Event Networking for Go
`evio` is an event driven networking framework that is fast and small. It makes direct [epoll](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epoll) and [kqueue](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kqueue) syscalls rather than the standard Go [net](https://golang.org/pkg/net/) package. It works in a similar manner as [libuv](https://github.com/libuv/libuv) and [libevent](https://github.com/libevent/libevent). The goal of this project is to create a server framework for Go that performs on par with [Redis](http://redis.io) and [Haproxy](http://www.haproxy.org) for packet handling. My hope is to use this as a foundation for [Tile38](https://github.com/tidwall/tile38) and a future L7 proxy for Go... and a bunch of other stuff. ## Features - Very fast single-threaded event loop design - Simple API - Low memory usage - Supports tcp4, tcp6, and unix sockets - Allows multiple network binding on the same event loop - Flexible ticker event - Fallback for non-epoll/kqueue operating systems by simulating events with the [net](https://golang.org/pkg/net/) package. ## Getting Started ### Installing To start using evio, install Go and run `go get`: ```sh $ go get -u github.com/tidwall/evio ``` This will retrieve the library. ### Usage Starting a server is easy with `evio`. Just set up your events and pass them to the `Serve` function along with the binding address(es). Each connections receives an ID that's passed to various events to differentiate the clients. At any point you can close a client or shutdown the server by return a `Close` or `Shutdown` action from an event. Example echo server that binds to port 5000: ```go package main import "github.com/tidwall/evio" func main() { var events evio.Events events.Data = func(id int, in []byte) (out []byte, action evio.Action) { out = in return } if err := evio.Serve(events, "tcp://localhost:5000"); err != nil { panic(err.Error()) } } ``` Here the only event being used is `Data`, which fires when the server receives input data from a client. The exact same input data is then passed through the output return value, which is sent back to the client. Connect to the echo server: ```sh $ telnet localhost 5000 ``` ### Events The event type has a bunch of handy events: - `Serving` fires when the server is ready to accept new connections. - `Opened` fires when a connection has opened. - `Closed` fires when a connection has closed. - `Detach` fires when a connection has been detached using the `Detach` return action. - `Data` fires when the server receives new data from a connection. - `Prewrite` fires prior to all write attempts from the server. - `Postwrite` fires immediately after every write attempt. - `Tick` fires immediately after the server starts and will fire again after the amount of time specified by the `delay` return value. ### Multiple addresses An server can bind to multiple addresses and share the same event loop. ```go evio.Serve(events, "tcp://192.168.0.10:5000", "unix://socket") ``` ### Wake up A connection can be woken up using the `wake` function that is made available through the `Serving` event. This is useful for when you need to offload an operation to a background goroutine and then later notify the event loop that it's time to send some data. ```go var wake func(id int) bool var mu sync.Mutex var done = make(map[int]bool) events.Serving = func(wakefn func(id int) bool, addrs []net.Addr) (action evio.Action) { wake = wakefn // hang on to the wake function return } events.Data = func(id int, in []byte) (out []byte, action evio.Action) { if in == nil { // look for `in` param equal to `nil` following a wake call. mu.Lock() if done[id]{ out = []byte("done\r\n") } mu.Unlock() } else if string(in) == "exec\r\n" { go func(){ // do some long running operation time.Sleep(time.Second*5) mu.Lock() done[id] = true mu.Unlock() wake(id) }() } else { out = in } return } ``` ### Data translations The `Translate` function is utility that wraps events and provides a `ReadWriter` that's used to translate data off the wire from one format to another. This can be useful for transparently adding compression or encryption. For example, let's say we need TLS support: ```go var events Events // ... fill the events with happy functions cer, err := tls.LoadX509KeyPair("certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem", "certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key") if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } config := &tls.Config{Certificates: []tls.Certificate{cer}} // wrap the events with a TLS translator events = evio.Translate(events, nil, func(rw io.ReadWriter) io.ReadWriter { return tls.Server(evio.NopConn(rw), config) }, ) log.Fatal(Serve(events, "tcp://0.0.0.0:443")) ``` Here we wrapped the event with a TLS translator. The `evio.NopConn` function is used to converts the `ReadWriter` a `net.Conn` so the `tls.Server` will work. There's a working TLS example at [examples/http-server/main.go](examples/http-server/main.go) that will bind to port 8080 and 4443 using an developer SSL certificate. The 8080 connections will be insecure and the 4443 will be secure. ```sh $ cd examples/http-server $ go run main.go --tlscert example.pem 2017/11/02 06:24:33 http server started on port 8080 2017/11/02 06:24:33 https server started on port 4443 ``` ```sh $ curl http://localhost:8080 Hello World! $ curl -k https://localhost:4443 Hello World! ``` ## More examples Please check out the [examples](examples) subdirectory for a simplified [redis](examples/redis-server/main.go) clone, an [echo](examples/echo-server/main.go) server, and a very basic [http](examples/http-server/main.go) server. To run an example: ```bash $ go run examples/http-server/main.go $ go run examples/redis-server/main.go $ go run examples/echo-server/main.go ``` ## Performance The benchmarks below use pipelining which allows for combining multiple Redis commands into a single packet. **Real Redis** ``` $ redis-server ``` ``` redis-benchmark -p 6379 -t ping,set,get -q -P 32 PING_INLINE: 869565.19 requests per second PING_BULK: 1694915.25 requests per second SET: 917431.19 requests per second GET: 1265822.75 requests per second ``` **Redis clone (evio)** ``` $ go run examples/redis-server/main.go ``` ``` redis-benchmark -p 6380 -t ping,set,get -q -P 32 PING_INLINE: 2380952.50 requests per second PING_BULK: 2380952.50 requests per second SET: 2325581.25 requests per second GET: 2222222.25 requests per second ``` *Running on a MacBook Pro 15" 2.8 GHz Intel Core i7 using Go 1.7* ## Contact Josh Baker [@tidwall](http://twitter.com/tidwall) ## License `evio` source code is available under the MIT [License](/LICENSE).