combine 0.5.5 combine: ^0.5.5 copied to clipboard
A Flutter package which allows you to work with MethodChannels in Isolate and provides simplified Isolate and Thread Pool API.
This plugin Combines Isolate, MethodChannel and Thread Pool.
In other words it provides a way to use flutter plugins in Isolate
or just work with user friendly API for Isolates.
Learn more in this article!
How it works with Method Channels. Briefly
For the MethodChannel
combine is using
BackgroundIsolateBinaryMessenger
.
In the case of the BinaryMessenger
combine sending its messages to the UI Isolate
and then sends them to the platform. As for now, BackgroundIsolateBinaryMessenger
can't be used for the BinaryMessenger
.
What's the difference between MethodChannel
and BinaryMessenger
?
BinaryMessenger
is a Low-Level API for sending messages to the platform.
For example, it's used by the AssetBundle
or event by the MethodChannel
in the main Isolate.
Features #
- Create an Isolate.
- Communicate with Isolate without extra code.
- Use Method Channels in Isolate.
- Efficiently execute tasks in Isolates pool.
Index #
Usage #
Short usage example #
Combine
is used to create Isolates.
CombineInfo isolateInfo = await Combine().spawn((context) {
print("Argument from main isolate: ${context.argument}");
context.messenger.messages.listen((message) {
print("Message from main isolate: $message");
context.messenger.send("Hello from isolate!");
});
}, argument: 42);
isolateInfo.messenger
..messages.listen((message) {
print("Message from isolate: $message");
})
..send("Hello from main isolate!");
// Will print:
// Argument from main isolate: 42
// Message from main isolate: Hello from main isolate!
// Message from isolate: Hello from isolate!
CombineWorker
is a pool of Isolates that efficiently executes tasks in them.
In comparison to Fluter's compute
method which creates an isolate each time
it is called, Combine Worker creates a pool of isolates and efficiently
reuses them.
final fibonacciNumber = await CombineWorker().executeWithArg(calculateFibonacci, 42);
print(fibonacciNumber); // 1655801441
int calculateFibonacci(int number) {
if (number == 1 || number == 2) {
return 1;
} else {
return calculateFibonacci(number - 1) + calculateFibonacci(number - 2);
}
}
Combine #
Create and maintain Isolate #
Create
CombineIsolate
is just a representation of Isolate
so when you create a CombineIsolate,
an Isolate will be created under the hood. On the web, however, everything will be executed
on the main isolate.
To create a new CombineIsolate you just need to call Combine().spawn(entryPointFunction)
.
entryPointFunction
is a function which will be called in Isolate.
CombineInfo
will be returned which holds CombineIsolate
to control Isolate
and IsolateMessenger
to communicate with it.
CombineInfo combineInfo = await Combine().spawn((context) {
print("Hello from Isolate!!!");
});
Kill
You can use CombineIsolate.kill
method to kill CombineIsolate.
CombineIsolate combineIsolate;
combineIsolate.kill(); // Kill Isolate.
Communicate with Isolate #
IsolateContext
Do you remember context
argument in entryPointFunction
? Let's take a closer look at it.
IsolateContext
holds an argument, passed while you spawn Isolate, IsolateMessenger
which is used to communicate with original Isolate and CombineIsolate
which is
represents current Isolate.
Pass arguments
You can just use variables from closure or
provide argument by passing it to the spawn
function.
final argumentFromClosure = "This is argument from main Isolate";
Combine().spawn(
(context) {
final argument = context.argument as String;
print(argument); // Print: This is my argument
print(argumentFromClosure); // Print: This is argument from main Isolate
},
argument: "This is my argument",
);
Arguments from closure will be copied to the Isolate. They may be mutable however mutable variable won't be synchronized so if you change it in main Isolate it won't be changed in Combine Isolate.
Chat with Isolate
To chat with Isolate you can use IsolateMessenger
.
It has messages
getter with stream of messages from Isolate
and send
method which sends message to Isolate.
In the created isolate you can get IsolateMessenger from IsolateContext.messenger
.
Another IsolateMessenger can be found in CombineIsolate
.
CombineInfo combineInfo = await Combine().spawn((context) {
context.messenger
..messages.listen(
(event) => print("Message from Main Isolate: $event"),
)
..send("Hello from Combine Isolate!");
});
combineInfo.messenger.messages.listen(
(event) {
print("Message from Combine Isolate: $event");
combineInfo.messenger.send("Hello from Main Isolate!");
},
);
This code will give the following output:
Message from Combine Isolate: Hello from Combine Isolate!
Message from Main Isolate: Hello from Main Isolate!
Dealing with MethodChannels #
Configuration
Everything is already configured to work with MethodChannels or BinaryMessengers so you can just use them!
Combine().spawn((context) async {
final textFromTestAsset = await rootBundle.loadString("assets/test.txt");
print("Text from test asset: $textFromTestAsset");
// Print: Text from test asset: Asset is loaded!
});
Explanation:
- the point it that
rootBundle
uses BinaryMessenger (low level MethodChannel) - let's assume that the file
assets/test.txt
exists and containsAsset is loaded!
text
Combine Worker #
Initialize worker #
To initialize worker you may call CombineWorker().initialize()
however
it can be lazily initialized on the first execution so you omit calling this method.
Also this method has isolatesCount
, tasksPerIsolate
and initializer
parameters.
The second parameter is used to set maximum number of tasks that one isolate
can perform asynchronously. About the initializer
parameter you can read
below.
Execute tasks #
You can execute task with from zero to five positional arguments using execute
,
executeWithArg
, executeWith2Args
, executeWith3Args
, executeWith4Args
and executeWith5Args
methods.
final helloWorld = await CombineWorker().execute(zeroArgsFunction);
final maksim = await CombineWorker().executeWithArg(oneArgFunction, "Maksim");
final helloArshak = await CombineWorker().executeWith2Args(
twoArgsFunction,
"Hello", "Arshak!"
);
String zeroArgsFunction() => "Hello, World!";
String oneArgFunction(String str) => str;
String twoArgsFunction(String a, String b) => "$a, $b";
Also you can execute task with any many count of positional and named arguments
with executeWithApply
method. It works like Function.apply
.
It takes a function to execute and a list of positional and map of named arguments.
final argumentsDescription = await CombineWorker().executeWithApply(
describeArgs, ["Hello"], {#namedArg: "World"},
);
String describeArgs(String arg, {required String namedArg}) {
return "Positional argument: $arg. Named argument: $namedArg";
}
This is very powerful method, however I suggest you to use execute
,
executeWithArg
, executeWith2Args
etc methods.
If some task will throw an exception, corresponding execute function will completes with this exception.
Create a new instance #
If you want to have a few workers with different settings for the separate tasks,
you can create a new worker instance with the CombineWorker.newInstance
factory.
Initialize worker isolates
Sometimes you need to execute some code once worker isolate is created. For example,
to initialize db connection, configure API client, etc. It can be done with the
initializer
function parameter for the CombineWorker.initialize()
method.
initializer
is a function that will be executed in each worker isolate during
their creation.
Close Worker #
CombineWorker().close()
method is used to close the current worker.
CombineWorker
is a singleton but under the hood it uses a worker manager instance
which can be closed and recreated. It may be useful if you want to cancel
all running and awaiting tasks (i. e. on user logout).
When worker is closed it completes all tasks with CombineWorkerClosedException
.
If you want to wait for remaining tasks set waitForRemainingTasks
parameter to true
.
In that case they won't be completed with exception.
You can call execute
or initialize
methods without awaiting for this future.
In that case new worker manager will be created.
Limitations #
Method Channel #
As MethodChannel
s are working using
BackgroundIsolateBinaryMessenger
they have their limitations.
Binary Messenger #
Everything will work fine while BinaryMessenger.send
method is used by you or your plugin.
However if BinaryMessenger.handlePlatformMessage
is used by you or your plugin you may notice that these methods are not working.
This may happen if you didn't send any data to the platform from this Isolate.
Why? In short the reason is that plugin just sends all messages from known binary messenger
in Main Isolate to the Combine Isolate. However binary messenger becomes known
when you send anything to it.
The good news is when you want to receive messages from messenger using
BinaryMessenger.handlePlatformMessage
method
almost always firstly you send some data to it
so it is very unlikely that you will face this problem.
Closure variables #
Isolate entryPoint
function for spawn
method or task
function for the execute
methods
may be a first-level, as well as a static or top-level.
Also, it may use closure variables but with some restrictions:
- closure variable will be copied (as every variable passed to isolate) so it won't be synchronized across Isolates.
- if you use at least one variable from closure all closure variables will be copied to the Isolate due to this issue. It can lead to high memory consumption or event exception because some variables may contain native resources.
Due to the above points, I highly recommend you avoid using closure variables until this issue is fixed.