Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

noflo

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
91
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

noflo

Flow-Based Programming environment for Node.js

  • 0.0.7
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
1
Created
Source

NoFlo: Flow-based programming for Node.js Build Status

NoFlo is a simple flow-based programming implementation for Node.js. From WikiPedia:

In computer science, flow-based programming (FBP) is a programming paradigm that defines applications as networks of "black box" processes, which exchange data across predefined connections by message passing, where the connections are specified externally to the processes. These black box processes can be reconnected endlessly to form different applications without having to be changed internally. FBP is thus naturally component-oriented.

Developers used to the Unix philosophy should be immediately familiar with FBP:

This is the Unix philosophy: Write programs that do one thing and do it well. Write programs to work together. Write programs to handle text streams, because that is a universal interface.

It also fits well in Alan Kay's original idea of object-oriented programming:

I thought of objects being like biological cells and/or individual computers on a network, only able to communicate with messages (so messaging came at the very beginning -- it took a while to see how to do messaging in a programming language efficiently enough to be useful).

NoFlo has been written in CoffeeScript for simplicity. The system is heavily inspired by J. Paul Morrison's book Flow-Based Programming.

Currently NoFlo is still in quite early stages. It has already been used in some real-world applications, but the small number of available components still limits the utility of the system.

Requirements and installing

NoFlo requires a reasonably recent version of Node.js, and some npm packages. Ensure you have the coffee-script package installed (coffee command should be available on command line) and NoFlo checked out from Git. Build NoFlo with:

$ cake build

Then you can install everything needed by a simple:

$ npm link

NoFlo is available from GitHub under the MIT license.

Using NoFlo

There are two ways to use NoFlo:

  • Independent: Building the whole control logic of your software as a NoFlo graph, and running it with the noflo tool
  • Embedded: Using NoFlo as a library and calling some NoFlo graphs whenever your software needs workflows

When you create a NoFlo graph, it doesn't do anything by itself. It only loads the components of the graph and sets up the connections between them. Then it is up to the components to actually start sending messages to their outports, or reacting to messages they receive on their inports.

Since most components require some input before they act, the usual way to make a NoFlo graph run is to send it some initial information packets, or IIPs. Examples of this would include sending a port number that a web server could listen to the web server component, or sending a file name to a file reader.

This activation model provides many possibilities:

  • Starting the graph based on user interaction (shell command, clicking a button)
  • Starting the graph based on a received signal (Redis pub/sub, D-Bus signal, WebHook, email)
  • Starting the graph at a given time or interval (running a graph on the first of every month, or five minutes from now)
  • Starting the graph based on context (when arriving to a physical location, when user goes to a given web site)

Running the examples

File line count using embedded NoFlo:

$ coffee ./examples/linecount/count.coffee somefile.txt

File line count as an individual NoFlo application:

$ noflo -i
NoFlo>> load examples/linecount/count.json

or

$ noflo examples/linecount/count.json

Simple "Hello, world" web service with Basic authentication using embedded NoFlo:

$ coffee ./examples/http/hello.coffee

Then just point your browser to http://localhost:8003/. Note that this example needs to have connect NPM package installed. Username is user and password is pass.

Terminology

  • Component: individual, pluggable and reusable piece of software. In this case a NoFlo-compatible CommonJS module
  • Graph: the control logic of a FBP application, can be either in programmatical or file format
  • Inport: inbound port of a component
  • Network: collection of processes connected by sockets. A running version of a graph
  • Outport: outbound port of a component
  • Process: an instance of a component that is running as part of a graph

Components

A component is the main ingredient of flow-based programming. Component is a CommonJS module providing a set of input and output port handlers. These ports are used for connecting components to each other.

NoFlo processes (the boxes of a flow graph) are instances of a component, with the graph controlling connections between ports of components.

Structure of a component

Functionality a component provides:

  • List of inports (named inbound ports)
  • List of outports (named outbound ports)
  • Handler for component initialization that accepts configuration
  • Handler for connections for each inport

Minimal component written in CoffeeScript would look like the following:

noflo = require "noflo"

class Forwarder extends noflo.Component
    description: "This component receives data on a single input 
port and sends the same data out to the output port"

    constructor: ->
        # Register ports
        @inPorts =
            in: new noflo.Port()
        @outPorts =
            out: new noflo.Port()

        @inPorts.in.on "data", (data) =>
            # Forward data when we receive it.
            # Note: send() will connect automatically if needed
            @outPorts.out.send data

        @inPorts.in.on "disconnect", =>
            # Disconnect output port when input port disconnects
            @outPorts.out.disconnect()

exports.getComponent = ->
    new Forwarder()

This example component register two ports: in and out. When it receives data in the in port, it opens the out port and sends the same data there. When the in connection closes, it will also close the out connection. So basically this component would be a simple repeater.

You can find more examples of components in the components folder shipping with NoFlo.

Subgraphs

A NoFlo graph may contain multiple subgraphs, managed by instances of the Graph component. Subgraphs are useful for packaging particular flows to be used as a "new component" by other flows. This allows building more advanced functionality by creating reusable graphs of connected components.

The Graph component loads the graph given to it as a new NoFlo network, and looks for unattached ports in it. It then exposes these ports as its own inports or outports. This way a graph containing subgraphs can easily connect data between the main graph and the subgraph.

Unattached ports from the subgraph will be available through naming ProcessName.port on the Graph component instance.

Simple example, specifying what file a spreadsheet-parsing subgraph should run with:

# Load a subgraph as a new process
'examples/spreadsheet/parse.fbp' -> GRAPH Reader(Graph)
# Send the filename to the component (subgraph)
'somefile.xls' -> READ.SOURCE Reader()
# Display the results
Reader() ENTITIZE.OUT -> IN Display(Output)

Some words on component design

Components should aim to be reusable, to do one thing and do it well. This is why often it is a good idea to split functionality traditionally done in one function to multiple components. For example, counting lines in a text file could happen in the following way:

  • Filename is sent to a Read File component
  • Read File reads it and sends the contents onwards to Split String component
  • Split String splits the contents by newlines, and sends each line separately to a Count component
  • Count counts the number of packets it received, and sends the total to a Output component
  • Output displays the number

This way the whole logic of the application is in the graph, in how the components are wired together. And each of the components is easily reusable for other purposes.

If a component requires configuration, the good approach is to set sensible defaults in the component, and to allow them to be overridden via an input port. This method of configuration allows the settings to be kept in the graph itself, or for example to be read from a file or database, depending on the needs of the application.

The components should not depend on a particular global state, either, but instead attempt to keep the input and output ports their sole interface to the external world. There may be some exceptions, like a component that listens for HTTP requests or Redis pub-sub messages, but even in these cases the server, or subscription should be set up by the component itself.

When discussing how to solve the unnecessary complexity of software, Out of the Tar Pit promotes an approach quite similar to the one discussed here:

The first thing that we’re doing is to advocate separating out all complexity of any kind from the pure logic of the system (which - having nothing to do with either state or control - we’re not really considering part of the complexity).

Done this way, components represent the pure logic, and the control flow and state of the application is managed separately of them in the graph. This separation makes the system a lot simpler.

Ports and events

Being a flow-based programming environment, the main action in NoFlo happens through ports and their connections. There are several events that can be associated with ports:

  • Attach: there is a connection to the port
  • Connect: the port has started sending or receiving a data transmission
  • BeginGroup: the data stream after this event is associated with a given named group. Components may or may not utilize this information
  • Data: an individual data packet in a transmission. There might be multiple depending on how a component operates
  • EndGroup: A particular grouped stream of data ends
  • Disconnect: end of data transmission
  • Detach: A connection to the port has been removed

It depends on the nature of the component how these events may be handled. Most typical components do operations on a whole transmission, meaning that they should wait for the disconnect event on inports before they act, but some components can also act on single data packets coming in.

When a port has no connections, meaning that it was initialized without a connection, or a detach event has happened, it should do no operations regarding that port.

The NoFlo shell

NoFlo comes with a command shell that you can use to load, run and manipulate NoFlo graphs. For example, the line count graph that was explained in Component design could be built with the shell in the following way:

$ noflo
NoFlo>> new countlines
countlines>> add read ReadFile
countlines>> add split SplitStr
countlines>> add count Counter
countlines>> add display Output
countlines>> connect read out split in
countlines>> connect split out count in
countlines>> connect count count display in
countlines>> dot
digraph {
  read [shape=box]
  split [shape=box]
  count [shape=box]
  display [shape=box]
  read -> split[label='out']
  split -> count[label='out']
  count -> display[label='count']
}
countlines>> send read source somefile

You can run help to see all available NoFlo shell commands, and quit to get out of the shell.

Designing NoFlo graphs with DrawFBP

As of version 2.6 onwards, the DrawFBP GUI tool for designing Flow-Based Programming graphs is able to generate graphs compatible with NoFlo.

The graphs can be exported to NoFlo format from the File -> Generate network -> NoFlo menu and then run normally.

The web-based NoFlo monitor

In addition to the shell, NoFlo also comes with a web interface that allows loaded graphs to be monitored. To start it, load a graph into the NoFlo shell, and run:

>> startserver 8080

This will start the NoFlo monitor on port 8080 of your system, so browsers can connect to it with http://localhost:8080. You can also use another port number.

At the moment the monitor only displays the graph, showing the processes and connections between them. Real-time statistics of data flow, and support for visual graph editing are planned.

NoFlo graph file format

In addition to using NoFlo in embedded mode where you create the FBP graph programmatically (see example), you can also initialize and run graphs defined using a JSON file.

The NoFlo JSON files declare the processes used in the FBP graph, and the connections between them. They look like the following:

{
    "properties": {
        "name": "Count lines in a file"
    },
    "processes": {
        "Read File": {
            "component": "ReadFile"
        },
        "Split by Lines": {
            "component": "SplitStr"
        },
        ...
    },
    "connections": [
        {
            "data": "package.json",
            "tgt": {
                "process": "Read File",
                "port": "source"
            }
        },
        {
            "src": {
                "process": "Read File",
                "port": "out"
            },
            "tgt": {
                "process": "Split by Lines",
                "port": "in"
            }
        },
        ...
    ]
}

To run a graph file, you can either use the load command of the NoFlo shell, or do it programmatically:

noflo = require "noflo"
noflo.loadFile "example.json", (network) ->
    console.log "Graph loaded"
    console.log network.graph.toDOT()

Language for Flow-Based Programming

In addition to the JSON format described above, FBP has its own Domain-Specific Language (DSL) for easy graph definition. The syntax is the following:

  • 'somedata' -> PORT Process(Component) sends initial data somedata to port PORT of process Process that runs component Component
  • A(Component1) X -> Y B(Component2) sets up a connection between port X of process A that runs component Component1 and port Y of process B that runs component Component2

You can connect multiple components and ports together on one line, and separate connection definitions with a newline or a comma (,).

Components only have to be specified the first time you mention a new process. Afterwards, simply append empty parentheses (()) after the process name.

Example:

'somefile.txt' -> SOURCE Read(ReadFile) OUT -> IN Split(SplitStr)
Split() OUT -> IN Count(Counter) COUNT -> IN Display(Output)
Read() ERROR -> IN Display()

NoFlo supports the FBP language fully. You can either load a graph with a string of FBP-language commands with:

fbpData = "<some FBP language connections>"

noflo = require "noflo"
noflo.graph.loadFbp fbpData, (graph) ->
    console.log "Graph loaded"
    console.log graph.toDOT()

The .fbp file suffix is used for files containing FBP language. This means you can load them also the same way as you load JSON files, using the noflo.loadFile method, or the NoFlo shell. Example:

$ noflo examples/linecount/count.fbp     

Development

NoFlo development happens on GitHub. Just fork the main repository, make modifications and send a pull request.

To run the unit tests you need nodeunit. Run the tests with:

$ nodeunit test

or:

$ npm test

Discussion

Flow-based programming in general, including NoFlo can be discussed on the Flow Based Programming Google group.

There is also an IRC channel #fbp on FreeNode.

Some ideas

  • Real-time status of the NoFlo graph via socket.io, see where data is flowing
  • Web Workers based multiprocess runner
  • Sockets-based multi-computer runner

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 10 May 2012

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc