@kbrw/node_erlastic v0.1.2
node_erlastic
Node library to make nodejs gen_server in Erlang/Elixir through Port connection.
This module allows you to :
- decode and encode between Binary Erlang Term and javascript types
- create a simple Erlang port interface through a nodeJS Readable and Writable (Duplex)
- create a "
gen_server
style" handler to manage your port
Example Usage
Before going through details, lets take an example, write an account manager server, where you can add or remove an amount in the account and get it :
require('@kbrw/node_erlastic').server(function(term,from,current_amount,done){
if (term == "get") return done("reply",current_amount);
if (term[0] == "add") return done("noreply",current_amount+term[1]);
if (term[0] == "rem") return done("noreply",current_amount-term[1]);
throw new Error("unexpected request")
});
GenServer.start_link(Exos.Proc,{"node calculator.js",0,cd: "/path/to/proj"}, name: Calculator)
GenServer.cast Calculator, {:add, 2}
GenServer.cast Calculator, {:add, 3}
GenServer.cast Calculator, {:rem, 1}
4 = GenServer.call Calculator, :get
defmodule Exos.Proc do
use GenServer
@moduledoc """
Generic port as gen_server wrapper :
send a message at init, first message is remote initial state
cast and call encode and decode erlang binary format
"""
def init({cmd,init,opts}) do
port = Port.open({:spawn,'#{cmd}'}, [:binary,:exit_status, packet: 4] ++ opts)
send(port,{self,{:command,:erlang.term_to_binary(init)}})
{:ok,port}
end
def handle_info({port,{:exit_status,0}},port), do: {:stop,:normal,port}
def handle_info({port,{:exit_status,_}},port), do: {:stop,:port_terminated,port}
def handle_info(_,port), do: {:noreply,port}
def handle_cast(term,port) do
send(port,{self,{:command,:erlang.term_to_binary(term)}})
{:noreply,port}
end
def handle_call(term,_reply_to,port) do
send(port,{self,{:command,:erlang.term_to_binary(term)}})
res = receive do {^port,{:data,b}}->:erlang.binary_to_term(b) end
{:reply,res,port}
end
end
External Term Format codec (BERT)
var Bert = require('@kbrw/node_erlastic/bert');
// you can configure `convention`, `all_binaries_as_string` , `map_key_as_atom`, see below
Bert.convention = Bert.ELIXIR;
Bert.all_binaries_as_string = true;
Bert.encode({foo: "bar", k2: 4});
Bert.encode({foo: "bar", k2: 4},true);
// with ",true", the result is not copied, the return buffer point always to
// the same allocated memory
Bert.decode(mybuffer);
Bert.decode
and Bert.encode
use a nodejs Buffer
object
containing the binary erlang term, converted using the following rules :
- erlang atom
foobar
is js{type: "Atom",value: "foobar", toString->value}
create it withBert.atom("foobar")
- the
toString()
method allows you to match with stringmyatom == 'foobar'
- the
- erlang list is js list
- erlang tuple
{a,b}
is js{type: "Tuple",value: [a,b],length: 2, 0: a, 1: b}
- the js object allows you to access elements by index
- erlang integer is js integer
- erlang float is js float
- other js objects are erlang maps
- erlang keys are converted to string during decoding (js behavior)
- js keys are converted to erlang atom if
Bert.map_key_as_atom == true
- erlang binary is nodejs "Buffer"
- but converted into string if
Bert.convention == Bert.ELIXIR && Bert.all_binaries_as_string
- but converted into string if
- js string is
- UTF8 erlang binary if
Bert.convention == Bert.ELIXIR
- erlang character list if
Bert.convention == Bert.ERLANG
- UTF8 erlang binary if
- js boolean are
true
andfalse
atoms - js null and undefined are
nil
atom ifBert.convention == Bert.ELIXIR
undefined
atom ifBert.convention == Bert.ERLANG
- if
Bert.decode_undefined_values == false
, thennil
andundefined
are decoded into atom instead of null
The Port Duplex
Port provides you a Node Duplex stream in object mode which is both Readable
and Writable : http://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#stream_class_stream_duplex_1
Through this duplex, you can communicate javascript objects with an erlang node
through stdin/out with port.read()
and port.write(obj)
. These objects are
converted to erlang external binary format using the Bert encoder described
above.
Need {packet,4}
openport
option on the erlang side
Below a simple "echo" server using this abstraction, read nodejs "readable" documentation to understand it :
var port = require('@kbrw/node_erlastic').port;
port.on('readable', function echo(){
if(null !== (term = port.read())){
port.write(term);
echo();
}
});
port = Port.open({:spawn,'node calculator.js'}, [:binary, packet: 4])
send(port,{self,{:command,:erlang.term_to_binary( {:hello, 007} )}})
{:hello, 007} = receive do {^port,{:data,b}}->:erlang.binary_to_term(b) end
send(port,{self,{:command,:erlang.term_to_binary( [:foo, :bar]} )}})
[:foo, :bar] = receive do {^port,{:data,b}}->:erlang.binary_to_term(b) end
The Erlang style handler interface to the port event handler
For convenience, you can use the server
function to react to the
port events in the same fashion as the erlang gen server handler.
It takes as parameter a handler function taking (req_term,from,state,done)
parameters.
To "unlock" state and continue to read request mailbox (equivalent of the
return of the erlang gen_server handle_*
function), you need to call done
.
done("noreply",newstate);
done("noreply");
done("reply",reply_term,newstate);
done("reply",reply_term);
Like in erlang, your handler can unlock the state before it replies to the call:
done("noreply",newstate);
// then in some callback
from(myreply);
Before sending request, the first message from the port will be used to define the initial state.
Please see the beginning of this README to find a complete example.
Log function
The port stderr is directly output into the erlang stdout, this library
provides a convenient log
function allowing you to log something from your
node server.
var log = require("@kbrw/node_erlastic").log;
log("your log");