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distchan

Package distchan enables Go channels to be used for distributed computation.

NOTE: This library is very young, and as such its API is very much subject to change. Until this notice is removed, it should be assumed that the API is in an alpha state and subject to breakage. That said, the changes shouldn't be too drastic, and feedback is very much encouraged, so please give it a shot!

Why?

While Go's concurrency story around single-process data pipelines is great, its ability to distribute workloads across multiple machines is relatively lacking. There are several options here (notably glow and gleam), but they lack the type-safety and ease-of-use that Go's built-in channels provide.

How?

In a nutshell: standard net primitives, Gob encoding, and reflection.

Architecturally, the package assumes a client-server model of workload distribution. One server can have as many clients connected to it as you want, and work will be distributed across them using a simple round-robin algorithm.

Example

As a simple example, let's say that capitalizing letters in a string is very computationally expensive, and you want to distribute that work across a number of nodes. First, you'll need to create a server in charge of defining the work to be done:

Server

package main

import (
	"log"
	"net"

	"github.com/dradtke/distchan"
)

func main() {
	ln, err := net.Listen("tcp", "localhost:5678")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	var (
		out       = make(chan string)
		in        = make(chan string)
		server, _ = distchan.NewServer(ln, out, in)
	)

	server.Start()
	server.WaitUntilReady() // wait until we have at least one worker available

	go producer(out)

	for s := range in {
		println(s)
	}
}

func producer(out chan<- string) {
	// send strings to be capitalized to out
	out <- "hello world"
	// don't forget to close the channel! this is how all connected
	// clients know that there's no more work coming.
	close(out)
}

Then you'll need to create a client, or worker. It's similarly easy to get wired up, so you can focus on the hard part: capitalizing strings:

Client

package main

import (
	"log"
	"net"
	"strings"

	"github.com/dradtke/distchan"
)

func main() {
	conn, err := net.Dial("tcp", "localhost:5678") // must be able to connect to the server
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	var (
		out = make(chan string)
		in  = make(chan string)
	)

	client, _ := distchan.NewClient(conn, out, in)
	client.Start()

	// Loop over all input from the server...
	for input := range in {
		capitalized := strings.ToUpper(input)
		// ...and send the results back.
		out <- capitalized
	}

	close(out)
	<-client.Done()
}

Check out the example folder for more examples.