2 releases
| 0.1.1 | Jun 18, 2025 |
|---|---|
| 0.1.0 | Jun 5, 2025 |
#407 in Asynchronous
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Vuo: Asynchronous Stream Processing for Rust
Vuo is an asynchronous stream processing library for Rust, built on the Actix actor framework. It provides a flexible way to define, transform, and consume streams of data with a rich set of operators, inspired by functional streaming concepts.
Overview
Vuo allows you to construct complex data processing pipelines that operate asynchronously. Each stream operation is typically managed by a dedicated actor, enabling concurrent processing while maintaining the defined stream semantics (e.g., sequential concatenation in flat_map, parallel execution in par_map_unordered).
The library is designed to be extensible and aims to provide a robust foundation for building reactive and data-intensive applications in Rust.
Features
- Asynchronous Stream Processing: Leverages Actix actors for non-blocking operations.
- Rich Set of Operators: Includes common functional stream operators:
- Sources:
emits,future,unfold,eval - Transformations:
map,filter,flat_map(aliasconcat_map),scan,fold,chunks - Timing/Concurrency:
debounce,throttle,par_map_unordered,par_map_ordered,merge,zip,group_within - Side-effects:
eval_tap,drain - Control Flow:
take,take_while,drop_while,interrupt_when
- Sources:
- Error Handling: Provides mechanisms like
handle_error_withandon_finalizefor managing stream errors. Errors are typically propagated asStringvalues. - Actor-Based: Each stream stage is an Actix actor, enabling fine-grained control and supervision if needed (though supervision is abstracted away by the
StreamAPI).
Getting Started
To use Vuo in your project, add it as a dependency in your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
vuo = "0.1.0" # Replace with the desired version
# Ensure actix and futures are also present
actix = "0.13"
futures = "0.3"
You'll need an Actix runtime to execute streams.
Basic Usage
Here's a simple example of how to define and use a stream:
use vuo::Stream; // Assuming Stream is re-exported from lib.rs
async fn run_example() -> Result<Vec<i32>, String> {
Stream::emits(vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6])
.map(|x| x * 2) // Stream: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12
.filter(|x| *x > 7) // Stream: 8, 10, 12
.eval_tap(|x| async move { println!("Tapping element: {}", x); }) // Prints elements
.flat_map(|x| Stream::emits(vec![x, x + 1])) // Stream: 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13
.take(4) // Stream: 8, 9, 10, 11
.compile_to_list() // Consumes the stream and collects elements into a Vec
.await
}
// To run this example (e.g., in a test or main function with Actix runtime):
// #[actix_rt::main]
// async fn main() {
// match run_example().await {
// Ok(results) => println!("Final results: {:?}", results), // Expected: [8, 9, 10, 11]
// Err(e) => eprintln!("Stream error: {}", e),
// }
// }
Key Operators
Vuo provides a variety of operators to construct and manipulate streams:
- Sources:
Stream::emits(items): Creates a stream from an iterator.Stream::future(fut): Creates a stream from a future that resolves to aResult<Item, String>.Stream::unfold(initial_state, fn): Creates a stream by repeatedly applying a function to a state.Stream::eval(value): Creates a stream that emits a single value.
- Transformations:
.map(fn): Applies a function to each element..filter(predicate_fn): Keeps elements that satisfy a predicate..flat_map(fn_produces_stream): Maps each element to a new stream and concatenates the results. (alias:concat_map).scan(initial, fn): Applies a folding function and emits each intermediate accumulator state..fold(initial, fn): Reduces the stream to a single value, emitted as the last element.
- Side-Effects:
.eval_tap(fn_returns_future): Performs an asynchronous side-effect for each element without modifying it..drain(): Consumes all elements, emitting a single()when the stream ends.
- Error Handling:
.handle_error_with(fn_err_to_stream): Catches errors and switches to a fallback stream..on_finalize(fn_returns_future): Executes an asynchronous action when the stream completes or is cancelled, regardless of success or failure.
Error Handling
Errors that occur during the setup of a stream stage or during its execution (if not handled by a specific operator like Stream::future) are generally propagated as String values.
The compile_to_list() method, for example, returns a Result<Vec<Out>, String>.
Use handle_error_with to catch these errors and provide alternative stream processing logic. on_finalize is useful for cleanup tasks that must run regardless of the stream's outcome.
Running Tests
To run the tests for this library:
cargo test
Dependencies
~5–16MB
~144K SLoC