package capnp-rpc-lwt
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=5a3277f970e25486d1acc5bdcfd4e42c049d680eee23521a20603904b887eef1
sha512=bcfe12cbd27bdaa13e3e3550b31083c5241f3006b9d38fd86fa0b3d6ee86ced0d7cd74755cc132843362e41ef2dd3b1546aee46a958e2bb12e66c199babbe80f
CHANGES.md.html
v0.3.3
Update uint.uint32 to uint (@Cjen1, #159).
Update to new x509 API (@talex5, #158).
Require base64 >= 3.0.0 for capnp-rpc-mirage too (@talex5, #157).
Put test sockets in temporary directory (@talex5, #156).
v0.3.2
Update for various upstream API changes, switch to the opam 2 metadata format, and convert from jbuilder to dune (@talex5, #152).
Adjust to mirage-stack / mirage-protocols changes (Nick Betteridge, #151).
update mirage/network for upgraded Ipaddr
update Dockerfile to use opam2, apt-get update, and newer opam-repository
Update dependencies from opam-repository (@talex5, #148).
0.3.1
Updates for new
x509
API and for OCaml 4.06 (#143).Add some diagrams to the tutorial (#134).
Add FAQ: how can I import a sturdy ref that I need to start my vat? (#137)
Build updates:
Add build dependency on conf-capnproto (#146). Projects using the schema compiler themselves should also now add this dependency instead of relying on
capnp
to pull it in.Remove generics from persistent.capnp (#141) so that it compiles on systems with older capnproto compilers (e.g. Ubuntu 14.04).
unix/network.ml
usesFmt.failwith
, which requires fmt.0.8.4 (#139).capnp-rpc-lwt
requiresUri.with_userinfo
, which is only inuri
>= 1.6.0 (#138).Move test-lwt to unix module (#133).
0.3 Unikernels
This release adds a new capnp-rpc-mirage
package, which provides support for using the library within a MirageOS unikernel. See https://github.com/mirage/capnp-rpc#how-can-i-use-this-with-mirage for details.
There are a few minor API changes:
Capnp_rpc_unix.Vat_config.derived_id ?name config
is nowCapnp_rpc_unix.Vat_config.derived_id config name
. If you weren't passing a~name
argument before, use"main"
to get the same ID.Capnp_rpc_unix.Network
'sSocket_address
module is now calledLocation
.There is an explicit network parameter in
Network.connect
, etc. This is needed to support Mirage, where the network isn't a global.
Bug fixes:
Fix race when reconnecting. We notified the user that the capability had broken while the old connection was still shutting down. If they immediately tried to reconnect, we tried to reuse the old connection. Now, we wait for it to be removed.
Fix handling of leaks in switchable. If we detected the ref-count was invalid, we tried to resolve to an error, but resolving now checks that the ref-count is valid first so this failed.
Documentation and examples:
Fixed ref-counting bug in calculator example. Also, changed the service ID to match what the C++ client expects. With these changes, the C++ client's tests pass when used with the OCaml service.
Fuzzing:
Also test answering questions with errors or with a promise from another question.
Code cleanups:
Use a better way to get the client certificate from a TLS connection (suggested by @hannesm).
Use
Alcotest_lwt
for unit-tests.Move
capnp://
URI handling toCapnp_rpc_lwt.Capnp_address
. This allows it to be shared with the Mirage code.Add
Capnp_rpc_lwt.VAT_NETWORK
with simpler signature thanS.VAT_NETWORK
.The address sub-module of
S.NETWORK
is now available separately asS.ADDRESS
.
0.2 Persistence, encryption and access control
This release brings support for RPC Level 2.
The API for implementing services and clients is mostly unchanged, but the APIs for setting up networking are very different. If you read the tutorial with the 0.1 release, you will probably want to read the new version again from the "Networking" point onwards.
The main change is that when connecting to a service you now give a URI of the form:
capnp://hash:digest@address/service
The client will connect to address
, check the server's public key matches hash:digest
, and then pass the (secret) service
ID to get access to a particular service. The server will typically display the URI to use on start-up, or write it to a file.
The communications are encrypted using TLS. If you want to disable TLS, use the form capnp://insecure@address
. This should only be needed for interoperability with non-TLS services, as the system will generate keys and certificates automatically, making secure use just as easy as the non-secure case.
The other major new feature is support for persistent services. In version 0.1 you could specify an offer
argument when creating a vat, telling it a service to provide in response to bootstrap requests. Now, you pass a restore
argument, which can restore different services depending on the service ID provided by the client.
The new Restorer.Table
module provides a table-based lookup restorer, to which services can be added dynamically. If you have a lot of services and don't want to add them all at startup, you can use Restorer.Table.of_loader
and provide your own function for loading services.
Other changes
Documentation changes:
The tutorial has been extended and a FAQ added.
The recommended layout of protocol files has changed. The
Client
sub-module is gone, andservice
becomeslocal
.The examples now have
.mli
files and there is a newstore.ml
example demonstrating persistence. The examples have been updated to the new layout convention.
Main API changes:
The
Capnp_rpc_lwt.Capability
module adds some useful functions:broken
creates a broken capability.when_broken
allows you to be notified when a capability breaks (e.g. because of a network failure).wait_until_settled
waits until a promise has resolved, if you don't want to pipeline (e.g. you want to send a large amount of data, so prefer to find out where the service is and avoid any forwarding).equal
tests if two capabilities designate the same service.
The new
Capnp_rpc_lwt.Sturdy_ref
module provides an abstraction for off-line capabilities.Sturdy_ref.connect
can be used to get a live connection. If you try to connect to multiple services in the same vat, it will share a single connection automatically.Sturdy_ref.reader
andSturdy_ref.builder
can be used for passing sturdy refs in messages.The new
Capnp_rpc_lwt.Restorer
module is used to implement sturdy-refs at the hosting side.The new
Capnp_rpc_lwt.Persistence
module provides support for the Cap'n Proto persistence protocol. Clients usePersistence.save
to request a sturdy ref from a service, and services can usePersistence.with_sturdy_ref
to answer such requests automatically.The new
Capnp_rpc_unix.Vat_config
collects together all vat configuration in one place.The new
Capnp_rpc_unix.File_store
can store Cap'n Proto structs in a directory. It can be useful when implementing persistence.The new
Capnp_rpc_lwt.Auth
module provides support for generating and handling secret keys and fingerprints.The new
Capnp_rpc_lwt.Tls_wrapper
provides support for doing TLS handshakes, with authentication and encryption.
In the core capnp-rpc
package (which applications do not normally use directly):
The new
cap#when_released
method can be used to find out when a capability is no longer needed. The restorer uses this to remove dynamically loaded services from its table automatically.The new
when_broken
helper adds a callback to call when a promise or far-ref becomes broken.NETWORK_TYPES
is now separate fromCORE_TYPES
.
0.1
Initial release. RPC Level 1 is fully implemented.