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You're reading from  Asynchronous Programming in Rust

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781805128137
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Carl Fredrik Samson
Carl Fredrik Samson
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Carl Fredrik Samson

Carl Fredrik Samson is a popular technology writer and has been active in the Rust community since 2018. He has an MSc in Business Administration where he specialized in strategy and finance. When not writing, he's a father of two children and a CEO of a company with 300 employees. He's been interested in different kinds of technologies his whole life and his programming experience ranges from programming against old IBM mainframes to modern cloud computing, using everything from assembly to Visual Basic for Applications. He has contributed to several open source projects including the official documentation for asynchronous Rust.
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Non-leaf futures

Non-leaf futures are the kind of futures we as users of a runtime write ourselves using the async keyword to create a task that can be run on the executor.

The bulk of an async program will consist of non-leaf futures, which are a kind of pause-able computation. This is an important distinction since these futures represent a set of operations. Often, such a task will await a leaf future as one of many operations to complete the task.

This is an example of a non-leaf future:

let non_leaf = async {
    let mut stream = TcpStream::connect("127.0.0.1:3000").await.unwrap();
    println!("connected!");
    let result = stream.write(b"hello world\n").await;
    println!("message sent!");
    ...
};

The two highlighted lines indicate points where we pause the execution, yield control to a runtime, and eventually resume. In...

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Asynchronous Programming in Rust
Published in: Feb 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781805128137

Author (1)

author image
Carl Fredrik Samson

Carl Fredrik Samson is a popular technology writer and has been active in the Rust community since 2018. He has an MSc in Business Administration where he specialized in strategy and finance. When not writing, he's a father of two children and a CEO of a company with 300 employees. He's been interested in different kinds of technologies his whole life and his programming experience ranges from programming against old IBM mainframes to modern cloud computing, using everything from assembly to Visual Basic for Applications. He has contributed to several open source projects including the official documentation for asynchronous Rust.
Read more about Carl Fredrik Samson