include S with type conn = Rpc.Connection.t and type address = Core.Host_and_port.t
The address of a service to which one can connect. E.g. Host_and_port.t
is a
reasonable choice when making a TCP connection.
module Event : sig ... end
val create : server_name:string ‑> ?log:Import.Log.t ‑> ?on_event:(Event.t ‑> unit) ‑> ?retry_delay:(unit ‑> Core.Time.Span.t) ‑> connect:(address ‑> conn Core.Or_error.t Import.Deferred.t) ‑> (unit ‑> address Core.Or_error.t Import.Deferred.t) ‑> t
create ~server_name ~log ~on_event ~retry_delay get_address
returns a persistent
connection to a server whose host and port are obtained via get_address
every
time we try to connect. For example, get_address
might look up a server's host
and port in catalog at a particular path to which multiple redundant copies of a
service are publishing their location. If one copy dies, we get the address of the
another one when looking up the address afterwards.
All connection events (see the type above) are passed to the on_event
callback, if
given. If a ~log
is supplied then these events will be written there as well,
with a "persistent-connection-to" tag value of server_name
, which should be the
name of the server we are connecting to.
`Failed_to_connect error
and `Obtained_address addr
events are only reported if
they are distinct from the most recent event of the same type that has taken place
since the most recent `Attempting_to_connect
event.
Connection is retried after Time.Span.randomize ~percent:0.3 (retry_delay ())
. The
default for retry_delay
is const (sec 10.)
. Note that what this retry delay
actually throttles is the delay between two connection attempts, so when a
long-lived connection dies, connection is usually immediately retried, and if that
failed, wait for another retry delay and retry.
val connected : t ‑> conn Import.Deferred.t
connected
returns the first available connection from the time it is called. When
currently connected, the returned deferred is already determined. If closed
has
been called, then the returned deferred is never determined.
close t
closes the current connection and stops it from trying to reconnect.
After the deferred it returns becomes determined, the last connection has been
closed and no others will be attempted.
Note: no close
calls are ever generated internally in response to the connection
being closed by the other side.
include Persistent_connection_intf.Closable with type t := t
val close : t ‑> unit Import.Deferred.t
close t
closes the connection. The returned deferred becomes determined once any
resources needed to maintain the connection have been released.
val is_closed : t ‑> bool
is_closed t
returns true if close
has ever been called (even if the returned
deferred has not yet been fulfilled).
Note that some modules implementing Closable
may call close internally upon
noticing that the connection was closed by the other side. The interface of such a
module ought to say that this is the case.
val close_finished : t ‑> unit Import.Deferred.t
close_finished t
becomes determined at the same time as the result of the first
call to close
. close_finished
differs from close
in that it does not have the
side effect of initiating a close.
val create' : server_name:string ‑> ?log:Import.Log.t ‑> ?on_event:(Event.t ‑> unit) ‑> ?retry_delay:(unit ‑> Core.Time.Span.t) ‑> ?via_local_interface:Import.Unix.Inet_addr.t ‑> ?implementations:_ Rpc.Connection.Client_implementations.t ‑> ?max_message_size:int ‑> ?make_transport:Rpc.Connection.transport_maker ‑> ?handshake_timeout:Core.Time.Span.t ‑> ?heartbeat_config:Rpc.Connection.Heartbeat_config.t ‑> (unit ‑> Core.Host_and_port.t Core.Or_error.t Import.Deferred.t) ‑> t
create'
is like the create
, but slightly more convenient for constructing
unembellished rpc connections.