chip
Chip is a local process registry that plays along with Gleam’s Subject
type for referencing
erlang processes. It can hold to a set of subjects to later reference individually or dispatch
a callback as a group. Will also automatically delist dead processes.
Types
An shorter alias for the registry’s Subject.
Sometimes, when building out your system it may be useful to state the Registry’s types.
Example
let assert Ok(registry) = chip.start()
let registry: chip.Registry(Event, Id, Topic)
Which is equivalent to:
let assert Ok(registry) = chip.start()
let registry: process.Subject(chip.Message(Event, Id, Topic))
By specifying the types we can document the kind of registry we are working with.
pub type Registry(msg, tag, group) =
process.Subject(Message(msg, tag, group))
Functions
pub fn dispatch(
registry: Subject(Message(a, b, c)),
callback: fn(Subject(a)) -> d,
) -> Nil
Applies a callback over all registered Subjects.
Example
chip.dispatch(registry, fn(subject) {
process.send(subject, message)
})
pub fn dispatch_group(
registry: Subject(Message(a, b, c)),
group: c,
callback: fn(Subject(a)) -> d,
) -> Nil
Applies a callback over a group.
Example
chip.dispatch_group(registry, Pets, fn(subject) {
process.send(subject, message)
})
pub fn find(
registry: Subject(Message(a, b, c)),
tag: b,
) -> Result(Subject(a), Nil)
Retrieves a tagged subject.
Example
let assert Ok(subject) = chip.find(registry, "Luis")
pub fn group(
registrant: Chip(a, b, c),
group: c,
) -> Chip(a, b, c)
Adds the registrant under a group.
Example
chip.new(subject)
|> chip.group(General)
pub fn new(subject: Subject(a)) -> Chip(a, b, c)
Creates a new registrant value.
Example
chip.new(subject)
pub fn register(
registry: Subject(Message(a, b, c)),
registrant: Chip(a, b, c),
) -> Nil
Registers a Registrant
.
Example
let assert Ok(registry) = chip.start()
chip.new(subject)
|> chip.register(registry, _)
Registrant
may be registered under a tag or group.
let assert Ok(registry) = chip.start()
chip.new(subject)
|> chip.tag("Francisco")
|> chip.group(Coffee)
|> chip.register(registry, _)
You may register any subject at any point in time but usually keeping it under the initialization
step of your process (like an Actor’s init
callback) will keep things organized and tidy.
pub fn start() -> Result(Subject(Message(a, b, c)), StartError)
Starts the registry.
Example
> chip.start()