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57 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
57 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
# IRCd Library
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This library can be embedded by developers creating their own server or those
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who simply want to use the library of routines it provides. See the section for
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`Using libircd`.
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The purpose of `libircd` is to facilitate the execution of a server which
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handles requests from end-users. The library hosts a set of pluggable modules
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which may introduce the actual application features (or the "business logic")
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of the server. These additional modules are found in the `modules/` directory;
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### Using libircd
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##### libircd can be embedded in your application with very minimal overhead.
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This allows you to customize and extend the functionality of the server and have
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control over its execution, or, simply use library routines provided by the library
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without any daemonization. Including libircd headers will not include any other
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headers beyond those in the standard library, with minimal impact on your project's
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compile complexity. The prototypical embedding of `libircd` is `charybdis` found in
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the `charybdis/` directory.
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##### libircd runs only one server at a time.
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Keeping with the spirit of simplicity of the original architecture, `libircd`
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continues to be a "singleton" object which uses globals and keeps actual server
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state in the library itself. In other words, **only one IRC daemon can exist
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within a process's address space at a time.** This is actually a profitable
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design decision for making IRCd easier to understand for contributors.
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##### libircd is single-threaded✝
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The library is based around the `boost::asio::io_service` event loop. It is still
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an asynchronous event-based system. We process one event at a time; developers must
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not block execution. Events are never processed concurrently on different threads.
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✝ If there is ever a truly long-running computation or a call to a 3rd party
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library which will do IO and block the event loop, we may use an additional
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`std::thread` to "offload" this operation.
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##### libircd introduces userspace threading
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IRCd presents an interface introducing stackful coroutines, a.k.a. userspace context
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switching, or green threads. The library does not use callbacks as the way to break
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up execution when waiting for events. Instead, we harken back to the simple old ways
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of synchronous programming, where control flow and data are easy to follow.
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##### libircd innovates with formal grammars
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We leverage the boost::spirit system of parsing and printing through formal grammars,
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rather than writing our own parsers manually. In addition, we build several tools
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on top of such formal devices like a type-safe format string library acting as a
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drop-in for ::sprintf(), but accepting objects like std::string without .c_str()
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and prevention of outputting unprintable/unwanted characters that may have been
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injected into the system somewhere prior.
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