Thrift Common Lisp Library
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Thrift is a protocol and library for language-independent communication between cooperating processes. The communication takes the form of request and response messages, of which the forms are specified in advance throufh a shared interface definition. A Thrift definition file is translated into Lisp source files, which comprise several definitions:
Each service definition expands in a collection of generic function definitions. For each op
in the service definition, two functions are defined
op
-request is defined for use by a client. It accepts an additional initial protocol
argument, to act as the client proxy for the operation and mediate the interaction with a remote process through a Thrift-encoded transport stream.op
-response is defined for use by a server. It accepts a single protocol
argument. A server uses it to decode the request message, invoke the base op
function with the message arguments, encode and send the the result as a response, and handles exceptions.The client interface is one operator
with-client (variable location) . body
: creates a connection in a dynamic context and closes it upon exit. The variable is bound to a client proxy stream/protocol instance, which wraps the base i/o stream - socket, file, etc, with an operators which implement the Thrift protocol and transport mechanisms.The server interface combines server and service objects
serve (location service)
: accepts connections on the designated port and responds to requests of the service's operations.The Thrift Common Lisp library is packaged as the ASDF[1] system thrift
. It depends on the systems
The dependencies are bundled for local builds of tests and tutorial binaries - it is possible to use those bundles to load the library, too.
In order to build it, register those systems with ASDF and evaluate:
(asdf:load-system :thrift)
This will compile and load the Lisp compiler for Thrift definition files, the transport and protocol implementations, and the client and server interface functions. In order to use Thrift in an application, one must also author and/or load the interface definitions for the remote service.[9] If one is implementing a service, one must also define the actual functions to which Thrift is to act as the proxy interface. The remainder of this document follows the Thrift tutorial to illustrate how to perform the steps
Note that, if one is to implement a new service, one will also need to author the IDL files, as there is no facility to generate them from a service implementation.
The tutorial comprises serveral functions: add
, ping
, zip
, and calculate
. Each translated IDL file generates three packages for every service. In the case of the tutorial file, the relevant packages are:
This is to separate the request (generated), response (generated) and implementation (meant to be implemented by the programmer) functions for defined Thrift methods.
It is suggested to work in the tutorial-implementation
package while implementing the services - it imports the common-lisp
package, while the service-specific ones don't (to avoid conflicts between Thrift method names and function names in common-lisp
).
;; define the base operations (in-package :tutorial-implementation) (defun tutorial.calculator-implementation:add (num1 num2) (format t "~&Asked to add ~A and ~A." num1 num2) (+ num1 num2)) (defun tutorial.calculator-implementation:ping () (print :ping)) (defun tutorial.calculator-implementation:zip () (print :zip)) (defun tutorial.calculator-implementation:calculate (logid task) (calculate-op (work-op task) (work-num1 task) (work-num2 task))) (defgeneric calculate-op (op arg1 arg2) (:method :around (op arg1 arg2) (let ((result (call-next-method))) (format t "~&Asked to calculate: ~d on ~A and ~A = ~d." op arg1 arg2 result) result)) (:method ((op (eql operation.add)) arg1 arg2) (+ arg1 arg2)) (:method ((op (eql operation.subtract)) arg1 arg2) (- arg1 arg2)) (:method ((op (eql operation.multiply)) arg1 arg2) (* arg1 arg2)) (:method ((op (eql operation.divide)) arg1 arg2) (/ arg1 arg2))) (defun zip () (print 'zip))
IDL files employ the file extension thrift
. In this case, there are two files to translate
tutorial.thrift
shared.thrift
As the former includes the latter, one uses it to generate the interfaces:
$THRIFT/bin/thrift -r --gen cl $THRIFT/tutorial/tutorial.thrift
-r
stands for recursion, while --gen
lets one choose the language to translate to.
The translator generates three files for each IDL file. For example tutorial-types.lisp
, tutorial-vars.lisp
and an .asd
file that can be used to load them both and pull in other includes (like shared
within the tutorial) as dependencies.
The actual service name, as specified in the def-service
form in tutorial.lisp
, is calculator
. Each service definition defines a global variable with the service name and binds it to a service instance whch describes the operations.
In order to start a service, specify a location and the service instance.
(in-package :tutorial) (serve #u"thrift://127.0.0.1:9091" calculator)
[in some other process] run the client
(in-package :cl-user) (macrolet ((show (form) `(format *trace-output* "~%~s =>~{ ~s~}" ',form (multiple-value-list (ignore-errors ,form))))) (with-client (protocol #u"thrift://127.0.0.1:9091") (show (tutorial.calculator:ping protocol)) (show (tutorial.calculator:add protocol 1 2)) (show (tutorial.calculator:add protocol 1 4)) (let ((task (make-instance 'tutorial:work :op operation.subtract :num1 15 :num2 10))) (show (tutorial.calculator:calculate protocol 1 task)) (setf (tutorial:work-op task) operation.divide (tutorial:work-num1 task) 1 (tutorial:work-num2 task) 0) (show (tutorial.calculator:calculate protocol 1 task))) (show (shared.shared-service:get-struct protocol 1)) (show (zip protocol))))
Where the IDL declares a field options, the def-struct form includes no initform for the slot and the encoding operator skips an unbound slot. This leave some ambiguity with bool fields.
struct classes are standard classes and exception classes are whatever the implementation prescribes. decoders apply make-struct to an initargs list. particularly at the service end, there are advantages to resourcing structs and decoding with direct side-effects on slot-values
Maps are now represented as hash tables. As data through the call/reply interface is all statically typed, it is not necessary for the objects to themselves indicate the coding form. Association lists would be sufficient. As the key type is arbitrary, property lists offer no additional convenience: as getf
operates with eq
a new access interface would be necessary and they would not be available for function application.