This adds initial, unstable, support for the wasm32-wasi target. Not all of Tokio's
features are supported yet as WASI's non-blocking APIs are still limited.
Refs: tokio-rs/tokio#4827
Currently, we only have WASM regression tests that run without WASI.
However, rust provides a WASI specific target which enables code to
special case WASI. This PR adds a basic test to cover that case.
This is an initial addition to help land tokio-rs/tokio#4716.
This fixes#4801, where, as a result of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95469, our implementation of cat used for this test no longer works, as stdio functions on windows now can abort the process if the pipe is set to nonblocking mode.
Unfortunately in windows, setting one end of the pipe to be nonblocking makes the whole thing nonblocking, so when, in tokio::process we set the child pipes to nonblocking mode, it causes serious problems for any rust program at the other end.
Fixing this issue is for another day, but fixing the tests is for today.
In some cases, a cycle is created between I/O driver wakers and the I/O
driver resource slab. This patch clears stored wakers when an I/O
resource is dropped, breaking the cycle.
Fixes#3228
* Add `TryInto<Stdio>` impls for `ChildStd{in,out,err}` for ergonomic
conversions into `std::process::Stdio` so callers can perform the
conversion without needing to manipulate raw fds/handles directly
* add Child::try_wait to mirror the std API
* replace Future impl on Child with `.wait()` method to bring our
APIs closer to those in std and it allow us to
internally fuse the future so that repeated calls to `wait` result in
the same value (similar to std) without forcing the caller to fuse the
outer future
* Also change `Child::id` to return an Option result to avoid
allowing the caller to accidentally use the pid on Unix systems after
the child has been reaped
* Also remove deprecated Child methods
Since the original shell runtime was implemented, utilities have been
added to encapsulate `unsafe`. The shell runtime is now able to use
those utilities and not include its own `unsafe` code.
When using #[tokio::main] on a function with generics, the generics are
skipped. Simply using #vis #sig instead of #vis fn #name(#inputs) #ret
fixes the problem.
Fixes#2176
Used for stack pinning and based on `pin_mut!` from the pin-util crate.
Pinning is used often when working with stream operators and the select!
macro. Given the small size of `pin!` it makes more sense to include a
version than re-export one from a separate crate or require the user to
depend on `pin-util` themselves.
Provides a `select!` macro for concurrently waiting on multiple async
expressions. The macro has similar goals and syntax as the one provided
by the `futures` crate, but differs significantly in implementation.
First, this implementation does not require special traits to be
implemented on futures or streams (i.e., no `FuseFuture`). A design goal
is to be able to pass a "plain" async fn result into the select! macro.
Even without `FuseFuture`, this `select!` implementation is able to
handle all cases the `futures::select!` macro can handle. It does this
by supporting pre-poll conditions on branches and result pattern
matching. For pre-conditions, each branch is able to include a condition
that disables the branch if it evaluates to false. This allows the user
to guard futures that have already been polled, preventing double
polling. Pattern matching can be used to disable streams that complete.
A second big difference is the macro is implemented almost entirely as a
declarative macro. The biggest advantage to using this strategy is that
the user will not need to alter the rustc recursion limit except in the
most extreme cases.
The resulting future also tends to be smaller in many cases.
The Tokio runtime provides a "shell" runtime when `rt-core` is not
available. This shell runtime is enough to support `#[tokio::main`] and
`#[tokio::test].
A previous change disabled these two attr macros when `rt-core` was not
selected. This patch fixes this by re-enabling the `main` and `test`
attr macros without `rt-core` and adds some integration tests to prevent
future regressions.
Changes the set of `default` feature flags to `[]`. By default, only
core traits are included without specifying feature flags. This makes it
easier for users to pick the components they need.
For convenience, a `full` feature flag is included that includes all
components.
Tests are configured to require the `full` feature. Testing individual
feature flags will need to be moved to a separate crate.
Closes#1791
In an effort to reach API stability, the `tokio` crate is shedding its
_public_ dependencies on crates that are either a) do not provide a
stable (1.0+) release with longevity guarantees or b) match the `tokio`
release cadence. Of course, implementing `std` traits fits the
requirements.
The on exception, for now, is the `Stream` trait found in `futures_core`.
It is expected that this trait will not change much and be moved into `std.
Since Tokio is not yet going reaching 1.0, I feel that it is acceptable to maintain
a dependency on this trait given how foundational it is.
Since the `Stream` implementation is optional, types that are logically
streams provide `async fn next_*` functions to obtain the next value.
Avoiding the `next()` name prevents fn conflicts with `StreamExt::next()`.
Additionally, some misc cleanup is also done:
- `tokio::io::io` -> `tokio::io::util`.
- `delay` -> `delay_until`.
- `Timeout::new` -> `timeout(...)`.
- `signal::ctrl_c()` returns a future instead of a stream.
- `{tcp,unix}::Incoming` is removed (due to lack of `Stream` trait).
- `time::Throttle` is removed (due to lack of `Stream` trait).
- Fix: `mpsc::UnboundedSender::send(&self)` (no more conflict with `Sink` fns).
A step towards collapsing Tokio sub crates into a single `tokio`
crate (#1318).
The `net` implementation is now provided by the main `tokio` crate.
Functionality can be opted out of by using the various net related
feature flags.