view src/capnproto-git-20161025/c++/samples/calculator-client.c++ @ 83:ae30d91d2ffe

Replace these with versions built using an older toolset (so as to avoid ABI compatibilities when linking on Ubuntu 14.04 for packaging purposes)
author Chris Cannam
date Fri, 07 Feb 2020 11:51:13 +0000
parents 9530b331f8c1
children
line wrap: on
line source
// Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Sandstorm Development Group, Inc. and contributors
// Licensed under the MIT License:
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.

#include "calculator.capnp.h"
#include <capnp/ez-rpc.h>
#include <kj/debug.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <iostream>

class PowerFunction final: public Calculator::Function::Server {
  // An implementation of the Function interface wrapping pow().  Note that
  // we're implementing this on the client side and will pass a reference to
  // the server.  The server will then be able to make calls back to the client.

public:
  kj::Promise<void> call(CallContext context) {
    auto params = context.getParams().getParams();
    KJ_REQUIRE(params.size() == 2, "Wrong number of parameters.");
    context.getResults().setValue(pow(params[0], params[1]));
    return kj::READY_NOW;
  }
};

int main(int argc, const char* argv[]) {
  if (argc != 2) {
    std::cerr << "usage: " << argv[0] << " HOST:PORT\n"
        "Connects to the Calculator server at the given address and "
        "does some RPCs." << std::endl;
    return 1;
  }

  capnp::EzRpcClient client(argv[1]);
  Calculator::Client calculator = client.getMain<Calculator>();

  // Keep an eye on `waitScope`.  Whenever you see it used is a place where we
  // stop and wait for the server to respond.  If a line of code does not use
  // `waitScope`, then it does not block!
  auto& waitScope = client.getWaitScope();

  {
    // Make a request that just evaluates the literal value 123.
    //
    // What's interesting here is that evaluate() returns a "Value", which is
    // another interface and therefore points back to an object living on the
    // server.  We then have to call read() on that object to read it.
    // However, even though we are making two RPC's, this block executes in
    // *one* network round trip because of promise pipelining:  we do not wait
    // for the first call to complete before we send the second call to the
    // server.

    std::cout << "Evaluating a literal... ";
    std::cout.flush();

    // Set up the request.
    auto request = calculator.evaluateRequest();
    request.getExpression().setLiteral(123);

    // Send it, which returns a promise for the result (without blocking).
    auto evalPromise = request.send();

    // Using the promise, create a pipelined request to call read() on the
    // returned object, and then send that.
    auto readPromise = evalPromise.getValue().readRequest().send();

    // Now that we've sent all the requests, wait for the response.  Until this
    // point, we haven't waited at all!
    auto response = readPromise.wait(waitScope);
    KJ_ASSERT(response.getValue() == 123);

    std::cout << "PASS" << std::endl;
  }

  {
    // Make a request to evaluate 123 + 45 - 67.
    //
    // The Calculator interface requires that we first call getOperator() to
    // get the addition and subtraction functions, then call evaluate() to use
    // them.  But, once again, we can get both functions, call evaluate(), and
    // then read() the result -- four RPCs -- in the time of *one* network
    // round trip, because of promise pipelining.

    std::cout << "Using add and subtract... ";
    std::cout.flush();

    Calculator::Function::Client add = nullptr;
    Calculator::Function::Client subtract = nullptr;

    {
      // Get the "add" function from the server.
      auto request = calculator.getOperatorRequest();
      request.setOp(Calculator::Operator::ADD);
      add = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    {
      // Get the "subtract" function from the server.
      auto request = calculator.getOperatorRequest();
      request.setOp(Calculator::Operator::SUBTRACT);
      subtract = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    // Build the request to evaluate 123 + 45 - 67.
    auto request = calculator.evaluateRequest();

    auto subtractCall = request.getExpression().initCall();
    subtractCall.setFunction(subtract);
    auto subtractParams = subtractCall.initParams(2);
    subtractParams[1].setLiteral(67);

    auto addCall = subtractParams[0].initCall();
    addCall.setFunction(add);
    auto addParams = addCall.initParams(2);
    addParams[0].setLiteral(123);
    addParams[1].setLiteral(45);

    // Send the evaluate() request, read() the result, and wait for read() to
    // finish.
    auto evalPromise = request.send();
    auto readPromise = evalPromise.getValue().readRequest().send();

    auto response = readPromise.wait(waitScope);
    KJ_ASSERT(response.getValue() == 101);

    std::cout << "PASS" << std::endl;
  }

  {
    // Make a request to evaluate 4 * 6, then use the result in two more
    // requests that add 3 and 5.
    //
    // Since evaluate() returns its result wrapped in a `Value`, we can pass
    // that `Value` back to the server in subsequent requests before the first
    // `evaluate()` has actually returned.  Thus, this example again does only
    // one network round trip.

    std::cout << "Pipelining eval() calls... ";
    std::cout.flush();

    Calculator::Function::Client add = nullptr;
    Calculator::Function::Client multiply = nullptr;

    {
      // Get the "add" function from the server.
      auto request = calculator.getOperatorRequest();
      request.setOp(Calculator::Operator::ADD);
      add = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    {
      // Get the "multiply" function from the server.
      auto request = calculator.getOperatorRequest();
      request.setOp(Calculator::Operator::MULTIPLY);
      multiply = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    // Build the request to evaluate 4 * 6
    auto request = calculator.evaluateRequest();

    auto multiplyCall = request.getExpression().initCall();
    multiplyCall.setFunction(multiply);
    auto multiplyParams = multiplyCall.initParams(2);
    multiplyParams[0].setLiteral(4);
    multiplyParams[1].setLiteral(6);

    auto multiplyResult = request.send().getValue();

    // Use the result in two calls that add 3 and add 5.

    auto add3Request = calculator.evaluateRequest();
    auto add3Call = add3Request.getExpression().initCall();
    add3Call.setFunction(add);
    auto add3Params = add3Call.initParams(2);
    add3Params[0].setPreviousResult(multiplyResult);
    add3Params[1].setLiteral(3);
    auto add3Promise = add3Request.send().getValue().readRequest().send();

    auto add5Request = calculator.evaluateRequest();
    auto add5Call = add5Request.getExpression().initCall();
    add5Call.setFunction(add);
    auto add5Params = add5Call.initParams(2);
    add5Params[0].setPreviousResult(multiplyResult);
    add5Params[1].setLiteral(5);
    auto add5Promise = add5Request.send().getValue().readRequest().send();

    // Now wait for the results.
    KJ_ASSERT(add3Promise.wait(waitScope).getValue() == 27);
    KJ_ASSERT(add5Promise.wait(waitScope).getValue() == 29);

    std::cout << "PASS" << std::endl;
  }

  {
    // Our calculator interface supports defining functions.  Here we use it
    // to define two functions and then make calls to them as follows:
    //
    //   f(x, y) = x * 100 + y
    //   g(x) = f(x, x + 1) * 2;
    //   f(12, 34)
    //   g(21)
    //
    // Once again, the whole thing takes only one network round trip.

    std::cout << "Defining functions... ";
    std::cout.flush();

    Calculator::Function::Client add = nullptr;
    Calculator::Function::Client multiply = nullptr;
    Calculator::Function::Client f = nullptr;
    Calculator::Function::Client g = nullptr;

    {
      // Get the "add" function from the server.
      auto request = calculator.getOperatorRequest();
      request.setOp(Calculator::Operator::ADD);
      add = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    {
      // Get the "multiply" function from the server.
      auto request = calculator.getOperatorRequest();
      request.setOp(Calculator::Operator::MULTIPLY);
      multiply = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    {
      // Define f.
      auto request = calculator.defFunctionRequest();
      request.setParamCount(2);

      {
        // Build the function body.
        auto addCall = request.getBody().initCall();
        addCall.setFunction(add);
        auto addParams = addCall.initParams(2);
        addParams[1].setParameter(1);  // y

        auto multiplyCall = addParams[0].initCall();
        multiplyCall.setFunction(multiply);
        auto multiplyParams = multiplyCall.initParams(2);
        multiplyParams[0].setParameter(0);  // x
        multiplyParams[1].setLiteral(100);
      }

      f = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    {
      // Define g.
      auto request = calculator.defFunctionRequest();
      request.setParamCount(1);

      {
        // Build the function body.
        auto multiplyCall = request.getBody().initCall();
        multiplyCall.setFunction(multiply);
        auto multiplyParams = multiplyCall.initParams(2);
        multiplyParams[1].setLiteral(2);

        auto fCall = multiplyParams[0].initCall();
        fCall.setFunction(f);
        auto fParams = fCall.initParams(2);
        fParams[0].setParameter(0);

        auto addCall = fParams[1].initCall();
        addCall.setFunction(add);
        auto addParams = addCall.initParams(2);
        addParams[0].setParameter(0);
        addParams[1].setLiteral(1);
      }

      g = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    // OK, we've defined all our functions.  Now create our eval requests.

    // f(12, 34)
    auto fEvalRequest = calculator.evaluateRequest();
    auto fCall = fEvalRequest.initExpression().initCall();
    fCall.setFunction(f);
    auto fParams = fCall.initParams(2);
    fParams[0].setLiteral(12);
    fParams[1].setLiteral(34);
    auto fEvalPromise = fEvalRequest.send().getValue().readRequest().send();

    // g(21)
    auto gEvalRequest = calculator.evaluateRequest();
    auto gCall = gEvalRequest.initExpression().initCall();
    gCall.setFunction(g);
    gCall.initParams(1)[0].setLiteral(21);
    auto gEvalPromise = gEvalRequest.send().getValue().readRequest().send();

    // Wait for the results.
    KJ_ASSERT(fEvalPromise.wait(waitScope).getValue() == 1234);
    KJ_ASSERT(gEvalPromise.wait(waitScope).getValue() == 4244);

    std::cout << "PASS" << std::endl;
  }

  {
    // Make a request that will call back to a function defined locally.
    //
    // Specifically, we will compute 2^(4 + 5).  However, exponent is not
    // defined by the Calculator server.  So, we'll implement the Function
    // interface locally and pass it to the server for it to use when
    // evaluating the expression.
    //
    // This example requires two network round trips to complete, because the
    // server calls back to the client once before finishing.  In this
    // particular case, this could potentially be optimized by using a tail
    // call on the server side -- see CallContext::tailCall().  However, to
    // keep the example simpler, we haven't implemented this optimization in
    // the sample server.

    std::cout << "Using a callback... ";
    std::cout.flush();

    Calculator::Function::Client add = nullptr;

    {
      // Get the "add" function from the server.
      auto request = calculator.getOperatorRequest();
      request.setOp(Calculator::Operator::ADD);
      add = request.send().getFunc();
    }

    // Build the eval request for 2^(4+5).
    auto request = calculator.evaluateRequest();

    auto powCall = request.getExpression().initCall();
    powCall.setFunction(kj::heap<PowerFunction>());
    auto powParams = powCall.initParams(2);
    powParams[0].setLiteral(2);

    auto addCall = powParams[1].initCall();
    addCall.setFunction(add);
    auto addParams = addCall.initParams(2);
    addParams[0].setLiteral(4);
    addParams[1].setLiteral(5);

    // Send the request and wait.
    auto response = request.send().getValue().readRequest()
                           .send().wait(waitScope);
    KJ_ASSERT(response.getValue() == 512);

    std::cout << "PASS" << std::endl;
  }

  return 0;
}