Turbolift is a prototype distribution interface for rust. It's designed to make distribution easier and more maintainable by extracting and distributing specific functions and their dependencies from a larger rust application. Turbolift then acts as the glue between these extracted mini-apps and the main application.
Look in the examples directory for full projects with working syntax examples. An external example is maintained that can be used as a template repo.
- Turbolift works as a proof-of-concept, but has not been optimized to shrink compilation time/requirements.
- Distribution is feature-gated in Turbolift to facilitate development / conditional distribution. The feature is called "distributed."
- Turbolift is implemented over http using
reqwest
andactix-web
(no current plans to refactor to use a lower level network protocol). - Turbolift assumes a secure network– function parameters are sent in plaintext to the microservice.
- When building, anything in the project directory or in local dependencies declared in the project manifest could be bundled and sent over the network to workers.
More information is available on the project homepage.
- Because of reliance on unstable proc_macro::Span features, all programs
using turbolift need to be built with an unstable nightly compiler flag (e.g.
RUSTFLAGS='--cfg procmacro2_semver_exempt' cargo build
) (tracking issue). - Functions are assumed to be pure (lacking side-effects such as writing to the file system or mutation of a global variable).
- For a function to be distributed, its inputs and outputs have to be (de)serializable with Serde.
- Distributed functions cannot be nested in other functions.
- Distributed functions cannot be methods.
- Distributed functions cannot use other functions called
main
. - Distributed functions not in
main.rs
cannot use functions declared inmain.rs
. - Distributed functions cannot have
-> impl Trait
types. - Unused functions that have been marked with the
on
macro will still be compiled for distribution, even if eventually the linker will then remove the completed binary and distribution code. - projects can have relative local dependencies listing in the cargo manifest, but those dependencies themselves should not have relative local dependencies prone to breaking.
- if your program produces side effects when initialized, for example when global constants are initialized, those side effects may be triggered for each function call.
- turbolift runs functions on an unreproducible linux build, it doesn't e.g. pin the env or match the OS of the current environment.
- support kubernetes (pr).
- implement startup, liveliness, and readiness probes for pods.
- while setting up a new service, wait for the pod to come alive via readiness check instead of just sleeping (code location).
- roadmap support for other targets.
- only use distributed configuration when flagged (like in
cargo build --features "distributed"
). Otherwise, just transform the tagged function into an async function (to provide an identical API), but don't build any microservices or alter any code. - build cross-architecture compilation tests into the CI.