xgo/docs/interoperability.md
2019-12-29 13:38:51 -08:00

6.9 KiB

Interoperability

Table of Contents

Using Scripts

Embedding and executing the Tengo code in Go is very easy. At a high level, this process is like:

  • create a Script instance with your code,
  • optionally add some Script Variables to Script,
  • compile or directly run the script,
  • retrieve output values from the Compiled instance.

The following is an example where a Tengo script is compiled and run with no input/output variables.

import "github.com/d5/tengo/v2"

var code = `
reduce := func(seq, fn) {
    s := 0
    for x in seq { fn(x, s) }
    return s
}

print(reduce([1, 2, 3], func(x, s) { s += x }))
`

func main() {
    s := tengo.NewScript([]byte(code))
    if _, err := s.Run(); err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
}

Here's another example where an input variable is added to the script, and, an output variable is accessed through Variable.Int function:

import (
	"fmt"

	"github.com/d5/tengo/v2"
)

func main() {
	s := tengo.NewScript([]byte(`a := b + 20`))

	// define variable 'b'
	_ = s.Add("b", 10)

	// compile the source
	c, err := s.Compile()
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}

	// run the compiled bytecode
	// a compiled bytecode 'c' can be executed multiple times without re-compiling it
	if err := c.Run(); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}

	// retrieve value of 'a'
	a := c.Get("a")
	fmt.Println(a.Int())           // prints "30"
	
	// re-run after replacing value of 'b'
	if err := c.Set("b", 20); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	if err := c.Run(); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	fmt.Println(c.Get("a").Int())  // prints "40"
}

A variable b is defined by the user before compilation using Script.Add function. Then a compiled bytecode c is used to execute the bytecode and get the value of global variables. In this example, the value of global variable a is read using Compiled.Get function. See documentation for the full list of variable value functions.

Value of the global variables can be replaced using Compiled.Set function. But it will return an error if you try to set the value of un-defined global variables (e.g. trying to set the value of x in the example).

Type Conversion Table

When adding a Variable (Script.Add), Script converts Go values into Tengo values based on the following conversion table.

Go Type Tengo Type Note
nil Undefined
string String
int64 Int
int Int
bool Bool
rune Char
byte Char
float64 Float
[]byte Bytes
time.Time Time
error Error{String} use error.Error() as String value
map[string]Object Map
map[string]interface{} Map individual elements converted to Tengo objects
[]Object Array
[]interface{} Array individual elements converted to Tengo objects
Object Object (no type conversion performed)

User Types

Users can add and use a custom user type in Tengo code by implementing Object interface. Tengo runtime will treat the user types in the same way it does to the runtime types with no performance overhead. See Object Types for more details.

Sandbox Environments

To securely compile and execute potentially unsafe script code, you can use the following Script functions.

Script.SetImports(modules *objects.ModuleMap)

SetImports sets the import modules with corresponding names. Script does not include any modules by default. You can use this function to include the Standard Library.

s := tengo.NewScript([]byte(`math := import("math"); a := math.abs(-19.84)`))

s.SetImports(stdlib.GetModuleMap("math"))
// or, to include all stdlib at once
s.SetImports(stdlib.GetModuleMap(stdlib.AllModuleNames()...))

You can also include Tengo's written module using objects.SourceModule (which implements objects.Importable).

s := tengo.NewScript([]byte(`double := import("double"); a := double(20)`))

mods := tengo.NewModuleMap()
mods.AddSourceModule("double", []byte(`export func(x) { return x * 2 }`))
s.SetImports(mods)

Script.SetMaxAllocs(n int64)

SetMaxAllocs sets the maximum number of object allocations. Note this is a cumulative metric that tracks only the object creations. Set this to a negative number (e.g. -1) if you don't need to limit the number of allocations.

Script.EnableFileImport(enable bool)

EnableFileImport enables or disables module loading from the local files. It's disabled by default.

tengo.MaxStringLen

Sets the maximum byte-length of string values. This limit applies to all running VM instances in the process. Also it's not recommended to set or update this value while any VM is executing.

tengo.MaxBytesLen

Sets the maximum length of bytes values. This limit applies to all running VM instances in the process. Also it's not recommended to set or update this value while any VM is executing.

Concurrency

A compiled script (Compiled) can be used to run the code multiple times by a goroutine. If you want to run the compiled script by multiple goroutine, you should use Compiled.Clone function to make a copy of Compiled instances.

Compiled.Clone()

Clone creates a new copy of Compiled instance. Cloned copies are safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines.

for i := 0; i < concurrency; i++ {
    go func(compiled *tengo.Compiled) {
        // inputs
        _ = compiled.Set("a", rand.Intn(10))
        _ = compiled.Set("b", rand.Intn(10))
        _ = compiled.Set("c", rand.Intn(10))
        
        if err := compiled.Run(); err != nil {
            panic(err)
        }
        
        // outputs
        d = compiled.Get("d").Int()
        e = compiled.Get("e").Int()
    }(compiled.Clone()) // Pass the cloned copy of Compiled
}

Compiler and VM

Although it's not recommended, you can directly create and run the Tengo Compiler, and VM for yourself instead of using Scripts and Script Variables. It's a bit more involved as you have to manage the symbol tables and global variables between them, but, basically that's what Script and Script Variable is doing internally.

TODO: add more information here