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A simple HTTP client/server (http/1.1 & h2) with Miou

httpcats (http + cats because miou) is an implementation of an http client and server (http/1.1 & h2) in pure OCaml. This implementation is based on the miou scheduler, ocaml-dns (for domain name resolution), happy-eyeballs (to manage connections), ocaml-tls (for TLS protocol) & mirage-crypto (for cryptography), ca-certs to obtain system certificates and h1 and h2 to implement http protocols. In all, httpcats requires 58 packages (including dune & ocamlfind) for a single installation.

That's a lot of packages!

That's what's needed to end up with a pure OCaml http client. curl, for example, has 13 dependencies and also contains implementations such as ftp or smtp that are not related to an http client. A comparison would therefore be difficult, you just have to choose your poison (OCaml or C?).

However, there are other implementations of http client & server in OCaml.

These implementations don't use miou, however. What's more, since http-lwt-client, we're opposed to the (ultimately complex) feature of being able to choose the TLS implementation (although we understand the constraints some users may have in wanting to use OpenSSL) and prefer to offer an http client that uses strictly ocaml-tls. Finally, we also want to have control over domain resolution, rather than having to use the system's resolver.

So how does httpcats work?

You need to initialize the random number generator required by mirage-crypto and ocaml-tls and make your request like this:

let f _meta _resp () = function
  | Some str -> print_string str
  | None -> ()

let () = Miou_unix.run @@ fun () ->
  let rng = Mirage_crypto_rng_miou_unix.(initialize (module Pfortuna)) in
  ignore (Httpcats.request ~f ~uri:"https://robur.coop/" ());
  Mirage_crypto_rng_miou_unix.kill rng

It's quite... simple. You can, of course, make POST requests, consume the response body in a more complex way (store it in a buffer, for example), process the received response and lots of other things like:

  • forcing the use of a version of the http protocol
  • define your own tls configuration
  • accept certain certificates (such as self-signed ones)
  • follow or not follow redirects
  • resolve domain names via happy-eyeballs

What about the server?

You can also have an http/1.1 and h2 server (with tls and a certificate you can handle with x509). As an example, here's a simple http/1.1 server:

let text = "Hello World!"

let[@warning "-8"] handler _ (`V1 reqd : [ `V1 of H1.Reqd.t | `V2 of H2.Reqd.t ]) =
  let open H1 in
  let request = Reqd.request reqd in
  match request.Request.target with
  | "" | "/" | "/index.html" ->
      let headers =
        Headers.of_list
          [
            ("content-type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8")
          ; ("content-length", string_of_int (String.length text))
          ]
      in
      let resp = Response.create ~headers `OK in
      let body = Reqd.request_body reqd in
      Body.Reader.close body;
      Reqd.respond_with_string reqd resp text
  | _ ->
      let headers = Headers.of_list [ ("content-length", "0") ] in
      let resp = Response.create ~headers `Not_found in
      Reqd.respond_with_string reqd resp ""

let server sockaddr = Httpcats.Server.clear ~handler sockaddr

let () =
  let sockaddr = Unix.(ADDR_INET (inet_addr_loopback, 8080)) in
  Miou_unix.run @@ fun () ->
  let domains = Miou.Domain.available () in
  let prm = Miou.async @@ fun () -> server sockaddr in
  if domains > 0
  then Miou.parallel server (List.init domains (Fun.const sockaddr))
       |> List.iter (function Ok () -> () | Error exn -> raise exn);
  Miou.await_exn prm

Again, it's pretty straightforward. This server takes the opportunity to use all your cores thanks to miou. You can also run the program with a specific number of domains:

$ ocamlfind opt -linkpkg -package digestif.c,httpcats server.ml
$ MIOU_DOMAINS=2 ./a.out

And what about performance?

httpcats & miou essentially want to take advantage of the domains available. Here are the results of a benchmark of examples/server.ml with rewrk:

threads (server) threads (client) connections / threads requests/s
0 12 256 ~ 42k
1 12 256 ~ 70k
2 12 256 ~ 74k
4 12 256 ~ 155k
8 12 256 ~ 300k
16 12 256 ~ 485k
MIOU_DOMAINS rewrk -t rewrk -c

miou is currently based on the simple idea that increasing the number of cores should make the service more available. So, the more domains available, the more httpcats is able to handle requests in parallel. It is for this reason that httpcats can easily outperform http server implementations just by increasing the number of domains.

For comparison, here's the result for CoHTTP (which, this time, takes advantage of io_uring):

threads (server) threads (client) connections / threads requests/s
12 256 ~ 110k

Just like the choice between a pure http implementation in OCaml or curl, choose your poison! However, there are several things to note about this benchmark:

  1. miou.unix uses select() and our benchmarks clearly show that the bottleneck concerns this system call. CoHTTP uses io_uring, which saves passage between user space and the kernel. In this respect, there is clearly an area for optimization for miou (io_uring) to avoid this bottleneck.
  2. CoHTTP uses a single domain to manage your requests. For the sake of comparison and fair play, we should compare CoHTTP and httpcats with MIOU_DOMAINS=0. This comparison shows that io_uring can be a way of optimising miou's syscall management. However, we prefer the more obvious reasoning of simply increasing the number of domains to manage more requests to that of having to change/complement the implementation in order to manage more requests.
  3. The request handling behavior of httpcats and CoHTTP may also differ. httpcats can also handle the h2 protocol (which CoHTTP doesn't). In fact, httpcats is based on an abstraction shared by h1 and h2, i.e. abstraction by passing values which can effectively give rise to syscalls. This is a different method to that proposed by CoHTTP, whose design uses functors.
  4. The benchmark does not concern the TLS layer and, as mentioned above, CoHTTP may, depending on your system, use OpenSSL where httpcats will only use ocaml-tls.

All this to say that these results should certainly be taken with a grain of salt. What can really be concluded about httpcats is its ability to stand shoulder to shoulder with other (C-based) server implementations - for example, on AMD Ryzen 9 7950X 16-Core, nginx can handle 178k req/s.

Finally, benchmarks (especially those concerning http) are difficult to make because they are hard to reproduce. So take the results as they come, but don't say that httpcats is faster than <any-dumb-http-implementation>.

Finally, wouldn't this be the best http stack in OCaml?

It is for me, of course, but it may not be for you. The best way to find out is to test and compare according to your objectives (which are, of course, different from mine). The project is also experimental at this stage - production use could break the internet - which could be interesting. Just like miou, httpcats allows for a diversity of implementations and offers a choice that, while requiring knowledge and real reflection on the whys and wherefores, brings freedom because we're no longer locked into using just one and unique implementation!

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