package capnp
OCaml code generation plugin for the Cap'n Proto serialization framework
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
capnp-3.0.0.tbz
sha256=0e1c627c9884797b744fa707aebeee7a21ffe22d34c6b1e10961169b6e492dc4
md5=15dce78b2912233378e8de9919c8e2b0
Description
Cap'n Proto is a multi-language code generation framework designed for high performance through the use of lazy parsing and arena allocation. This package provides a plugin for the Cap'n Proto compiler which enables OCaml code generation, as well as corresponding runtime library support.
Published: 09 Aug 2017
README
README.adoc
capnp-ocaml =========== This is an http://ocaml.org[OCaml] code generator plugin for the http://kentonv.github.io/capnproto[Cap\'n Proto] serialization framework. This plugin is roughly feature-complete for the Cap\'n Proto basic serialization. For RPC support, see <https://github.com/mirage/capnp-rpc>. Design Notes ------------ The generated code follows the general Cap\'n Proto convention of using the serialized message format as the in-memory data structure representation. This enables the "infinitely faster" performance characteristic, but it also means that the generated code is not directly compatible with OCaml records, arrays, etc. The generated code is functorized over the underlying message format. This enables client code to operate equally well on messages stored as--for example--OCaml `bytes` buffers or OCaml `Bigarray` (perhaps most interesting for applications involving `mmap()`). Generated Code -------------- The Cap\'n Proto types are mapped to OCaml types as follows: .Type mapping [width="50%",cols="2",options="header"] |================================================ | Cap\'n Proto Type | OCaml Type | `Void` | `unit` | `Bool` | `bool` | `Int8` | `int` | `Int16` | `int` | `Int32` | `int32` | `Int64` | `int64` | `UInt8` | `int` | `UInt16` | `int` | `UInt32` | `Uint32.t` (from https://github.com/andrenth/ocaml-uint[`uint`] library) | `UInt64` | `Uint64.t` (from https://github.com/andrenth/ocaml-uint[`uint`] library) | `Float32` | `float` | `Float64` | `float` | `Text` | `string` | `Data` | `string` | `List<T>` | `('a, T, 'b) Capnp.Array.t` |================================================ The `Capnp.Array` module is roughly API-compatible with OCaml arrays and provides similar performance characteristics. A Cap\'n Proto struct maps to an OCaml module. The generated module hierarchy reflects the hierarchy of structs specified in the schema file. For example, the Cap\'n Proto schema -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- @0xbdb65202adbdc4a0; struct Outer1 { struct Inner { } } struct Outer2 { } -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- would yield a generated module with the signature [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- module type S = sig module Reader : sig module Outer1 : sig type t module Inner : sig type t (* Read-only accessors for Inner.t *) ... end (* Read-only accessors for Outer1.t *) ... end module Outer2 : sig type t (* Read-only accessors for Outer2.t *) ... end ... end module Builder : sig module Outer1 : sig type t module Inner : sig type t (* Read/write accessors for Inner.t *) ... end (* Read/write accessors for Outer1.t *) ... end module Outer2 : sig type t (* Read/write accessors for Outer2.t *) ... end ... end end -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The `Reader` and `Builder` submodules provide read-only and read/write message accessors, respectively. The accessors for struct fields are constructed as follows: Primitive Fields ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A struct field `foo` of primitive type will result in generation of the following accessors: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (* for field 'foo' of type Void *) val foo_get : t -> unit val foo_set : t -> unit -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type Bool *) val foo_get : t -> bool val foo_set : t -> bool -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type Float32 or Float64 *) val foo_get : t -> float val foo_set : t -> float -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type Text or Data *) val has_foo : t -> bool val foo_get : t -> string val foo_set : t -> string -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type Int8 *) val foo_get : t -> int (* Raise [Invalid_argument] if out of Int8 range *) val foo_set_exn : t -> int -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type Int16 *) val foo_get : t -> int (* Raise [Invalid_argument] if out of Int16 range *) val foo_set_exn : t -> int -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type Int32 *) val foo_get : t -> int32 (* Raise [Message.Out_of_int_range] if not representable as int *) val foo_get_int_exn : t -> int val foo_set : t -> int32 -> unit (* Raise [Invalid_argument] if out of Int32 range *) val foo_set_int_exn : t -> int -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type Int64 *) val foo_get : t -> int64 (* Raise [Message.Out_of_int_range] if not representable as int *) val foo_get_int_exn : t -> int val foo_set : t -> int64 -> unit val foo_set_int : t -> int (* for field 'foo' of type UInt8 *) val foo_get : t -> int (* Raise [Invalid_argument] if out of UInt8 range *) val foo_set_exn : t -> int -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type UInt16 *) val foo_get : t -> int (* Raise [Invalid_argument] if out of UInt16 range *) val foo_set_exn : t -> int -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type UInt32 *) val foo_get : t -> Uint32.t (* Raise [Message.Out_of_int_range] if not representable as int *) val foo_get_int_exn : t -> int val foo_set : t -> Uint32.t -> unit (* Raise [Invalid_argument] if out of UInt32 range *) val foo_set_int_exn : t -> int -> unit (* for field 'foo' of type UInt64 *) val foo_get : t -> Uint64.t (* Raise [Message.Out_of_int_range] if not representable as int *) val foo_get_int_exn : t -> int val foo_set : t -> Uint64.t -> unit (* Raise [Invalid_argument] if out of UInt64 range *) val foo_set_int_exn : t -> int -> unit -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- `_get` accessors will be available in both the `Reader` and the `Builder` modules; `_set` accessors will be available only for `Builder` types. Embedded Struct Fields ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A struct field `foo` which is of struct type will result in generation of the following accessors: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (* Assuming that field foo has generated type Foo.t... *) (** [has_foo s] returns [true] if field [foo] was set in structure [s]. *) val has_foo : t -> bool (** [foo_init s] initializes the value of field [foo] to the default value for its type. @return a reference to the content of field [foo] *) val foo_init : t -> Foo.t (** [foo_get s] gets a reference to the content of field [foo]. (For the Builder implementation, if the field was not previously initialized then as a side-effect this function will default-initialize the structure and cause [has_foo s] to return [true].) @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_get : t -> Foo.t (** [foo_get_pipelined s] is a reference to the field [foo] in the (possibly not yet received) struct [s]. Only available in the Reader section. *) val foo_get_pipelined : struct_t StructRef.t -> Foo.struct_t StructRef.t (** [foo_set_reader s v] sets the content of field [foo] by making a deep copy of the Reader-typed structure. @return reference to the content of field [foo] @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_set_reader : t -> Reader.Foo.t -> Builder.Foo.t (** [foo_set_builder s v] sets the content of field [foo] by making a deep copy of the Builder-typed structure. @return reference to the content of field [foo] @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_set_builder : t -> Builder.Foo.t -> Builder.Foo.t -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- List Fields ~~~~~~~~~~~ A struct field `foo` which is of list type will result in generation of the following accessors: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (* Assuming that field foo contains values of type Inner... *) (** [has_foo s] returns [true] if field [foo] was set in structure [s]. *) val has_foo : t -> bool (** [foo_init s n] initializes field [foo] to a zero-initialized list of length [n] (i.e. primitive types are initialized as zero, struct types are initialized as the default value for the struct type). @return a reference to the content of field [foo] *) val foo_init : t -> int -> (rw, Inner.t, 'a) Capnp.Array.t (** [foo_get s] gets a reference to the content of field [foo]. (For the Builder implementation, if the field was not previously initialized then as a side-effect this function will default-initialize the list and cause [has_foo s] to return [true].) @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_get : t -> ('cap, Inner.t, 'arr) Capnp.Array.t (** [foo_get_list s] creates an OCaml list containing the content of field [foo]. @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_get_list : t -> Inner.t list (** [foo_get_array s] creates an OCaml array containing the content of field [foo]. @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_get_array : t -> Inner.t array (** [foo_set s v] sets the content of field [foo] by creating a deep copy of list [v]. (This may result in reallocation of [foo], which may lead to poor performance.) @return a reference to the content of field [foo] @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_set : t -> ('cap, Inner.t, 'a) Capnp.Array.t -> (rw, Inner.t, 'b) Capnp.Array.t (** [foo_set_list s v] sets the content of field [foo] from OCaml list [v]. (This may result in reallocation of [foo], which may lead to poor performance.) @return a reference to the content of field [foo] @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_set_list : t -> Inner.t list -> (rw, Inner.t, 'b) Capnp.Array.t (** [foo_set_array s v] sets the content of field [foo] from OCaml array [v]. (This may result in reallocation of [foo], which may lead to poor performance.) @return a reference to the content of field [foo] @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val foo_set_array : t -> Inner.t array -> (rw, Inner.t, 'b) Capnp.Array.t -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Union Fields ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cap\'n Proto has first-class support for union (sum) types. These are mapped to OCaml variants in a straightforward way. To retrieve a union value, use the generated `get` function which will return a variant specifying which of the possible fields is present. To set a union value, use the generated `set_foo` (or `init_foo`) functions which simultaneously set (or init) the field value and set the union discriminant. Variant constructors are generated simply by capitalizing the first letters of the associated union fields. In addition, to allow forward compatibility the constructor `Undefined of int` is added to the variant type definition. This constructor value is returned whenever an unknown union discriminant is decoded. Enum Fields ~~~~~~~~~~~ Enums map to OCaml variants in the way one would expect. Enum fields within structs will lead to generation of `foo_get` and `foo_set` accessors which work just like the accessors for other primitive types. Additional Operations on Structs ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In addition to field accessors, modules associated with structs also contain the following functions: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (* Assuming that the struct is called Bar... *) (** [of_message m] parses message [m] to retrieve the root struct. @return a reference to the content of the root struct @raise Message.Invalid_message if the message is ill-formatted *) val of_message : 'cap message_t -> t (** [of_builder b] converts a read/write reference to the struct into a read-only interface. (Found only in the Reader module.) *) val of_builder : Builder.Bar.t -> Reader.Bar.t (** [to_reader b] converts a read/write reference to the struct into a read-only interface. (Found only in the Builder module.) *) val to_reader : Builder.Bar.t -> Reader.Bar.t (** [init_root ?message_size ()] constructs a new message and initializes an instance of this struct type as the root struct of the message. The optional [message_size] can be used to set the initial message size. @return a reference to the content of the root struct *) val init_root : ?message_size:int -> unit -> Bar.t (** [init_pointer p] initializes an instance of this struct type inside [p]'s message and updates [p] to point to the new struct. This is useful when dealing with AnyPointer fields. @return a reference to the content of the struct *) val init_pointer : pointer_t -> t (** [to_message s] retrieves the underlying message which is used as the backing store for struct [s]. *) val to_message : t -> rw message_t -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Interfaces ~~~~~~~~~~ A struct field `foo` which is of interface type will result in generation of the following accessors: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (* Assuming that field foo contains interfaces of type Foo... *) (** The caller is responsible for freeing the result. *) val foo_get : t -> Foo.t Capability.t option (** [foo_get_pipelined t] is a capability that can be used to invoke methods on the object in the [foo] field of [t], which might not have arrived yet. The caller is responsible for freeing the result. *) val foo_get_pipelined : struct_t StructRef.t -> Foo.t Capability.t (** [foo_set t c] sets the field to capability [c], increasing [c]'s ref-count (i.e. the caller is still responsible for freeing [c]). *) val foo_set : t -> Foo.t Capability.t option -> unit -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Each interface `Foo` generates a module `Foo`. There will be one submodule for each method, with `Params` and `Results` submodules for any implicit structs needed for the method arguments and results: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- module Reader : sig module Foo : sig type t = [`Foo_c36d76740ee15e68] module MyMethod : sig module Params : sig type struct_t = [`MyMethod_b104a8c98610c556] type t = struct_t reader_t val arg1_get : t -> string [...] end module Results : sig type struct_t = [`MyMethod_c6367b042fce8e87] type t = struct_t reader_t val result_get : t -> string [...] end end end end -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- module Builder : sig module Foo : sig type t = [`Foo_c36d76740ee15e68] module MyMethod : sig module Params : sig type struct_t = [`MyMethod_b104a8c98610c556] type t = struct_t builder_t val arg1_set : t -> string -> unit [...] end module Results : sig type struct_t = [`MyMethod_c6367b042fce8e87] type t = struct_t builder_t val result_set : t -> string -> unit [...] end end end end -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The generated file will also contain `Client` and `Service` top-level modules: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- module Client : sig module Foo : sig type t = [`Foo_c36d76740ee15e68] val interface_id : Uint64.t module MyMethod : sig module Params = Builder.Foo.MyMethod.Params module Results = Reader.Foo.MyMethod.Results val method_id : (t, Params.t, Results.t) Capnp.RPC.MethodID.t end end end module Service : sig module Foo : sig type t = [`Foo_c36d76740ee15e68] val interface_id : Uint64.t module MyMethod : sig module Params = Reader.Foo.MyMethod.Params module Results = Builder.Foo.MyMethod.Results end class virtual service : object inherit MessageWrapper.Untyped.generic_service method virtual my_method_impl : (MyMethod.Params.t, MyMethod.Results.t) MessageWrapper.Service.method_t end val local : #service -> t MessageWrapper.Capability.t end end -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The `Client` module is for use by clients. Each method links to a *builder* for the parameters and a *reader* for the results (in the `Service` section they are the other way around). The client section also includes the method's globally-unique ID. This is just a `(Uint64.t * int)` pair, but its type gives the type of the interface and of the request and response structs. Consult your RPC library's documentation for information about how to call the method. To implement a service, inherit from the generated virtual service class and implement the virtual methods. Use the `local` function to export your service as a capability. Inheritance is not currently supported. Generating Code --------------- You will need to http://kentonv.github.io/capnproto/install.html[install the Cap\'n Proto compiler]. Once the Cap\'n Proto compiler and capnp-ocaml are both installed, you should be able to use `capnp compile -o ocaml yourSchemaFile.capnp` in order to generate `yourSchemaFile.mli` and `yourSchemaFile.ml`. These modules will link against OCaml packages `core_kernel`, `extunix`, `uint`, `ocplib-endian`, `res`, and of course `capnp`. Instantiating the Modules ------------------------- The modules generated by capnp-ocaml are functors which take the underlying message type as input. In principle, messages can be stored using any underlying data structure that satisfies the `Capnp.MessageStorage.S` signature. At present, capnp-ocaml contains one implementation: `Capnp.BytesStorage` provides message storage in the form of native OCaml `bytes` buffers, and `Capnp.BytesMessage` provides a `Message` implementation based on `BytesStorage`. This module makes it easy to retrieve messages in a format suitable for use with file I/O, socket I/O, etc. To instantiate your code using BytesMessage, you could use the following pattern: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- module YSF = YourSchemaFile.Make(Capnp.BytesMessage) let root_struct = YSF.Builder.Foo.init_root () in (* ... *) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Performance ----------- For certain applications, the overhead associated with OCaml functors may be problematic. The functors may be eliminated by compiling with an flambda build of the OCaml compiler (e.g. `opam switch 4.04.1+flambda`) and using the `@inlined` annotation, like this: [source,ocaml] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- module YSF = YourSchemaFile.Make[@inlined](Capnp.BytesMessage) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You can use the `ocamlopt -inlining-report` option to check that the code has been inlined. It may also be a good idea to compile with `-O3` if you care about speed. I Need to See an Example ------------------------ I should really put together some trivial example code. But in the meantime, the https://github.com/pelzlpj/capnp-ocaml/tree/master/src/tests[tests] and https://github.com/pelzlpj/capnp-ocaml/tree/master/src/benchmark[benchmark] subdirectories may be helpful to look at. Installation ------------ capnp-ocaml requires OCaml >= 4.02. You should be able to install capnp-ocaml with http://opam.ocaml.org[OPAM] using using `opam install capnp`. If you prefer to compile manually, you will need jbuilder, Findlib, and OCaml packages `core_kernel`, `extunix`, `uint`, `ocplib-endian`, and `res`. Run `jbuilder build` to build both the compiler and the runtime library, and then use `jbuilder install` to copy them into appropriate places within your filesystem. Contact ------- pelzlpj at gmail dot com License ------- Copyright (c) 2013-2014, Paul Pelzl All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. Some of the `.capnp` schema files are imported from the Cap'n Proto repository and have their own license (at the top of each file).
Dependencies (8)
-
conf-capnproto
build
- uint
- res
-
ocplib-endian
>= "0.7"
- extunix
-
core_kernel
>= "112.24.00"
-
jbuilder
>= "1.0+beta7"
-
ocaml
>= "4.02.0"
Used by (1)
-
capnp-rpc-lwt
!= "0.3.2" & < "0.4.0"
Conflicts (1)
-
base
>= "v0.10.0"
sectionYPositions = computeSectionYPositions($el), 10)"
x-init="setTimeout(() => sectionYPositions = computeSectionYPositions($el), 10)"
>
On This Page