Prerequisites
This tutorial assumes that you are familiar with writing and running a Fuchsia component and with implementing a FIDL server, which are both covered in the FIDL server tutorial. For the full set of FIDL tutorials, refer to the overview.
Overview
This tutorial implements a client for a FIDL protocol and runs it against the server created in the previous tutorial. The client in this tutorial is synchronous. There is an alternate tutorial for asynchronous clients.
If you want to write the code yourself, delete the following directories:
rm -r examples/fidl/rust/client_sync/*
Create the component
Create a new component project at examples/fidl/rust/client_sync
:
Add a
main()
function toexamples/fidl/rust/client_sync/src/main.rs
:fn main() { println!("Hello, world!"); }
Declare a target for the client in
examples/fidl/rust/client_sync/BUILD.gn
:import("//build/components.gni") import("//build/rust/rustc_binary.gni") # Declare an executable for the client. rustc_binary("bin") { name = "fidl_echo_rust_client_sync" edition = "2021" sources = [ "src/main.rs" ] } fuchsia_component("echo-client") { component_name = "echo_client" manifest = "meta/client.cml" deps = [ ":bin" ] }
Add a component manifest in
examples/fidl/rust/client_sync/meta/client.cml
:{ include: [ "syslog/client.shard.cml" ], // Information about the program to run. program: { // Use the built-in ELF runner. runner: "elf", // The binary to run for this component. binary: "bin/fidl_echo_rust_client_sync", }, // Capabilities used by this component. use: [ { protocol: "fuchsia.examples.Echo" }, ], }
Once you have created your component, ensure that you can add it to the build configuration:
fx set core.x64 --with //examples/fidl/rust/client_sync:echo-client
Build the Fuchsia image:
fx build
Edit GN dependencies
Add the following dependencies to the
rustc_binary
:deps = [ "//examples/fidl/fuchsia.examples:fuchsia.examples_rust", "//sdk/rust/zx", "//src/lib/fuchsia-component", "//third_party/rust_crates:anyhow", ]
Then, import them in
main.rs
:use anyhow::{Context as _, Error}; use fidl_fuchsia_examples::{EchoEvent, EchoMarker}; use fuchsia_component::client::connect_to_protocol_sync;
These dependencies are explained in the server tutorial.
The one new dependency is fuchsia-zircon
, which is a crate containing type safe
bindings for making Zircon kernel syscalls. In this example, the crate is used to
create a channel.
Connect to the server
The steps in this section explain how to add code to the main()
function
that connects the client to the server and makes requests to it.
Initialize a channel
fn main() -> Result<(), Error> {
// Connect to the Echo protocol, returning a synchronous proxy
let echo =
connect_to_protocol_sync::<EchoMarker>().context("Failed to connect to echo service")?;
// Make an EchoString request, with no timeout for receiving the response
let res = echo.echo_string("hello", zx::MonotonicInstant::INFINITE)?;
println!("response: {:?}", res);
// Make a SendString request
echo.send_string("hi")?;
// Wait for a single OnString event.
let EchoEvent::OnString { response } =
echo.wait_for_event(zx::MonotonicInstant::INFINITE).context("error receiving events")?;
println!("Received OnString event for string {:?}", response);
Ok(())
}
This channel will be used to communicate between the client and server.
Connect to the server
fn main() -> Result<(), Error> {
// Connect to the Echo protocol, returning a synchronous proxy
let echo =
connect_to_protocol_sync::<EchoMarker>().context("Failed to connect to echo service")?;
// Make an EchoString request, with no timeout for receiving the response
let res = echo.echo_string("hello", zx::MonotonicInstant::INFINITE)?;
println!("response: {:?}", res);
// Make a SendString request
echo.send_string("hi")?;
// Wait for a single OnString event.
let EchoEvent::OnString { response } =
echo.wait_for_event(zx::MonotonicInstant::INFINITE).context("error receiving events")?;
println!("Received OnString event for string {:?}", response);
Ok(())
}
connect_channel_to_service
will bind the provided channel end to the specified
service. Under the hood, this call triggers a sequence of events that starts on the client and traces through the server code from the previous tutorial:
- Makes a request to the component framework containing the name of the service to connect to, and the
other end of the channel. The name of the service is obtained implicitly using the
SERVICE_NAME
ofEchoMarker
template argument, similarly to how the service path is determined on the server end. - This client object is returned from
connect_to_protocol
.
In the background, the request to the component framework gets routed to the server:
- When this request is received in the server process,
it wakes up the
async::Executor
executor and tells it that theServiceFs
task can now make progress and should be run. - The
ServiceFs
wakes up, sees the request available on the startup handle of the process, and looks up the name of the requested service in the list of(service_name, service_startup_func)
provided through calls toadd_service
,add_fidl_service
, etc. If a matchingservice_name
exists, it callsservice_startup_func
with the provided channel to connect to the new service. IncomingService::Echo
is called with aRequestStream
(typed-channel) of theEcho
FIDL protocol that is registered withadd_fidl_service
. The incoming request channel is stored inIncomingService::Echo
and is added to the stream of incoming requests.for_each_concurrent
consumes theServiceFs
into aStream
of typeIncomingService
. A handler is run for each entry in the stream, which matches over the incoming requests and dispatches to therun_echo_server
. The resulting futures from each call torun_echo_server
are run concurrently when theServiceFs
stream isawait
ed.- When a request is sent on the channel, the channel the
Echo
service is becomes readable, which wakes up the asynchronous code in the body ofrun_echo_server
.
Send requests to the server
The code makes two requests to the server:
- An
EchoString
request - A
SendString
request
fn main() -> Result<(), Error> {
// Connect to the Echo protocol, returning a synchronous proxy
let echo =
connect_to_protocol_sync::<EchoMarker>().context("Failed to connect to echo service")?;
// Make an EchoString request, with no timeout for receiving the response
let res = echo.echo_string("hello", zx::MonotonicInstant::INFINITE)?;
println!("response: {:?}", res);
// Make a SendString request
echo.send_string("hi")?;
// Wait for a single OnString event.
let EchoEvent::OnString { response } =
echo.wait_for_event(zx::MonotonicInstant::INFINITE).context("error receiving events")?;
println!("Received OnString event for string {:?}", response);
Ok(())
}
The call to echo_string
will block until a response is received from the server, and therefore
it takes a timeout argument as the last parameter.
On the other hand, the call to send_string
does not have a timeout parameter since SendString
does not have a response. With the current server implementation, an OnString
event
will be sent to the client after this request is received. However, the synchronous Rust bindings
do not have support for handling events.
The bindings reference describes how these methods are generated, and the Fuchsia rustdoc includes documentation for the generated FIDL crates.
Run the client
In order for the client and server to communicate using the Echo
protocol,
component framework must route the fuchsia.examples.Echo
capability from the
server to the client. For this tutorial, a
realm
component is
provided to declare the appropriate capabilities and routes.
Configure your build to include the provided package that includes the echo realm, server, and client:
fx set core.x64 --with //examples/fidl/rust:echo-rust-client-sync
Build the Fuchsia image:
fx build
Run the
echo_realm
component. This creates the client and server component instances and routes the capabilities:ffx component run /core/ffx-laboratory:echo_realm fuchsia-pkg://fuchsia.com/echo-rust-client-sync#meta/echo_realm.cm
Start the
echo_client
instance:ffx component start /core/ffx-laboratory:echo_realm/echo_client
The server component starts when the client attempts to connect to the Echo
protocol. You should see output similar to the following in the device logs
(ffx log
):
[echo_server][][I] Listening for incoming connections...
[echo_server][][I] Received EchoString request for string "hello"
[echo_server][][I] Response sent successfully
[echo_client][][I] response: "hello"
[echo_server][][I] Received SendString request for string "hi"
[echo_server][][I] Event sent successfully
[echo_client][][I] Received OnString event for string "hi"
Terminate the realm component to stop execution and clean up the component instances:
ffx component destroy /core/ffx-laboratory:echo_realm