eagle/README.md

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2024-06-19 23:25:45 +02:00
# Eagle
## Disclaimer
Eagle is still in development and not currently usable. The current state is barely a proof of concept.
## What is Eagle?
Eagle is a library designed to make "full-stack" applications with Rust. It allows you to define a communication protocl
based on simple "questions" and "answers" which can be implemented as simple functions. From the perspective of the client
(which sends "questions") the protocol is simply a set of async functions on a struct. From the perspective of the server
(which sends "answers") the protocol is a trait which it implements on any struct of its choice.
## Using Eagle
The way that `eagle` is designed to be used is inside a shared dependency between your "server" and your "client". Both of these should be in a workspace. Create a `shared` crate which both components should depend on. Inside this crate, you can
define your protocol as an enum:
```rs
use eagle::Protocol;
#[derive(Protocol)]
pub enum TestProtocol {
Addition((i32, i32), i32),
SomeKindOfQuestion(String, i32)
}
```
In your server, you will be able to implement this protocol for any struct (and in the future register it for communication):
```rs
use shared::TestProtocolServer;
pub struct Server;
impl TestProtocolServer for Server {
fn addition(&mut self, a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 {
a + b
}
fn some_kind_of_question(&mut self, question: String) -> i32 {
42
}
}
```
In your client, you can use an instance of the client struct to query the server:
```rs
use shared::TestProtocolClient;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let client = TestProtocolClient::new();
assert_eq!(client.addition(2, 2).await, 4);
}
```
## License
2024-06-19 23:28:57 +02:00
Eagle is licensed under the AGPL (GNU Affero General Public License). To learn more, read [LICENSE.md](LICENSE)