tokio/examples/sink.rs
Carl Lerche 2e94b658ed
Track futures tokio-reform branch (#88)
This patch also updates tests and examples to remove deprecated API
usage.
2018-02-01 10:31:07 -08:00

59 lines
1.8 KiB
Rust

//! A small server that writes as many nul bytes on all connections it receives.
//!
//! There is no concurrency in this server, only one connection is written to at
//! a time. You can use this as a benchmark for the raw performance of writing
//! data to a socket by measuring how much data is being written on each
//! connection.
//!
//! Typically you'll want to run this example with:
//!
//! cargo run --example sink --release
//!
//! And then you can connect to it via:
//!
//! cargo run --example connect 127.0.0.1:8080 > /dev/null
//!
//! You should see your CPUs light up as data's being shove into the ether.
extern crate env_logger;
extern crate futures;
extern crate futures_cpupool;
extern crate tokio;
extern crate tokio_io;
use std::env;
use std::iter;
use std::net::SocketAddr;
use futures::Future;
use futures::future::{self, Executor};
use futures::stream::{self, Stream};
use futures_cpupool::CpuPool;
use tokio_io::IoFuture;
use tokio::net::{TcpListener, TcpStream};
fn main() {
env_logger::init().unwrap();
let addr = env::args().nth(1).unwrap_or("127.0.0.1:8080".to_string());
let addr = addr.parse::<SocketAddr>().unwrap();
let pool = CpuPool::new(1);
let socket = TcpListener::bind(&addr).unwrap();
println!("Listening on: {}", addr);
let server = socket.incoming().for_each(|socket| {
println!("got a socket: {}", socket.peer_addr().unwrap());
pool.execute(write(socket).or_else(|_| Ok(()))).unwrap();
Ok(())
});
future::blocking(server).wait().unwrap();
}
fn write(socket: TcpStream) -> IoFuture<()> {
static BUF: &'static [u8] = &[0; 64 * 1024];
let iter = iter::repeat(());
Box::new(stream::iter_ok(iter).fold(socket, |socket, ()| {
tokio_io::io::write_all(socket, BUF).map(|(socket, _)| socket)
}).map(|_| ()))
}