Function tokio::task::spawn [−][src]
pub fn spawn<T>(task: T) -> JoinHandle<T::Output>ⓘNotable traits for JoinHandle<T>impl<T> Future for JoinHandle<T> type Output = Result<T, JoinError>; where
T: Future + Send + 'static,
T::Output: Send + 'static, Expand description
Spawns a new asynchronous task, returning a
JoinHandle for it.
Spawning a task enables the task to execute concurrently to other tasks. The
spawned task may execute on the current thread, or it may be sent to a
different thread to be executed. The specifics depend on the current
Runtime configuration.
There is no guarantee that a spawned task will execute to completion. When a runtime is shutdown, all outstanding tasks are dropped, regardless of the lifecycle of that task.
This function must be called from the context of a Tokio runtime. Tasks running on
the Tokio runtime are always inside its context, but you can also enter the context
using the Runtime::enter method.
Examples
In this example, a server is started and spawn is used to start a new task
that processes each received connection.
use tokio::net::{TcpListener, TcpStream};
use std::io;
async fn process(socket: TcpStream) {
// ...
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> io::Result<()> {
let listener = TcpListener::bind("127.0.0.1:8080").await?;
loop {
let (socket, _) = listener.accept().await?;
tokio::spawn(async move {
// Process each socket concurrently.
process(socket).await
});
}
}Panics
Panics if called from outside of the Tokio runtime.
Using !Send values from a task
The task supplied to spawn must implement Send. However, it is
possible to use !Send values from the task as long as they only
exist between calls to .await.
For example, this will work:
use tokio::task;
use std::rc::Rc;
fn use_rc(rc: Rc<()>) {
// Do stuff w/ rc
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
tokio::spawn(async {
// Force the `Rc` to stay in a scope with no `.await`
{
let rc = Rc::new(());
use_rc(rc.clone());
}
task::yield_now().await;
}).await.unwrap();
}This will not work:
use tokio::task;
use std::rc::Rc;
fn use_rc(rc: Rc<()>) {
// Do stuff w/ rc
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
tokio::spawn(async {
let rc = Rc::new(());
task::yield_now().await;
use_rc(rc.clone());
}).await.unwrap();
}Holding on to a !Send value across calls to .await will result in
an unfriendly compile error message similar to:
`[... some type ...]` cannot be sent between threads safelyor:
error[E0391]: cycle detected when processing `main`