//! A chat server that broadcasts a message to all connections.
//!
//! This is a line-based server which accepts connections, reads lines from
//! those connections, and broadcasts the lines to all other connected clients.
//!
//! This example is similar to chat.rs, but uses combinators and a much more
//! functional style.
//!
//! You can test this out by running:
//!
//! cargo run --example chat
//!
//! And then in another window run:
//!
//! cargo run --example connect 127.0.0.1:8080
//!
//! You can run the second command in multiple windows and then chat between the
//! two, seeing the messages from the other client as they're received. For all
//! connected clients they'll all join the same room and see everyone else's
//! messages.
#![deny(warnings)]
extern crate futures;
extern crate tokio;
use tokio::io;
use tokio::net::TcpListener;
use tokio::prelude::*;
use std::collections::HashMap;
use std::env;
use std::io::BufReader;
use std::iter;
use std::sync::{Arc, Mutex};
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<std::error::Error>> {
// Create the TCP listener we'll accept connections on.
let addr = env::args().nth(1).unwrap_or("127.0.0.1:8080".to_string());
let addr = addr.parse()?;
let socket = TcpListener::bind(&addr)?;
println!("Listening on: {}", addr);
// This is running on the Tokio runtime, so it will be multi-threaded. The
// `Arc<Mutex<...>>` allows state to be shared across the threads.
let connections = Arc::new(Mutex::new(HashMap::new()));
// The server task asynchronously iterates over and processes each incoming
// connection.
let srv = socket
.incoming()
.map_err(|e| {
println!("failed to accept socket; error = {:?}", e);
e
})
.for_each(move |stream| {
// The client's socket address
let addr = stream.peer_addr()?;
println!("New Connection: {}", addr);
// Split the TcpStream into two separate handles. One handle for reading
// and one handle for writing. This lets us use separate tasks for
// reading and writing.
let (reader, writer) = stream.split();
// Create a channel for our stream, which other sockets will use to
// send us messages. Then register our address with the stream to send
// data to us.
let (tx, rx) = futures::sync::mpsc::unbounded();
connections.lock().unwrap().insert(addr, tx);
// Define here what we do for the actual I/O. That is, read a bunch of
// lines from the socket and dispatch them while we also write any lines
// from other sockets.
let connections_inner = connections.clone();
let reader = BufReader::new(reader);
// Model the read portion of this socket by mapping an infinite
// iterator to each line off the socket. This "loop" is then
// terminated with an error once we hit EOF on the socket.
let iter = stream::iter_ok::<_, io::Error>(iter::repeat(()));
let socket_reader = iter.fold(reader, move |reader, _| {
// Read a line off the socket, failing if we're at EOF
let line = io::read_until(reader, b'\n', Vec::new());
let line = line.and_then(|(reader, vec)| {
if vec.len() == 0 {
Err(io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::BrokenPipe, "broken pipe"))
} else {
Ok((reader, vec))
}
});
// Convert the bytes we read into a string, and then send that
// string to all other connected clients.
let line = line.map(|(reader, vec)| (reader, String::from_utf8(vec)));
// Move the connection state into the closure below.
let connections = connections_inner.clone();
line.map(move |(reader, message)| {
println!("{}: {:?}", addr, message);
let mut conns = connections.lock().unwrap();
if let Ok(msg) = message {
// For each open connection except the sender, send the
// string via the channel.
let iter = conns
.iter_mut()
.filter(|&(&k, _)| k != addr)
.map(|(_, v)| v);
for tx in iter {
tx.unbounded_send(format!("{}: {}", addr, msg)).unwrap();
}
} else {
let tx = conns.get_mut(&addr).unwrap();
tx.unbounded_send("You didn't send valid UTF-8.".to_string())
.unwrap();
}
reader
})
});
// Whenever we receive a string on the Receiver, we write it to
// `WriteHalf<TcpStream>`.
let socket_writer = rx.fold(writer, |writer, msg| {
let amt = io::write_all(writer, msg.into_bytes());
let amt = amt.map(|(writer, _)| writer);
amt.map_err(|_| ())
});
// Now that we've got futures representing each half of the socket, we
// use the `select` combinator to wait for either half to be done to
// tear down the other. Then we spawn off the result.
let connections = connections.clone();
let socket_reader = socket_reader.map_err(|_| ());
let connection = socket_reader.map(|_| ()).select(socket_writer.map(|_| ()));
// Spawn a task to process the connection
tokio::spawn(connection.then(move |_| {
connections.lock().unwrap().remove(&addr);
println!("Connection {} closed.", addr);
Ok(())
}));
Ok(())
})
.map_err(|err| println!("error occurred: {:?}", err));
// execute server
tokio::run(srv);
Ok(())
}