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# Chronos - An efficient library for asynchronous programming
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## Introduction
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Chronos is an [asyncdispatch ](https://nim-lang.org/docs/asyncdispatch.html )
fork with a unified callback type, FIFO processing order for Future callbacks and [many other changes ](https://github.com/status-im/nim-chronos/wiki/AsyncDispatch-comparison ) that diverged from upstream's philosophy.
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## Installation
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You can use Nim's official package manager Nimble to install Chronos:
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```
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$ nimble install https://github.com/status-im/nim-chronos.git
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```
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## Documentation
### Concepts
Chronos implements the async/await paradigm in a self-contained library, using
macros, with no specific helpers from the compiler.
Our event loop is called a "dispatcher" and a single instance per thread is
created, as soon as one is needed.
To trigger a dispatcher's processing step, we need to call `poll()` - either
directly or through a wrapper like `runForever()` or `waitFor()` . This step
handles any file descriptors, timers and callbacks that are ready to be
processed.
`Future` objects encapsulate the result of an async procedure, upon successful
completion, and a list of callbacks to be scheduled after any type of
completion - be that success, failure or cancellation.
(These explicit callbacks are rarely used outside Chronos, being replaced by
implicit ones generated by async procedure execution and `await` chaining.)
Async procedures (those using the `{.async.}` pragma) return `Future` objects.
Inside an async procedure, you can `await` the future returned by another async
procedure. At this point, control will be handled to the event loop until that
future is completed.
Future completion is tested with `Future.finished()` and is defined as success,
failure or cancellation. This means that a future is either pending or completed.
To differentiate between completion states, we have `Future.failed()` and
`Future.cancelled()` .
### Dispatcher
You can run the "dispatcher" event loop forever, with `runForever()` which is defined as:
```nim
proc runForever*() =
while true:
poll()
```
You can also run it until a certain future is completed, with `waitFor()` which
will also call `Future.read()` on it:
```nim
proc p(): Future[int] {.async.} =
await sleepAsync(100.milliseconds)
return 1
echo waitFor p() # prints "1"
```
`waitFor()` is defined like this:
```nim
proc waitFor*[T](fut: Future[T]): T =
while not(fut.finished()):
poll()
return fut.read()
```
### Async procedures and methods
The `{.async.}` pragma will transform a procedure (or a method) returning a
specialised `Future` type into a closure iterator. If there is no return type
specified, a `Future[void]` is returned.
```nim
proc p() {.async.} =
await sleepAsync(100.milliseconds)
echo p().type # prints "Future[system.void]"
```
Whenever `await` is encountered inside an async procedure, control is passed
back to the dispatcher for as many steps as it's necessary for the awaited
future to complete successfully, fail or be cancelled. `await` calls the
equivalent of `Future.read()` on the completed future and returns the
encapsulated value.
```nim
proc p1() {.async.} =
await sleepAsync(1.seconds)
proc p2() {.async.} =
await sleepAsync(1.seconds)
proc p3() {.async.} =
let
fut1 = p1()
fut2 = p2()
# Just by executing the async procs, both resulting futures entered the
# dispatcher's queue and their "clocks" started ticking.
await fut1
await fut2
# Only one second passed while awaiting them both, not two.
waitFor p3()
```
Don't let `await` 's behaviour of giving back control to the dispatcher surprise
you. If an async procedure modifies global state, and you can't predict when it
will start executing, the only way to avoid that state changing underneath your
feet, in a certain section, is to not use `await` in it.
### Error handling
Exceptions inheriting from `CatchableError` are caught by hidden `try` blocks
and placed in the `Future.error` field, changing the future's status to
`Failed` .
When a future is awaited, that exception is re-raised, only to be caught again
by a hidden `try` block in the calling async procedure. That's how these
exceptions move up the async chain.
A failed future's callbacks will still be scheduled, but it's not possible to
resume execution from the point an exception was raised.
```nim
proc p1() {.async.} =
await sleepAsync(1.seconds)
raise newException(ValueError, "ValueError inherits from CatchableError")
proc p2() {.async.} =
await sleepAsync(1.seconds)
proc p3() {.async.} =
let
fut1 = p1()
fut2 = p2()
await fut1
echo "unreachable code here"
await fut2
# `waitFor()` would call `Future.read()` unconditionally, which would raise the
# exception in `Future.error`.
let fut3 = p3()
while not(fut3.finished()):
poll()
echo "fut3.state = ", fut3.state # "Failed"
if fut3.failed():
echo "p3() failed: ", fut3.error.name, ": ", fut3.error.msg
# prints "p3() failed: ValueError: ValueError inherits from CatchableError"
```
You can put the `await` in a `try` block, to deal with that exception sooner:
```nim
proc p3() {.async.} =
let
fut1 = p1()
fut2 = p2()
try:
await fut1
except:
echo "p1() failed: ", fut1.error.name, ": ", fut1.error.msg
echo "reachable code here"
await fut2
```
Exceptions inheriting from `Defect` are treated differently, being raised
directly. Don't try to catch them coming out of `poll()` , because this would
leave behind some zombie futures.
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## TODO
* Pipe/Subprocess Transports.
* Multithreading Stream/Datagram servers
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## Contributing
When submitting pull requests, please add test cases for any new features or fixes and make sure `nimble test` is still able to execute the entire test suite successfully.
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## License
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Licensed and distributed under either of
* MIT license: [LICENSE-MIT ](LICENSE-MIT ) or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
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or
* Apache License, Version 2.0, ([LICENSE-APACHEv2](LICENSE-APACHEv2) or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
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at your option. These files may not be copied, modified, or distributed except according to those terms.