Connecting Erlang, Julia, Elixir
This is my ambitious little project to connect the different worlds of Erlang/Elixir and Julia:
- Provide one package for three platforms/languages,
- Allow them to talk to and call each other.
Now Erlang and Elixir processes can send messages to each other since they run on the same BEAM platform and share PIDs. But how about sending messages to Julia and back to Erlang/Elixir?
In the Julia REPL we start a pServer
task, which on demand spawns an EvalServer
task with its own module namespace.
julia> using Erjulix, Sockets
julia> pServer(6000)
Task (runnable) @0x0000000110b30ab0
In the Elixir REPL we request a Julia EvalServer
and use it to
evaluate Julia expressions or to call Julia functions.
iex(1)> {:ok, jl, _} = :ejx_udp.srv(6000) # get an eval server from Julia
{:ok, {{127, 0, 0, 1}, 54465}, "Main.##esm#257"}
iex(2)> :ejx_udp.eval(jl, "using .Threads")
{:ok, []}
iex(3)> :ejx_udp.call(jl, :threadid)
{:ok, 3}
iex(4)> :ejx_udp.call(jl, :factorial, [50])
{:error,
"OverflowError(\"50 is too large to look up in the table; consider using `factorial(big(50))` instead\")"}
iex(5)> :ejx_udp.eval(jl, """ # define a function on the Julia server
...(5)> function fact(x)
...(5)> factorial(big(x))
...(5)> end
...(5)> """)
{:ok, "Main.##esm#257.fact"}
iex(6)> :ejx_udp.call(jl, :fact, [50])
{:ok, 30414093201713378043612608166064768844377641568960512000000000000}
iex(7)> :timer.tc(:ejx_udp, :call, [jl, :fact, [55]])
{527,
{:ok,
12696403353658275925965100847566516959580321051449436762275840000000000000}}
The last timing shows that the ping-pong for calling the created Julia fact
function with data from Elixir and getting the result back takes roughly 500 µs with both sessions running on the same machine (MacBook Pro).
iex(8)> a = Enum.map(1..10, fn _ -> :rand.uniform() end)
[0.9414436609049482, 0.08244595999142224, 0.6727398779368937,
0.18612089183158875, 0.7414592106015152, 0.7340558985797445,
0.9511971092470349, 0.7139960750204088, 0.31514816254491884, 0.94168140313657]
iex(9)> :ejx_udp.set(jl, :a, a) # create variable a on the Julia server
{:ok, []}
Back in the Julia REPL:
julia> exmod = Erjulix._ESM[1] # get access to the server module
Main.##esm#257
julia> exmod.a # and to the created variable a
10-element Vector{Any}:
0.9414436609049482
0.08244595999142224
0.6727398779368937
0.18612089183158875
⋮
0.9511971092470349
0.7139960750204088
0.31514816254491884
0.94168140313657
julia> using Plots ....
If we start our pServer
with the machine's IP address and a key, communication with remote clients gets SHA-256 encrypted:
julia> getipaddr()
ip"192.168.2.113"
julia> key = Erjulix.genpasswd(12)
"1XQeFem2NUNw"
julia> pServer(getipaddr(), 6000, key)
Task (runnable) @0x00000001110e7b90
We use the machine's IP address and that key to access the pServer
from a Raspberry Pi in the local network:
iex(1)> :inet.gethostname()
{:ok, 'raspberrypi'}
iex(2)> key = "1XQeFem2NUNw"
"1XQeFem2NUNw"
iex(3)> {:ok, jl, _} = :ejx_udp.srv({{192,168,2,113}, 6000, key})
{:ok, {{192, 168, 2, 113}, 55052, "j8Gh3G6dPfJm28UpthL0dXew"}, "Main.##esm#258"}
iex(4)> :ejx_udp.call(jl, :factorial, [20])
{:ok, 2432902008176640000}
iex(5)> :timer.tc(:ejx_udp, :call, [jl, :factorial, [20]])
{86620, {:ok, 2432902008176640000}}
The pServer
generated a new key for encrypted network access to the Julia EvalServer
. The timing shows that network ping-pong took under 100 ms between the two machines (without encryption it takes around 70 ms).
iex(9)> :ejx_udp.client(jl, :exit)
{:ok, :done}
This is a prototype for interoperability based on Erlang`s Term Format over UDP.
- It is aimed at experimenting and learning before providing Julia Actors with functionality for sharing messages with Erlang/Elixir.
- It allows applications in Web services, IoT or microservices.
- A more general application, providing message-based interop also with other languages should be done with OSC.
Thread-safety: Of course accessing the server module as demonstrated is not thread-safe and thus should not be done concurrently.
Security: If you share UDP-Server addresses and ports, a remote client can get access to the filesystem. If you provide
a key to the pServer
, data transmissions will use SHA-256 encryption.
- Implement JWT tokenized secure data transmission,
- Implement an Elixir server to serve Julia with Elixir/Erlang functionality.
- The Julia package currently depends on
ErlangTerm.jl
. - The Erlang/Elixir part depends on a fork of
jwerl
, compatible with Erlang/OTP 24. There is an issue to update the main repo.
When available in the Julia registry, you can install the package with
pkg> add Erjulix
If available in Hex, the package can be installed in Elixir by adding erjulix
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:erjulix, "~> 0.1.0"}
]
end
Documentation can be generated with ExDoc and published on HexDocs. Once published, the docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/erjulix.