On 08.05.2014 19:30, Dominik Charousset wrote:
Hi all,
attached you'll find the first preliminary submission for Boost.Actor as ZIP file along with the Manual in PDF version. You currently still need CMake, a Boost.Jam build file will follow. The project is hosted at GitHub: https://github.com/Neverlord/boost.actor
As far as I understand a library with LGPL can not be part of boost (see www.boost.org/development/requirements.html ). So the it should be changed.
To state the obvious: we [1] took our time, but not because we are not taking the boost submission serious. In fact, the opposite is true. We did refine libcppa (which is the base for Boost.Actor) over the last months based on community feedback - feedback from this mailing list, last year's C++Now, GitHub, and libcppa's mailing list. However, we are not just trying to lift our library into Boost. We want Boost.Actor to fit into Boost as good as possible - and we did significant changes to the API (see below), which also took time. Furthermore, we think performance is key when providing a native actor system. Boost.Actor/libcppa has now reached a level of performance with the latest version that lives up to our expectations - and hopefully to the expectations of (future) users as well. A brief performance evaluation [2] is attached. The graphs still mention 'libcppa' instead of Boost.Actor.
I hope the lack of Boost.Jam support is not too much of an issue - I thought it would be a good idea to post the preliminary submission before the C++Now (you can meet me there!), to get people time to play with Boost.Actor beforehand.
*Differences between Boost.Actor and libcppa*
If you don't have any experience with libcppa, you can simply skip this. The most visible change is the removal of any_tuple and cow_tuple. The COW tuple implementation of libcppa is in our opinion not general enough and is too intermeshed with the type system. Instead, Boost.Actor provides the class `message` that is an opaque container from a user's point of view. Also, the pattern matching has been reduced to a minimal DSL for defining message handlers. The separate DSL for guard expressions is gone completely (a similar functionality still exists though). Since our pattern matching only worked with messages/any_tuples, we don't see too much use of it outside of Boost.Actor. We are still hoping for native pattern matching in C++ (N3449 proposed this a while ago) in which case our DSL would become unnecessary anyways. As a side-effect of removing all these parts, Boost.Actor has become a streamlined version of libcppa that is easier to grasp and that will be easier to maintain i
n the long run as well.
*Boost.Actor depends on...*
variant, optional, none, string_algorithms, intrusive_ptr, thread (currently as header-only dependency), context/coroutine (for cooperatively scheduled blocking actors). Some examples also require program_options.
*Boost.Actor does NOT use...*
(1) MPL. Boost.Actor uses a ludicrous amount of metaprogramming based on boost::actor::detail::type_list. I've tried to port it to MPL and wasted almost two days doing so. MPL is a great C++ library. Unfortunately, C++98, not C++11. Even after adding variadic helpers to reduce the amount of template instantiations, it would still explode and fail to compile. I've stopped after writing half the size of the current type_list utility functions and still wasn't able to reduce the amount of template instantiations significantly enough. That being said, I am looking forward to the GSoC project for MPL11.
(2) Serialization. The first and most obvious problem I have with this library is the lack of a portable binary archive. String serialization is sufficient for a lot of applications, but the performance hit for both networking overhead and the string serialization itself is not acceptable in an actor system. Furthermore, simply adding such a binary archive would not be enough. The library does not give you a platform-independent representation of the type names, which is crucial. Also, one cannot create an instance of a type given only its type name and then deserialize its values from a network stream (I was thinking of ETI::key_register using the uniform names and ETI::find, but it only solves a part of the problem). Adding all of these capabilities on top of boost.serialization plus writing a portable binary archive (or maybe use something like EOS - http://epa.codeplex.com/) would probably result in more code and most likely in a more complicated design, i.e., would be harder
to maintain. Maybe I miss the forest for the trees here and some experienced boost.serialization user knows a straightforward way I don't see. However, maybe there is interest in extending boost.serialization. I'd be happy to work on patches for adding uniform names, etc.
(3) Boost.Asio. There is definitely potential to port the low-level parts of the middleman to Asio, I think. These changes would be transparent to the user, though, since users really only use the broker and can forget about the rest.
*Separating parts of Boost.Actor?*
Vicente J. Botet Escriba suggested to separate some parts of library. Namely the constexpr atom() [the other parts he suggested were removed, btw]. Aside from that, there are some C++11 utility functions that I think would be useful for other developers as well. Namely int_list [3] which can be used to create indices for variadic types such as tuples to allow users to apply the values of a tuple to a functor with apply_args [4]. type_list [5] is a powerful tool too, but I think this functionality goes to MPL11 anyways. Something that might be worth lifting to the boost namespace is unit [6], which makes metaprogramming (for me) a lot easier by providing an easy way of lifting void to something useful and don't need to worry whether or not it might end up in a tuple or variant. MPL already has void_t, but it doesn't seem to be indented to be used the way I use unit. For binary serialization of floats, there is IEEE 754 packing/unpacking [6] that is based on http://beej.us/guide/bgn
et/examples/pack2.c What is the difference from your int_list and std::integer_sequence (http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/integer_sequence) ?
Sorry for the wall of text, the Mail got longer and longer somehow ...
[1] "We" are a working group at the University of Applied Sciences Hamburg: http://inet.cpt.haw-hamburg.de/
[2] The sources for all benchmark programs can be found here: https://github.com/Neverlord/cppa-benchmarks, please keep in mind that the evaluation uses libcppa, so the API used in the benchmarks is different.
[3] https://github.com/Neverlord/boost.actor/blob/a0cab41e2946df7d751c59dfead0c2...
[4] https://github.com/Neverlord/boost.actor/blob/ea53a515e09a98baa173ad379127c3...
[5] https://github.com/Neverlord/boost.actor/blob/58d6177837788b2e54b8547531bda9...
[6] https://github.com/Neverlord/boost.actor/blob/644a47760d6b55eef438a81d7bcdc2...
[7] https://github.com/Neverlord/boost.actor/blob/ea53a515e09a98baa173ad379127c3...
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