_worker "A";
  spawn_worker "B";
  Switch.run (fun sw ->
     for i = 1 to 3 do
       Fiber.fork ~sw (fun () ->
         traceln "Client %d submitting job..." i;
         traceln "Client %d got %s" i (submit stream i)
       );
       Fiber.yield ()
     done
  );;
+Worker A ready
+Worker B ready
+Client 1 submitting job...
+Worker A processing request 1
+Client 2 submitting job...
+Worker B processing request 2
+Client 3 submitting job...
+Client 1 got Processed:1
+Worker A processing request 3
+Client 2 got Processed:2
+Client 3 got Processed:3
- : unit = ()

We use a zero-capacity stream here, which means that the Stream.add doesn't succeed until a worker accepts the job. This is a good choice for a worker pool because it means that if the client fiber gets cancelled while waiting for a worker then the job will never be run. It's also more efficient, as 0-capacity streams use a lock-free algorithm that is faster when there are multiple domains. Note that, while the stream itself is 0-capacity, clients still queue up waiting to use it.

In the code above, any exception raised while processing a job will exit the whole program. We might prefer to handle exceptions by sending them back to the client and continuing:

let rec run_worker id stream =
  let request, reply = Eio.Stream.take stream in
  traceln "Worker %s processing request %d" id request;
  begin match handle_job request with
    | result -> Promise.resolve_ok reply result
    | exception ex -> Promise.resolve_error reply ex; Fiber.check ()
  end;
  run_worker id stream

The Fiber.check () checks whether the worker itself has been cancelled, and exits the loop if so. It's not actually necessary in this case, because if we continue instead then the following Stream.take will perform the check anyway.

Mutexes and Semaphores

Eio also provides Mutex and Semaphore sub-modules. Each of these corresponds to the module with the same name in the OCaml standard library, but allows other fibers to run while waiting instead of blocking the whole domain. They are all safe to use in parallel from multiple domains.

  • Eio.Mutex provides mutual exclusion, so that only one fiber can access a resource at a time.

  • Eio.Semaphore generalises this to allow up to n fibers to access a resource at once.

For example, if we allow loading and saving data in a file there could be a problem if we try to load the data while a save is in progress. Protecting the file with a mutex will prevent that:

module Atomic_file = struct
  type 'a t = {
    path : 'a Eio.Path.t;
    mutex : Eio.Mutex.t;
  }

  let of_path path =
    { path; mutex = Eio.Mutex.create () }

  let save t data =
    Eio.Mutex.use_rw t.mutex ~protect:true (fun () ->
       Eio.Path.save t.path data ~create:(`Or_truncate 0o644)
    )

  let load t =
    Eio.Mutex.use_ro t.mutex (fun () ->
       Eio.Path.load t.path
    )
end

The ~protect:true in save makes the critical section non-cancellable, so that if a cancel happens during a save then we will finish writing the data first. It can be used like this:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun env ->
  let dir = Eio.Stdenv.cwd env in
  let t = Atomic_file.of_path (dir / "data") in
  Fiber.both
    (fun () -> Atomic_file.save t "some data")
    (fun () ->
      let data = Atomic_file.load t in
      traceln "Loaded: %S" data
    );;
+Loaded: "some data"
- : unit = ()

Note: In practice, a better way to make file writes atomic is to write the data to a temporary file and then atomically rename it over the old data. That will work even if the whole computer crashes, and does not delay cancellation.

If the operation being performed is very fast (such as updating some in-memory counters), then it is fine to use the standard library's Mutex instead.

If the operation does not switch fibers and the resource is only accessed from one domain, then no mutex is needed at all. For example:

(* No mutex needed if only used from a single domain: *)

let in_use = ref 10
let free = ref 0

let release () =
  incr free;
  decr in_use

Conditions

Eio.Condition allows a fiber to wait until some condition is true. For example:

module X = struct
  (* Note: this version is not safe to share across domains! *)

  type t = {
    mutable x : int;
    changed : Eio.Condition.t;
  }

  let make x = { x; changed = Eio.Condition.create () }

  let await_zero t =
    while t.x <> 0 do Eio.Condition.await_no_mutex t.changed done;
    traceln "x is now zero"

  let set t x =
    t.x <- x;
    Eio.Condition.broadcast t.changed;
    traceln "x set to %d" x
end
# Eio_mock.Backend.run @@ fun () ->
  let x = X.make 5 in
  Fiber.both
    (fun () ->
       traceln "Waiting for x to be 0";
       X.await_zero x
    )
    (fun () -> X.set x 0);;
+Waiting for x to be 0
+x set to 0
+x is now zero
- : unit = ()

Note that we need a loop in await_zero. This is needed because it's possible that another fiber might set it to zero and then set it to something else before the waiting fiber resumes.

The above version is not safe to share across domains, because await_zero relies on the value of x not changing after x is read but before await_no_mutex registers itself with the condition. Here's a domain-safe version:

module Y = struct
  (* Safe to share between domains. *)

  type t = {
    mutable y : int;
    mutex : Eio.Mutex.t;
    changed : Eio.Condition.t;
  }

  let make y = {
    y;
    mutex = Eio.Mutex.create ();
    changed = Eio.Condition.create ();
  }

  let await_zero t =
    Eio.Mutex.use_ro t.mutex (fun () ->
      while t.y <> 0 do Eio.Condition.await t.changed t.mutex done;
      traceln "y is now zero (at least until we release the mutex)"
    )

  let set t y =
    Eio.Mutex.use_rw t.mutex ~protect:true (fun () ->
       t.y <- y;
       Eio.Condition.broadcast t.changed;
       traceln "y set to %d" y
    );
end

Here, Eio.Condition.await registers itself with changed and only then releases the mutex, allowing other threads to change y. When it gets woken, it re-acquires the mutex.

# Eio_mock.Backend.run @@ fun () ->
  let y = Y.make 5 in
  Fiber.both
    (fun () ->
       traceln "Waiting for y to be 0";
       Y.await_zero y
    )
    (fun () -> Y.set y 0);;
+Waiting for y to be 0
+y set to 0
+y is now zero (at least until we release the mutex)
- : unit = ()

Conditions are more difficult to use correctly than e.g. promises or streams. In particular, it is easy to miss a notification due to broadcast getting called before await. However, they can be useful if used carefully.

Example: Signal handlers

On Unix-type systems, processes can react to signals. For example, pressing Ctrl-C will send the SIGINT (interrupt) signal.

Here is an example function that allows itself to be interrupted:

let run_op ~interrupted =
  Fiber.first
    (fun () ->
       Eio.Condition.await_no_mutex interrupted;
       traceln "Cancelled at user's request."
    )
    (fun () ->
       traceln "Running operation (Ctrl-C to cancel)...";
       Fiber.await_cancel ()       (* Simulated work *)
    )

Note that we don't need a mutex here. We're just waiting for the number of interrupts received to change, and, since that increases monotonically, once we get woken we always want to continue. Also, we don't care about missing interrupts from before this operation started.

The code here is quite subtle. We rely on the fact that the first branch of the Fiber.first runs first, and only starts running the second branch once await_no_mutex has finished registering. Thus, we never display the message telling the user to press Ctrl-C before we're ready to receive it. This isn't likely to matter if a human is responding to the message, but if the response is automated then the delay could matter.

To run this function, we need to install a signal handler. There are very few things that you can do safely in a signal handler. For example, you can't take a mutex in a signal handler because the signal might have interrupted a fiber that had already locked it. However, you can safely call Eio.Condition.broadcast:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _env ->
  let interrupted = Eio.Condition.create () in
  let handle_signal (_signum : int) =
    (* Warning: we're in a signal handler now.
       Most operations are unsafe here, except for Eio.Condition.broadcast! *)
    Eio.Condition.broadcast interrupted
  in
  Sys.set_signal Sys.sigint (Signal_handle handle_signal);
  run_op ~interrupted;;
+Running operation (Ctrl-C to cancel)...
[ user presses Ctrl-C here ]
+Cancelled at user's request.
- : unit = ()

Another common pattern when using signals is using SIGHUP to tell an application to reload its configuration file:

let main ~config_changed =
  while true do
    Fiber.both
      (fun () ->
         (* First, we start waiting for SIGHUP.
            This is so that if we get SIGHUP before we finish loading
            the old configuration then we'll start again. *)
         Eio.Condition.await_no_mutex config_changed;
         traceln "Received SIGHUP";
         (* We could cancel the loading fiber now, in case it's still running,
            but in this example we just wait for it to finish by itself. *)
      )
      (fun () ->
         traceln "Reading configuration ('kill -SIGHUP %d' to reload)..." (Unix.getpid ());
         load_config ();
         traceln "Finished reading configuration";
      )
  done

Unlike the cancellation case above, where we used Fiber.first, here we use Fiber.both to wait until we have both read the previous version of the configuration and received a request to reload, then we loop and read it again.

See the examples/signals directory for the full code.

Design Note: Determinism

Within a domain, fibers are scheduled deterministically. Programs using only the Eio APIs can only behave non-deterministically if given a capability to do so from somewhere else.

For example, Fiber.both f g always starts running f first, and only switches to g when f finishes or performs an effect that can switch fibers.

Performing IO with external objects (e.g., stdout, files, or network sockets) will introduce non-determinism, as will using multiple domains.

Note that traceln is unusual. Although it writes (by default) to stderr, it will not switch fibers. Instead, if the OS is not ready to receive trace output, the whole domain is paused until it is ready. This means that adding traceln to deterministic code will not affect its scheduling.

In particular, if you test your code by providing (deterministic) mocks then the tests will be deterministic. An easy way to write tests is by having the mocks call traceln and then comparing the trace output with the expected output. See Eio's own tests for examples, e.g., tests/switch.md.

Provider Interfaces

Eio applications use resources by calling functions (such as Eio.Flow.write). These functions are actually wrappers that call methods on the resources. This allows you to define your own resources.

Here's a flow that produces an endless stream of zeros (like "/dev/zero"):

let zero = object
  inherit Eio.Flow.source

  method read_into buf =
    Cstruct.memset buf 0;
    Cstruct.length buf
end

It can then be used like any other Eio flow:

# Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  let r = Eio.Buf_read.of_flow zero ~max_size:100 in
  traceln "Got: %S" (Eio.Buf_read.take 4 r);;
+Got: "\000\000\000\000"
- : unit = ()

The Flow.source interface has some extra methods that can be used for optimisations (for example, instead of filling a buffer with zeros it could be more efficient to share a pre-allocated block of zeros). Using inherit provides default implementations of these methods that say no optimisations are available. It also protects you somewhat from API changes in future, as defaults can be provided for any new methods that get added.

Although it is possible to use an object by calling its methods directly, it is recommended that you use the functions instead. The functions provide type information to the compiler, leading to clearer error messages, and may provide extra features or sanity checks.

For example Eio.Flow.single_read is defined as:

let single_read (t : #Eio.Flow.source) buf =
  let got = t#read_into buf in
  assert (got > 0 && got <= Cstruct.length buf);
  got

As an exception to this rule, it is fine to use the methods of env directly (e.g. using main env#stdin instead of main (Eio.Stdenv.stdin env). Here, the compiler already has the type from the Eio_main.run call immediately above it, and env is acting as a simple record. We avoid doing that in this guide only to avoid alarming OCaml users unfamiliar with object syntax.

See Dynamic Dispatch for more discussion about the use of objects here.

Example Applications

Integrations

Eio can be used with several other IO libraries.

Async

Async_eio has experimental support for running Async and Eio code together in a single domain.

Lwt

You can use Lwt_eio to run Lwt threads and Eio fibers together in a single domain, and to convert between Lwt and Eio promises. This may be useful during the process of porting existing code to Eio.

Unix and System Threads

The Eio_unix module provides features for using Eio with OCaml's Unix module. In particular, Eio_unix.run_in_systhread can be used to run a blocking operation in a separate systhread, allowing it to be used within Eio without blocking the whole domain.

Domainslib

For certain compute-intensive tasks it may be useful to send work to a pool of Domainslib worker domains. You can resolve an Eio promise from non-Eio domains (or systhreads), which provides an easy way to retrieve the result. For example:

open Eio.Std

let pool = Domainslib.Task.setup_pool ~num_domains:2 ()

let fib n = ... (* Some Domainslib function *)

let run_in_pool fn x =
  let result, set_result = Promise.create () in
  let _ : unit Domainslib.Task.promise = Domainslib.Task.async pool (fun () ->
      Promise.resolve set_result @@
      match fn x with
      | r -> Ok r
      | exception ex -> Error ex
    )
  in
  Promise.await_exn result

let () =
  Eio_main.run @@ fun _ ->
  Fiber.both
    (fun () -> traceln "fib 30 = %d" (run_in_pool fib 30))
    (fun () -> traceln "fib 10 = %d" (run_in_pool fib 10))

Note that most Domainslib functions can only be called from code running in the Domainslib pool, while most Eio functions can only be used from Eio domains. The bridge function run_in_pool makes use of the fact that Domainslib.Task.async is able to run from an Eio domain, and Eio.Promise.resolve is able to run from a Domainslib one.

kcas

Eio provides the support kcas requires to implement blocking in the lock-free software transactional memory (STM) implementation that it provides. This means that one can use all the composable lock-free data structures and primitives for communication and synchronization implemented using kcas to communicate and synchronize between Eio fibers, raw domains, and any other schedulers that provide the domain local await mechanism.

To demonstrate kcas

# #require "kcas"
# open Kcas

let's first create a couple of shared memory locations

# let x = Loc.make 0
val x : int Loc.t = <abstr>
# let y = Loc.make 0
val y : int Loc.t = <abstr>

and spawn a domain

# let foreign_domain = Domain.spawn @@ fun () ->
    let x = Loc.get_as (fun x -> Retry.unless (x <> 0); x) x in
    Loc.set y 22;
    x
val foreign_domain : int Domain.t = <abstr>

that first waits for one of the locations to change value and then writes to the other location.

Then we run a Eio program

# let y = Eio_main.run @@ fun _env ->
    Loc.set x 20;
    Loc.get_as (fun y -> Retry.unless (y <> 0); y) y
val y : int = 22

that first writes to the location the other domain is waiting on and then waits for the other domain to write to the other location.

Joining with the other domain

# y + Domain.join foreign_domain
- : int = 42

we arrive at the answer.

Best Practices

This section contains some recommendations for designing library APIs for use with Eio.

Switches

A function should not take a switch argument if it could create one internally instead.

Taking a switch indicates that a function creates resources that outlive the function call, and users seeing a switch argument will naturally wonder what these resources may be and what lifetime to give them, which is confusing if this is not needed.

Creating the switch inside your function ensures that all resources are released promptly.

(* BAD - switch should be created internally instead *)
let load_config ~sw path =
  parse_config (Eio.Path.open_in ~sw path)

(* GOOD - less confusing and closes file promptly *)
let load_config path =
  Switch.run @@ fun sw ->
  parse_config (Eio.Path.open_in ~sw path)

Of course, you could use with_open_in in this case to simplify it further.

Casting

Unlike many languages, OCaml does not automatically cast objects (polymorphic records) to super-types as needed. Remember to keep the type polymorphic in your interface so users don't need to do this manually. This is similar to the case with polymorphic variants (where APIs should use [< ...] or [> ...]).

For example, if you need an Eio.Flow.source then users should be able to use a Flow.two_way without having to cast it first:

(* BAD - user must cast to use function: *)
module Message : sig
  type t
  val read : Eio.Flow.source -> t
end

(* GOOD - a Flow.two_way can be used without casting: *)
module Message : sig
  type t
  val read : #Eio.Flow.source -> t
end

If you want to store the argument, this may require you to cast internally:

module Foo : sig
  type t
  val of_source : #Eio.Flow.source -> t
end = struct
  type t = {
    src : Eio.Flow.source;
  }

  let of_source x = {
    src = (x :> Eio.Flow.source);
  }
end

Note: the #type syntax only works on types defined by classes, whereas the slightly more verbose <type; ..> works on all object types.

Passing env

The env value you get from Eio_main.run is a powerful capability, and programs are easier to understand when it's not passed around too much.

In many cases, it's clearer (if a little more verbose) to take the resources you need as separate arguments, e.g.

module Status : sig
  val check :
    clock:#Eio.Time.clock ->
    net:#Eio.Net.t ->
    bool
end

You can also provide a convenience function that takes an env too. Doing this is most appropriate if many resources are needed and your library is likely to be initialised right at the start of the user's application.

In that case, be sure to request only the resources you need, rather than the full set. This makes it clearer what you library does, makes it easier to test, and allows it to be used on platforms without the full set of OS resources. If you define the type explicitly, you can describe why you need each resource there:

module Status : sig
  type 'a env = <
    net : #Eio.Net.t;             (** To connect to the servers *)
    clock : #Eio.Time.clock;      (** Needed for timeouts *)
    ..
  > as 'a

  val check : _ env -> bool
end

Further Reading

Some background about the effects system can be found in:

OCaml

Innovation. Community. Security.