Trait futures::sink::Sink [−][src]
pub trait Sink { type SinkItem; type SinkError;}Show methods
fn start_send(
&mut self,
item: Self::SinkItem
) -> StartSend<Self::SinkItem, Self::SinkError>; fn poll_complete(&mut self) -> Poll<(), Self::SinkError>; fn close(&mut self) -> Poll<(), Self::SinkError> { ... } fn wait(self) -> Wait<Self>
where
Self: Sized, { ... } fn with<U, F, Fut>(self, f: F) -> With<Self, U, F, Fut>
where
F: FnMut(U) -> Fut,
Fut: IntoFuture<Item = Self::SinkItem>,
Fut::Error: From<Self::SinkError>,
Self: Sized, { ... } fn with_flat_map<U, F, St>(self, f: F) -> WithFlatMap<Self, U, F, St>
where
F: FnMut(U) -> St,
St: Stream<Item = Self::SinkItem, Error = Self::SinkError>,
Self: Sized, { ... } fn sink_map_err<F, E>(self, f: F) -> SinkMapErr<Self, F>
where
F: FnOnce(Self::SinkError) -> E,
Self: Sized, { ... } fn sink_from_err<E: From<Self::SinkError>>(self) -> SinkFromErr<Self, E>
where
Self: Sized, { ... } fn buffer(self, amt: usize) -> Buffer<Self>
where
Self: Sized, { ... } fn fanout<S>(self, other: S) -> Fanout<Self, S>
where
Self: Sized,
Self::SinkItem: Clone,
S: Sink<SinkItem = Self::SinkItem, SinkError = Self::SinkError>, { ... } fn flush(self) -> Flush<Self>
where
Self: Sized, { ... } fn send(self, item: Self::SinkItem) -> Send<Self>
where
Self: Sized, { ... } fn send_all<S>(self, stream: S) -> SendAll<Self, S>
where
S: Stream<Item = Self::SinkItem>,
Self::SinkError: From<S::Error>,
Self: Sized, { ... }
Expand description
A Sink
is a value into which other values can be sent, asynchronously.
Basic examples of sinks include the sending side of:
- Channels
- Sockets
- Pipes
In addition to such “primitive” sinks, it’s typical to layer additional functionality, such as buffering, on top of an existing sink.
Sending to a sink is “asynchronous” in the sense that the value may not be sent in its entirety immediately. Instead, values are sent in a two-phase way: first by initiating a send, and then by polling for completion. This two-phase setup is analogous to buffered writing in synchronous code, where writes often succeed immediately, but internally are buffered and are actually written only upon flushing.
In addition, the Sink
may be full, in which case it is not even possible
to start the sending process.
As with Future
and Stream
, the Sink
trait is built from a few core
required methods, and a host of default methods for working in a
higher-level way. The Sink::send_all
combinator is of particular
importance: you can use it to send an entire stream to a sink, which is
the simplest way to ultimately consume a sink.
You can find more information/tutorials about streams online at https://tokio.rs
Associated Types
Required methods
Begin the process of sending a value to the sink.
As the name suggests, this method only begins the process of sending
the item. If the sink employs buffering, the item isn’t fully processed
until the buffer is fully flushed. Since sinks are designed to work with
asynchronous I/O, the process of actually writing out the data to an
underlying object takes place asynchronously. You must use
poll_complete
in order to drive completion of a send. In particular,
start_send
does not begin the flushing process
Return value
This method returns AsyncSink::Ready
if the sink was able to start
sending item
. In that case, you must ensure that you call
poll_complete
to process the sent item to completion. Note, however,
that several calls to start_send
can be made prior to calling
poll_complete
, which will work on completing all pending items.
The method returns AsyncSink::NotReady
if the sink was unable to begin
sending, usually due to being full. The sink must have attempted to
complete processing any outstanding requests (equivalent to
poll_complete
) before yielding this result. The current task will be
automatically scheduled for notification when the sink may be ready to
receive new values.
Errors
If the sink encounters an error other than being temporarily full, it
uses the Err
variant to signal that error. In most cases, such errors
mean that the sink will permanently be unable to receive items.
Panics
This method may panic in a few situations, depending on the specific sink:
- It is called outside of the context of a task.
- A previous call to
start_send
orpoll_complete
yielded an error.
fn poll_complete(&mut self) -> Poll<(), Self::SinkError>
[src]
fn poll_complete(&mut self) -> Poll<(), Self::SinkError>
[src]Flush all output from this sink, if necessary.
Some sinks may buffer intermediate data as an optimization to improve
throughput. In other words, if a sink has a corresponding receiver then
a successful start_send
above may not guarantee that the value is
actually ready to be received by the receiver. This function is intended
to be used to ensure that values do indeed make their way to the
receiver.
This function will attempt to process any pending requests on behalf of the sink and drive it to completion.
Return value
Returns Ok(Async::Ready(()))
when no buffered items remain. If this
value is returned then it is guaranteed that all previous values sent
via start_send
will be guaranteed to be available to a listening
receiver.
Returns Ok(Async::NotReady)
if there is more work left to do, in which
case the current task is scheduled to wake up when more progress may be
possible.
Errors
Returns Err
if the sink encounters an error while processing one of
its pending requests. Due to the buffered nature of requests, it is not
generally possible to correlate the error with a particular request. As
with start_send
, these errors are generally “fatal” for continued use
of the sink.
Panics
This method may panic in a few situations, depending on the specific sink:
- It is called outside of the context of a task.
- A previous call to
start_send
orpoll_complete
yielded an error.
Compatibility nodes
The name of this method may be slightly misleading as the original intention was to have this method be more general than just flushing requests. Over time though it was decided to trim back the ambitions of this method to what it’s always done, just flushing.
In the 0.2 release series of futures this method will be renamed to
poll_flush
. For 0.1, however, the breaking change is not happening
yet.
Provided methods
A method to indicate that no more values will ever be pushed into this sink.
This method is used to indicate that a sink will no longer even be given
another value by the caller. That is, the start_send
method above will
be called no longer (nor poll_complete
). This method is intended to
model “graceful shutdown” in various protocols where the intent to shut
down is followed by a little more blocking work.
Callers of this function should work it it in a similar fashion to
poll_complete
. Once called it may return NotReady
which indicates
that more external work needs to happen to make progress. The current
task will be scheduled to receive a notification in such an event,
however.
Note that this function will imply poll_complete
above. That is, if a
sink has buffered data, then it’ll be flushed out during a close
operation. It is not necessary to have poll_complete
return Ready
before a close
is called. Once a close
is called, though,
poll_complete
cannot be called.
Return value
This function, like poll_complete
, returns a Poll
. The value is
Ready
once the close operation has completed. At that point it should
be safe to drop the sink and deallocate associated resources.
If the value returned is NotReady
then the sink is not yet closed and
work needs to be done to close it. The work has been scheduled and the
current task will receive a notification when it’s next ready to call
this method again.
Finally, this function may also return an error.
Errors
This function will return an Err
if any operation along the way during
the close operation fails. An error typically is fatal for a sink and is
unable to be recovered from, but in specific situations this may not
always be true.
Note that it’s also typically an error to call start_send
or
poll_complete
after the close
function is called. This method will
initiate a close, and continuing to send values after that (or attempt
to flush) may result in strange behavior, panics, errors, etc. Once this
method is called, it must be the only method called on this Sink
.
Panics
This method may panic or cause panics if:
- It is called outside the context of a future’s task
- It is called and then
start_send
orpoll_complete
is called
Compatibility notes
Note that this function is currently by default a provided function,
defaulted to calling poll_complete
above. This function was added
in the 0.1 series of the crate as a backwards-compatible addition. It
is intended that in the 0.2 series the method will no longer be a
default method.
It is highly recommended to consider this method a required method and
to implement it whenever you implement Sink
locally. It is especially
crucial to be sure to close inner sinks, if applicable.
Creates a new object which will produce a synchronous sink.
The sink returned does not implement the Sink
trait, and instead
only has two methods: send
and flush
. These two methods correspond
to start_send
and poll_complete
above except are executed in a
blocking fashion.
Composes a function in front of the sink.
This adapter produces a new sink that passes each value through the
given function f
before sending it to self
.
To process each value, f
produces a future, which is then polled to
completion before passing its result down to the underlying sink. If the
future produces an error, that error is returned by the new sink.
Note that this function consumes the given sink, returning a wrapped
version, much like Iterator::map
.
fn with_flat_map<U, F, St>(self, f: F) -> WithFlatMap<Self, U, F, St> where
F: FnMut(U) -> St,
St: Stream<Item = Self::SinkItem, Error = Self::SinkError>,
Self: Sized,
[src]
fn with_flat_map<U, F, St>(self, f: F) -> WithFlatMap<Self, U, F, St> where
F: FnMut(U) -> St,
St: Stream<Item = Self::SinkItem, Error = Self::SinkError>,
Self: Sized,
[src]Composes a function in front of the sink.
This adapter produces a new sink that passes each value through the
given function f
before sending it to self
.
To process each value, f
produces a stream, of which each value
is passed to the underlying sink. A new value will not be accepted until
the stream has been drained
Note that this function consumes the given sink, returning a wrapped
version, much like Iterator::flat_map
.
Examples
Using this function with an iterator through use of the stream::iter_ok()
function
use futures::prelude::*; use futures::stream; use futures::sync::mpsc; let (tx, rx) = mpsc::channel::<i32>(5); let tx = tx.with_flat_map(|x| { stream::iter_ok(vec![42; x].into_iter().map(|y| y)) }); tx.send(5).wait().unwrap(); assert_eq!(rx.collect().wait(), Ok(vec![42, 42, 42, 42, 42]))
fn sink_map_err<F, E>(self, f: F) -> SinkMapErr<Self, F> where
F: FnOnce(Self::SinkError) -> E,
Self: Sized,
[src]
fn sink_map_err<F, E>(self, f: F) -> SinkMapErr<Self, F> where
F: FnOnce(Self::SinkError) -> E,
Self: Sized,
[src]Transforms the error returned by the sink.
fn sink_from_err<E: From<Self::SinkError>>(self) -> SinkFromErr<Self, E> where
Self: Sized,
[src]
fn sink_from_err<E: From<Self::SinkError>>(self) -> SinkFromErr<Self, E> where
Self: Sized,
[src]Map this sink’s error to any error implementing From
for this sink’s
Error
, returning a new sink.
If wanting to map errors of a Sink + Stream
, use .sink_from_err().from_err()
.
Adds a fixed-size buffer to the current sink.
The resulting sink will buffer up to amt
items when the underlying
sink is unwilling to accept additional items. Calling poll_complete
on
the buffered sink will attempt to both empty the buffer and complete
processing on the underlying sink.
Note that this function consumes the given sink, returning a wrapped
version, much like Iterator::map
.
This method is only available when the use_std
feature of this
library is activated, and it is activated by default.
Fanout items to multiple sinks.
This adapter clones each incoming item and forwards it to both this as well as the other sink at the same time.
A future that completes when the sink has finished processing all pending requests.
The sink itself is returned after flushing is complete; this adapter is intended to be used when you want to stop sending to the sink until all current requests are processed.
A future that completes after the given item has been fully processed into the sink, including flushing.
Note that, because of the flushing requirement, it is usually better
to batch together items to send via send_all
, rather than flushing
between each item.
On completion, the sink is returned.
A future that completes after the given stream has been fully processed into the sink, including flushing.
This future will drive the stream to keep producing items until it is exhausted, sending each item to the sink. It will complete once both the stream is exhausted, the sink has received all items, the sink has been flushed, and the sink has been closed.
Doing sink.send_all(stream)
is roughly equivalent to
stream.forward(sink)
. The returned future will exhaust all items from
stream
and send them to self
, closing self
when all items have been
received.
On completion, the pair (sink, source)
is returned.