Conduit is a framework for dealing with streaming data, such as reading raw bytes from a file, parsing a CSV response body from an HTTP request, or performing an action on all files in a directory tree. It standardizes various interfaces for streams of data, and allows a consistent interface for transforming, manipulating, and consuming that data.
Some of the reasons you'd like to use conduit are:
- Constant memory usage over large data
- Deterministic resource usage (e.g., promptly close file handles)
- Easily combine different data sources (HTTP, files) with data consumers (XML/CSV processors)
Want more motivation on why to use conduit? Check out
this presentation on conduit.
Feel free to ignore the yesod
section.
NOTE As of March 2018, this document has been updated to be compatible with version 1.3 of conduit. This is available in Long Term Support (LTS) Haskell version 11 and up. For more information on changes between versions 1.2 and 1.3, see the changelog.
Basic examples of conduit usage, much more to follow!
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main = do
-- Pure operations: summing numbers.
print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| sumC
-- Exception safe file access: copy a file.
writeFile "input.txt" "This is a test." -- create the source file
runConduitRes $ sourceFileBS "input.txt" .| sinkFile "output.txt" -- actual copying
readFile "output.txt" >>= putStrLn -- prove that it worked
-- Perform transformations.
print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| mapC (+ 1) .| sinkList
There are a large number of packages relevant to conduit, just search for conduit on the LTS Haskell package list page. In this tutorial, we're going to rely mainly on the conduit library itself, which provides a large number of common functions built-in. There is also the conduit-extra library, which adds in some common extra support, like GZIP (de)compression.
You can run the examples in this tutorial as Stack scripts.
Let's start off by comparing conduit to normal lists. We'll be able to compare and contrast with functions you're already used to working with.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
{-# LANGUAGE ExtendedDefaultRules #-}
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = do
putStrLn "List version:"
print $ take 10 [1..]
putStrLn ""
putStrLn "Conduit version:"
print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..] .| takeC 10 .| sinkList
Our list function is pretty straightforward: create an infinite list from 1 and ascending, take the first 10 elements, and then print the list. The conduit version does the exact same thing, but:
- In order to convert the
[1..]
list into a conduit, we use theyieldMany
function. (And note that, like lists, conduit has no problem dealing with infinite streams.) - We're not just doing function composition, and therefore we need to
use the
.|
composition operator. This combines multiple components of a conduit pipeline together. - Instead of
take
, we usetakeC
. TheConduit
module provides many functions matching common list functions, but appends aC
to disambiguate the names. (If you'd prefer to use a qualified import, check out Data.Conduit.Combinators). - To consume all of our results back into a list, we use
sinkList
- We need to explicitly run our conduit pipeline to get a result from
it. Since we're running a pure pipeline (no monadic effects), we can
use
runConduitPure
. - And finally, the data flows from left to right in the conduit
composition, as opposed to right to left in normal function
composition. There's nothing deep to this; it's just intended to
make conduit feel more like common streaming abstraction from other
places. For example, notice how similar the code above looks to
piping in a Unix shell:
ps | grep ghc | wc -l
.
Alright, so what we've established is that we can use conduit as a bad, inconvenient version of lists. Don't worry, we'll soon start to see cases where conduit far outshines lists, but we're not quite there yet. Let's build up a slightly more complex pipeline:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
{-# LANGUAGE ExtendedDefaultRules #-}
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = do
putStrLn "List version:"
print $ takeWhile (< 18) $ map (* 2) $ take 10 [1..]
putStrLn ""
putStrLn "Conduit version:"
print $ runConduitPure
$ yieldMany [1..]
.| takeC 10
.| mapC (* 2)
.| takeWhileC (< 18)
.| sinkList
Nothing more magical going on, we're just looking at more
functions. For our last bad-list example, let's move over from a pure
pipeline to one which performs some side effects. Instead of
print
ing the whole result list, let's use mapM_C
to print each
value individually.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
{-# LANGUAGE ExtendedDefaultRules #-}
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = do
putStrLn "List version:"
mapM_ print $ takeWhile (< 18) $ map (* 2) $ take 10 [1..]
putStrLn ""
putStrLn "Conduit version:"
runConduit
$ yieldMany [1..]
.| takeC 10
.| mapC (* 2)
.| takeWhileC (< 18)
.| mapM_C print
For the list version, all we've done is added mapM_
at the
beginning. In the conduit version, we replace print $ runConduitPure
with runConduit
(since we're no longer generating a result to print,
and our pipeline now has effects), and replaced sinkList
with
mapM_C print
. We're no longer reconstructing a list at the end,
instead just streaming the values one at a time into the print
function.
Let's make things a bit more difficult for lists. We've played to
their strengths until now, having a pure series of functions composed,
and then only performing effects at the end (either print
or mapM_ print
). Suppose we have some new function:
magic :: Int -> IO Int
magic x = do
putStrLn $ "I'm doing magic with " ++ show x
return $ x * 2
And we want to use this in place of the map (* 2)
that we were doing
before. Let's see how the list and conduit versions adapt:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
{-# LANGUAGE ExtendedDefaultRules #-}
import Conduit
magic :: Int -> IO Int
magic x = do
putStrLn $ "I'm doing magic with " ++ show x
return $ x * 2
main :: IO ()
main = do
putStrLn "List version:"
mapM magic (take 10 [1..]) >>= mapM_ print . takeWhile (< 18)
putStrLn ""
putStrLn "Conduit version:"
runConduit
$ yieldMany [1..]
.| takeC 10
.| mapMC magic
.| takeWhileC (< 18)
.| mapM_C print
Notice how different the list version looks: we needed to break out
>>=
to allow us to have two different side-effecting actions (mapM magic
and mapM_ print
). Meanwhile, in conduit, all we did was
replace mapC (* 2)
with mapMC magic
. This is where we begin to see
the strength of conduit: it allows us to build up large pipelines of
components, and each of those components can be side-effecting!
However, we're not done with the difference yet. Try to guess what the output will be, and then ideally run it on your machine and see if you're correct. For those who won't be running it, here's the output:
List version:
I'm doing magic with 1
I'm doing magic with 2
I'm doing magic with 3
I'm doing magic with 4
I'm doing magic with 5
I'm doing magic with 6
I'm doing magic with 7
I'm doing magic with 8
I'm doing magic with 9
I'm doing magic with 10
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
Conduit version:
I'm doing magic with 1
2
I'm doing magic with 2
4
I'm doing magic with 3
6
I'm doing magic with 4
8
I'm doing magic with 5
10
I'm doing magic with 6
12
I'm doing magic with 7
14
I'm doing magic with 8
16
I'm doing magic with 9
In the list version, we apply the magic
function to all 10 elements
in the initial list, printing all the output at once and generating a
new list. We then use takeWhile
on this new list and exclude the
values 18 and 20. Finally, we print out each element in our new
8-value list. This has a number of downsides:
- We had to force all 10 items of the list into memory at once. For 10 items, not a big deal. But if we were dealing with massive amounts of data, this could cripple our program.
- We did "more magic" than was strictly necessary: we applied
magic
to 10 items in the list. However, ourtakeWhile
knew when it looked at the 9th result that it was going to ignore the rest of the list. Nonetheless, because our two components (magic
andtakeWhile
) are separate from each other, we couldn't know that.
Let's compare that to the conduit version:
- From the output, we can see that the calls to
magic
are interleaved with the calls toprint
. This shows that our data flows through the whole pipeline one element at a time, and never needs to build up an intermediate list. In other words, we get constant memory usage in this pipeline, a huge selling point for conduit. - Notice that we only perform "magic" 9 times: once we run
magic
on 9, get a result of 18, and find out that it fails ourtakeWhileC (< 18)
, the conduit pipeline doesn't demand any more values, and thereforemagic
isn't run again. We'll describe in more detail later how conduit is consumer-driven, but this is your first taste of this.
To be clear, it's entirely possible to get this behavior with a list-based program. What you'll lose is easy composition. For example, here's one way to get the same behavior as was achieved with conduit:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
magic :: Int -> IO Int
magic x = do
putStrLn $ "I'm doing magic with " ++ show x
return $ x * 2
main :: IO ()
main = do
let go [] = return ()
go (x:xs) = do
y <- magic x
if y < 18
then do
print y
go xs
else return ()
go $ take 10 [1..]
Notice how we've had to reimplement the behavior of takeWhile
,
mapM
, and mapM_
ourselves, and the solution is less compositional.
Conduit makes it easy to get the right behavior: interleaved
effects, constant memory, and (as we'll see later) deterministic
resource usage.
Let's take a step back from the code and discuss some terminology and concepts in conduit. Conduit deals with streams of data. Each component of a pipeline can consume data from upstream, and produce data to send downstream. For example:
runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| mapC show .| mapM_C print
In this snippet, yieldMany [1..10]
, mapC show
, and mapM_C print
are each components. We use the .|
operator—a synonym for the
fuse
function—to
compose these components into a pipeline. Then we run that pipeline
with runConduit
.
From the perspective of mapC show
, yieldMany [1..10]
is its
upstream, and mapM_C
is its downstream. When we look at yieldMany [1..10] .| mapC show
, what we're actually doing is combining these
two components into a larger component. Let's look at the streams
involved:
yieldMany
consumes nothing from upstream, and produces a stream ofInt
smapC show
consumes a stream ofInt
s, and produces a stream ofString
s- When we combine these two components together, we get something
which consumes nothing from upstream, and produces a stream of
String
s.
To add some type signatures into this:
yieldMany [1..10] :: ConduitT () Int IO ()
mapC show :: ConduitT Int String IO ()
There are four type parameters to ConduitT
:
- The first indicates the upstream value, or input. For
yieldMany
, we're using()
, though really it could be any type since we never read anything from upstream. FormapC
, it'sInt
- The second indicates the downstream value, or output. For
yieldMany
, this isInt
. Notice how this matches the input ofmapC
, which is what lets us combine these two. The output ofmapC
isString
. - The third indicates the base monad, which tells us what kinds of
effects we can perform. A
ConduitT
is a monad transformer, so you can uselift
to perform effects. (We'll learn more about conduit's monadic nature later.) We're usingIO
in our example. - The final indicates the result type of the component. This is typically only used for the most downstream component in a pipeline. We'll get into this when we discuss folds below.
Let's also look at the type of our .|
operator:
(.|) :: Monad m
=> ConduitT a b m ()
-> ConduitT b c m r
-> ConduitT a c m r
This shows us that:
- The output from the first component must match the input from the second
- We ignore the result type from the first component, and keep the result of the second
- The combined component consumes the same type as the first component and produces the same type as the second component
- Everything has to run in the same base monad
Exercise Work through what happens when we add .| mapM_C print
to the mix above.
Finally, let's look at the type of the runConduit
function:
runConduit :: Monad m => ConduitT () Void m r -> m r
This gives us a better idea of what a pipeline is: just a self
contained component, which consumes nothing from upstream (denoted by
()
) and producing nothing to downstream (denoted by Void
)*. When
we have such a stand-alone component, we can run it to extract a
monadic action that will return a result (the m r
).
* The choice of ()
and Void
instead of, say, both ()
or both
Void
, is complicated. For now, I recommend just accepting that this
makes sense. The short explanation is that the input is in negative
position whereas the output is in positive position, and therefore we
can give the stronger Void
guarantee in the output case. The long
explanation can be found here.
Finally, we talked about pure pipelines before. Those are just
pipelines with Identity
as the base monad:
runConduitPure :: ConduitT () Void Identity r -> r
A common activity with lists is folding down to a single result. This concept translates directly into conduit, and works nicely at ensuring constant memory usage. If you're familiar with folding over lists, the concepts here should be pretty straightforward, so this will mostly just be a collection of examples.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..100 :: Int] .| sumC
Summing is straightforward, and can be done if desired with the
foldlC
function:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..100 :: Int] .| foldlC (+) 0
You can use foldMapC
to fold monoids together:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import Data.Monoid (Sum (..))
main :: IO ()
main = print $ getSum $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..100 :: Int] .| foldMapC Sum
Or you can use foldC
as a shortened form of foldMapC id
:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = putStrLn $ runConduitPure
$ yieldMany [1..10 :: Int]
.| mapC (\i -> show i ++ "\n")
.| foldC
Though if you want to make that easier you can use unlinesC
:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = putStrLn $ runConduitPure
$ yieldMany [1..10 :: Int]
.| mapC show
.| unlinesC
.| foldC
You can also do monadic folds:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import Data.Monoid (Product (..))
magic :: Int -> IO (Product Int)
magic i = do
putStrLn $ "Doing magic on " ++ show i
return $ Product i
main :: IO ()
main = do
Product res <- runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| foldMapMC magic
print res
Or with foldMC
:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import Data.Monoid (Product (..))
magic :: Int -> Int -> IO Int
magic total i = do
putStrLn $ "Doing magic on " ++ show i
return $! total * i
main :: IO ()
main = do
res <- runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| foldMC magic 1
print res
There are plenty of other functions available in the conduit-combinator library. We won't be covering all of them in this tutorial, but hopefully this crash-course will give you an idea of what kinds of things you can do and help you understand the API docs.
When learning lists, one of the first functions you'll see is map
,
which transforms each element of the list. We've already seen mapC
,
above, which does the same thing for conduit. This is just one of many
functions available for performing transformations. Like folds, these
functions are named and behave like their list counterparts in many
examples, so we'll just blast through some examples.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| mapC (* 2) .| mapM_C print
We can also filter out values:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| filterC even .| mapM_C print
Or if desired we can add some values between each value in the list:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| intersperseC 0 .| mapM_C print
It's also possible to "flatten out" a conduit, by converting a stream of chunks (like a list of vector) of data into the individual values.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit
$ yieldMany (map (replicate 5) [1..10])
.| concatC
.| mapM_C print
NOTE This is our first exposure to "chunked data" in conduit. This
is actually a very important and common use case, especially around
ByteString
s and Text
s. We'll cover it in much more detail in its
own section later.
You can also perform monadic actions while transforming. We've seen
mapMC
being used already, but other such functions exist:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
import Conduit
evenM :: Int -> IO Bool
evenM i = do
let res = even i
print (i, res)
return res
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit
$ yieldMany [1..10]
.| filterMC evenM
.| mapM_C print
Or you can use the iterM
function, which performs a monadic action
on the upstream values without modifying them:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = do
res <- runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| iterMC print .| sumC
print res
EXERCISE Implement iterMC
in terms of mapMC
.
We've so far only really explored half of the power of conduit: being
able to combine multiple components together by connecting the output
of the upstream to the input of the downstream (via the .|
operator
or the fuse
function). However, there's another way to combine
simple conduits into more complex ones, using the standard monadic
interface (or do
-notation). Let's start with some examples,
beginning with a data producer:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
source :: Monad m => ConduitT i Int m ()
source = do
yieldMany [1..10]
yieldMany [11..20]
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ source .| mapM_C print
We've created a new conduit, source
, which combines together two
calls to yieldMany
. Try to guess at intuitively what this will do
before reading the explanation.
As you may have guessed, this program will print the numbers 1 through 20. What we've seen here is that, when you use monadic composition, the output from the first component is sent downstream, and then the output from the second component is sent downstream. Now let's look at the consuming side. Again, try to guess what this program will do before you read the explanation following it.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
sink :: Monad m => ConduitT Int o m (String, Int)
sink = do
x <- takeC 5 .| mapC show .| foldC
y <- sumC
return (x, y)
main :: IO ()
main = do
let res = runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| sink
print res
Let's first analyze takeC 5 .| mapC show .| foldC
. This bit will
take 5 elements from the stream, convert them to String
s, and then
combine those String
s into one String
. So if we actually have 10
elements on the stream, what happens to the other 5? Well, up until
now, the answer would have been "disappears into the aether." However,
we've now introduced monadic composition. In this world, those values
are still sitting on the stream, ready to be consumed by whatever
comes next. In our case, that's sumC
.
EXERCISE Rewrite sink
to not use do
-notation. Hint: it'll be
easier to go Applicative
.
So we've seen how monadic composition works with both upstream and downstream, but in isolation. We can just as easily combine these two concepts together, and create a transformer using monadic composition.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
trans :: Monad m => ConduitT Int Int m ()
trans = do
takeC 5 .| mapC (+ 1)
mapC (* 2)
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| trans .| mapM_C print
Here, we've set up a conduit that takes the first 5 values it's given, adds 1 to each, and sends the result downstream. Then, it takes everything else, multiplies it by 2, and sends it downstream.
EXERCISE Modify trans
so that it does something different for
the first 3, second 3, and final 3 values from upstream, and drops all
other values.
The only restriction we have in monadic composition is exactly what you'd expect from the types: the first three type parameters (input, output, and monad) must be the same for all components.
We've worked with high-level functions in conduit so far. However, at
its core conduit is built on top of a number of simple
primitives. Combined with monadic composition, we can build up all of
the more advanced functions from these primitives. Let's start with
likely the more expected one: yield
. It's just like the yieldMany
function we've been using until now, except it works in a single value
instead of a collection of them.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yield 1 .| mapM_C print
Of course, we're not limited to using just a single call to yield
:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ (yield 1 >> yield 2) .| mapM_C print
EXERCISE Reimplement yieldMany
for lists using the yield
primitive and monadic composition.
Given that yield
sends an output value downstream, we also need a
function to get an input value from upstream. For that, we'll use
await
. Let's start really simple:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
{-# LANGUAGE ExtendedDefaultRules #-}
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = do
-- prints: Just 1
print $ runConduitPure $ yield 1 .| await
-- prints: Nothing
print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [] .| await
-- Note, that the above is equivalent to the following. Work out
-- why this works:
print $ runConduitPure $ return () .| await
print $ runConduitPure await
await
will ask for a value from upstream, and return a Just
if
there is a value available. If not, it will return a Nothing
.
NOTE I was specific in my phrasing of "await
will ask." This has
to do with the evaluation of a conduit pipeline, and how it is driven
by downstream. We'll cover this in more detail in the next section.
Of course, things get much more interesting when we combine both
yield
and await
together. For example, we can implement our own
mapC
function:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
myMapC :: Monad m => (i -> o) -> ConduitT i o m ()
myMapC f =
loop
where
loop = do
mx <- await
case mx of
Nothing -> return ()
Just x -> do
yield (f x)
loop
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| myMapC (+ 1) .| mapM_C print
EXERCISE Try implementing filterC
and mapMC
. For the latter,
you'll need to use the lift
function.
The next primitive requires a little motivation. Let's look at a
simple example of using the takeWhileC
function:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| do
x <- takeWhileC (<= 5) .| sinkList
y <- sinkList
return (x, y)
As you may guess, this will result in the output
([1,2,3,4,5],[6,7,8,9,10])
. Awesome. Let's go ahead and try to
implement our own takeWhileC
with just await
and yield
.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
myTakeWhileC :: Monad m => (i -> Bool) -> ConduitT i i m ()
myTakeWhileC f =
loop
where
loop = do
mx <- await
case mx of
Nothing -> return ()
Just x
| f x -> do
yield x
loop
| otherwise -> return ()
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| do
x <- myTakeWhileC (<= 5) .| sinkList
y <- sinkList
return (x, y)
I'd recommend looking over myTakeWhileC
and making sure you're
comfortable with what it's doing. When you've done that, run the
program and compare the output. To make it easier, I'll put the output
of the original (with the real takeWhileC
) vs this program:
takeWhileC:
([1,2,3,4,5],[6,7,8,9,10])
myTakeWhileC:
([1,2,3,4,5],[7,8,9,10])
What happened to 6
? Well, in the otherwise
branch of the case
statement, we've determined that the value that we received from
upstream does not match our predicate function f
. So what do we do
with it? Well, we just throw it away! In our program, the first value
to fail the predicate is 6
, so it's discarded, and then our second
sinkList
usage grabs the next value, which is 7
.
What we need is a primitive that let's us put a value back on the
stream. And we have one that does just that: leftover
. Let's fix up
our myTakeWhileC
:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
myGoodTakeWhileC :: Monad m => (i -> Bool) -> ConduitT i i m ()
myGoodTakeWhileC f =
loop
where
loop = do
mx <- await
case mx of
Nothing -> return ()
Just x
| f x -> do
yield x
loop
| otherwise -> leftover x
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| do
x <- myGoodTakeWhileC (<= 5) .| sinkList
y <- sinkList
return (x, y)
As expected, this has the same output as using the real takeWhileC
function.
EXERCISE Implement a peek
function that gets the next value from
upstream, if available, and then puts it back on the stream.
We can also call leftover
as many times as we want, and even use
values that didn't come from upstream, though this is a fairly unusual
use case. Just to prove it's possible though:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ return () .| do
mapM_ leftover [1..10]
sinkList
There are two semi-advanced concepts to get across in this example:
- If you run this, the result is a descending list from 10
to 1. This is because using
leftover
works in a LIFO (last in first out) fashion. - If you take off the
return () .|
bit, this example will fail to compile. That's because, by usingleftover
, we've stated that our conduit actually takes some input from upstream. If you remember, when you userunConduitPure
, the complete pipeline cannot be expected any input (it must have an input of type()
). Addingreturn () .|
says "we're connecting you to an empty upstream component" so satisfy the type system.
Let's talk about the evaluation strategy of a conduit pipeline. The most important thing to remember is everything is driven by downstream. To see what I mean, consider this example:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| iterMC print .| return ()
This program will generate no output. The reason is that the most
downstream component is return ()
, which never await
s any values
from upstream and immediately exits. Once it exits, the entire
pipeline exits. As a result, the two upstream components are never run
at all. If you wanted to instead force all of the values and just
discard them, you could use sinkNull
:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| iterMC print .| sinkNull
Now try and guess what the following program outputs:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ yieldMany [1..10] .| iterMC print .| return () .| sinkNull
Answer: nothing! The sinkNull
will await
for all values from its
immediate upstream. But its immediate upstream is return ()
, which
never yield
s any value, causing the sinkNull
to exit immediately.
Alright, let's tweak this slightly: what will this one output:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit
$ yieldMany [1..10]
.| iterMC print
.| liftIO (putStrLn "I was called")
.| sinkNull
In this case, sinkNull
calls await
, which forces execution to
defer to the next upstream component (the liftIO ...
bit). In order
to see if it yield
s, that component must be evaluated until it
either (1) exits, (2) yield
s, or (3) await
s. We see that it exits
after calling liftIO
, causing the pipeline to terminate, but not
before it prints its "I was called" message.
There's really not too much to understanding conduit evaluation. It mostly works the way you'd expect, as long as you remember that downstream drives.
Let's copy a file with conduit:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import qualified System.IO as IO
main :: IO ()
main = IO.withBinaryFile "input.txt" IO.ReadMode $ \inH ->
IO.withBinaryFile "output.txt" IO.WriteMode $ \outH ->
runConduit $ sourceHandle inH .| sinkHandle outH
This works nicely, and follows the typical bracket pattern we typically expect in Haskell. However, it's got some downsides:
- You have to allocate all of your resources outside of the conduit pipeline. (This is because conduit is coroutine based, and coroutines/continuations cannot guarantee a cleanup action is called.)
- You will sometimes end up needing to allocate too many resources, or holding onto them for too long, if you allocate them in advance instead of on demand.
- Some control flows are impossible. For example, if you wanted to write a function to traverse a directory tree, you can't open up all of the directory handles before you enter your conduit pipeline.
One slight improvement we can make is to switch over to the
withSourceFile
and withSinkFile
helper functions, which handle the
calls to withBinaryFile
for you:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = withSourceFile "input.txt" $ \source ->
withSinkFile "output.txt" $ \sink ->
runConduit $ source .| sink
However, this only slightly improves ergonomics; the most of the problems above remain. To solve those (and some others), conduit provides built in support for a related package (resourcet), which allows you to allocate resources and be guaranteed that they will be cleaned up. The basic idea is that you'll have a block like:
runResourceT $ do
foo
bar
baz
Any resources that foo
, bar
, or baz
allocate have a cleanup
function registered in a mutable map. When the runResourceT
call
exits, all of those cleanup functions are called, regardless of
whether the exiting occured normally or via an exception.
In order to do this in a conduit, we have the built-in function
bracketP
, which takes an allocation function and a cleanup function,
and provides you a resource. Putting this all together, we can rewrite
our example as:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import qualified System.IO as IO
import Data.ByteString (ByteString)
sourceFile' :: MonadResource m => FilePath -> ConduitT i ByteString m ()
sourceFile' fp =
bracketP (IO.openBinaryFile fp IO.ReadMode) IO.hClose sourceHandle
sinkFile' :: MonadResource m => FilePath -> ConduitT ByteString o m ()
sinkFile' fp =
bracketP (IO.openBinaryFile fp IO.WriteMode) IO.hClose sinkHandle
main :: IO ()
main = runResourceT
$ runConduit
$ sourceFile' "input.txt"
.| sinkFile' "output.txt"
But that's certainly too tedious. Fortunately, conduit provides the
sourceFile
and sinkFile
functions built in, and defines a helper
runConduitRes
which is just runResourceT . runConduit
. Putting all
of that together, copying a file becomes absolutely trivial:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes $ sourceFile "input.txt" .| sinkFile "output.txt"
Let's get a bit more inventive though. Let's traverse an entire
directory tree and write the contents of all files with a .hs
file
extension into the file "all-haskell-files".
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import System.FilePath (takeExtension)
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes
$ sourceDirectoryDeep True "."
.| filterC (\fp -> takeExtension fp == ".hs")
.| awaitForever sourceFile
.| sinkFile "all-haskell-files"
What's great about this example is:
- It guarantees that only two file handles are open at a time: the
all-haskell-files
destination file and whichever file is being read from. - It will only open as many directory handles as needed to traverse the depth of the file structure.
- If any exceptions occur, all resources will be cleaned up.
I'd like to read a file, convert all of its characters to upper case, and then write it to standard output. That looks pretty straightforward:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import qualified Data.Text as T
import Data.Char (toUpper)
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes
$ sourceFile "input.txt"
.| decodeUtf8C
.| mapC (T.map toUpper)
.| encodeUtf8C
.| stdoutC
This works just fine, but is inconvenient: isn't that mapC (T.map ...)
repetition just completely jarring? The issue is that instead of
having a stream of Char
values, we have a stream of Text
values,
and our mapC
function will work on the Text
s. But our toUpper
function works on the Char
s inside of the Text
. We want to use
Text
(or ByteString
, or sometimes Vector
) because it's a more
efficient representation of data, but don't want to have to deal with
this overhead.
This is where the chunked functions in conduit come into play. In
addition to functions that work directly on the values in a stream, we
have functions that work on the elements inside those values. These
functions get a CE
suffix instead of C
, and are very
straightforward to use. To see it in action:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import Data.Char (toUpper)
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes
$ sourceFile "input.txt"
.| decodeUtf8C
.| omapCE toUpper
.| encodeUtf8C
.| stdoutC
NOTE We also had to prepend o
to get the monomorphic mapping
function, since Text
is a monomorphic container.
We can use this for other things too. For example, let's get just the first line of content:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import Data.Char (toUpper)
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes
$ sourceFile "input.txt"
.| decodeUtf8C
.| takeWhileCE (/= '\n')
.| encodeUtf8C
.| stdoutC
Or just the first 5 bytes:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes
$ sourceFile "input.txt"
.| takeCE 5
.| stdoutC
There are many other functions available for working on chunked data. In fact, most non-chunked functions have a chunked equivalent. This means that most of the intuition you've built up for working with streams of values will automatically translate to dealing with chunked streams, a big win for binary and textual processing.
EXERCISE Try to implement the takeCE
function on
ByteString
s. Hint: you'll need to use leftover
to make it work
correctly!
So far we've had very linear pipelines: a component feeds into exactly
one downstream component, and so on. However, sometimes we may wish to
allow for multiple consumers of a single stream. As a motivating
example, let's consider taking the average of a stream of
Double
s. In the list world, this may look like:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
doubles :: [Double]
doubles = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
average :: [Double] -> Double
average xs = sum xs / fromIntegral (length xs)
main :: IO ()
main = print $ average doubles
However, performance afficionados will quickly point out that this has
a space leak: the list will be traversed once for the sum
, kept in
memory, and then traversed a second time for the length
. We could
work around that by using lower-level functions, but we lose
composability. (Though see the
foldl package for composable
folding.)
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
doubles :: [Double]
doubles = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
average :: Monad m => ConduitT Double Void m Double
average =
getZipSink (go <$> ZipSink sumC <*> ZipSink lengthC)
where
go total len = total / fromIntegral len
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany doubles .| average
ZipSink
is a newtype wrapper which provides an different
Applicative
instance than the standard one for ConduitT
. Instead
of sequencing the consumption of a stream, it allows two components to
consume in parallel. Now, our sumC
and lengthC
are getting
values at the same time, and then those values can be immediately
thrown away. This leads to easy composition and constant memory usage.
NOTE Both the list and conduit versions of this are subject to a
divide-by-zero error. You'd probably in practice want to make
average
return a Maybe Double
.
Another real world example of ZipSink
is when you want to both
consume a file and calculate its cryptographic hash. Working with the
cryponite
and cryptonite-conduit
libraries:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
import Crypto.Hash.Conduit (sinkHash)
import Crypto.Hash (Digest, SHA256)
main :: IO ()
main = do
digest <- runConduitRes
$ sourceFile "input.txt"
.| getZipSink (ZipSink (sinkFile "output.txt") *> ZipSink sinkHash)
print (digest :: Digest SHA256)
Or we can get slightly more inventive, and read from an HTTP connection instead of a local file:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
import Conduit
import Crypto.Hash.Conduit (sinkHash)
import Crypto.Hash (Digest, SHA256)
import Network.HTTP.Simple (httpSink)
main :: IO ()
main = do
digest <- runResourceT $ httpSink "http://httpbin.org"
(\_res -> getZipSink (ZipSink (sinkFile "output.txt") *> ZipSink sinkHash))
print (digest :: Digest SHA256)
This provides a convenient and efficient method to consume data over a network connection.
Let's keep a good thing going. In addition to consuming in parallel,
we may wish to produce in parallel. For this, we'll use the
ZipSource
newtype wrapper, which is very similar in concept to the
ZipList
wrapper for those familiar. As a simple example, let's
create a stream of the Fibonacci numbers, together with each one's
index in the sequence:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
fibs :: [Int]
fibs = 0 : 1 : zipWith (+) fibs (drop 1 fibs)
indexedFibs :: ConduitT () (Int, Int) IO ()
indexedFibs = getZipSource
$ (,)
<$> ZipSource (yieldMany [1..])
<*> ZipSource (yieldMany fibs)
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ indexedFibs .| takeC 10 .| mapM_C print
To round out the collection of newtype wrappers, we've got
ZipConduit
, which is certainly the most complicated of the bunch. It
allows you to combine a bunch of transformers in such a way that:
- Drain all of the
ZipConduit
s of allyield
ed values, until they are allawait
ing - Grab the next value from upstream, and feed it to all of the
ZipConduit
s - Repeat
Here's a silly example of using it, which demonstrates its most common
use case: focusing in on a subset of a stream. We split a stream of
numbers into evens (Left
) and odds (Right
). Then we have two
transformers that each look at only half the stream, and combine those
two transformers together into a single transformer that looks at the
whole stream:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
tagger :: Monad m => ConduitT Int (Either Int Int) m ()
tagger = mapC $ \i -> if even i then Left i else Right i
evens, odds :: Monad m => ConduitT Int String m ()
evens = mapC $ \i -> "Even number: " ++ show i
odds = mapC $ \i -> "Odd number: " ++ show i
left :: Either l r -> Maybe l
left = either Just (const Nothing)
right :: Either l r -> Maybe r
right = either (const Nothing) Just
inside :: Monad m => ConduitT (Either Int Int) String m ()
inside = getZipConduit
$ ZipConduit (concatMapC left .| evens)
*> ZipConduit (concatMapC right .| odds)
main :: IO ()
main = runConduit $ enumFromToC 1 10 .| tagger .| inside .| mapM_C putStrLn
In my experience, the most useful of the three newtype wrappers is
ZipSink
, but your mileage may vary.
Remember that, in our evaluation method for conduit, we stop processing as soon as downstream stops. There are some cases where this is problematic, specifically when we want to ensure a specific amount of data is consumed. Consider:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
withFiveSum :: Monad m
=> ConduitT Int o m r
-> ConduitT Int o m (r, Int)
withFiveSum inner = do
r <- takeC 5 .| inner
s <- sumC
return (r, s)
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| withFiveSum sinkList
Our withFiveSum
function will let the provided inner
conduit work
on the first five values in the stream, then take the sum of the
rest. All seems well, but now consider if we replace sinkList
with
return ()
. Our takeC 5 .| return ()
will no longer consume any of
the first five values, and sumC
will end up consuming
them. Depending on your use case, this could be problematic, and very
surprising.
We can work around this by forcing all other values to be dropped, e.g.:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
withFiveSum :: Monad m
=> ConduitT Int o m r
-> ConduitT Int o m (r, Int)
withFiveSum inner = do
r <- takeC 5 .| do
r <- inner
sinkNull
return r
s <- sumC
return (r, s)
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| withFiveSum (return ())
However, there's also a convenience function which captures this
pattern: takeExactlyC
:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
withFiveSum :: Monad m
=> ConduitT Int o m r
-> ConduitT Int o m (r, Int)
withFiveSum inner = do
r <- takeExactlyC 5 inner
s <- sumC
return (r, s)
main :: IO ()
main = print $ runConduitPure $ yieldMany [1..10] .| withFiveSum (return ())
Notice that there's no .|
operator between takeExactlyC 5
and
inner
. That's not a typo! takeExactlyC
isn't actually a conduit,
it's a combinator which, when given a conduit, will generate a
conduit.
EXERCISE Try to write takeExactlyC
as a conduit itself, and/or
convince yourself why that's impossible.
This same kind of pattern is used to deal with the stream-of-streams
problem. As a motivating example, consider processing a file, and
wanting to work on it one line at a time. One possibility is to simply
break the stream into one Text
per line, but this can be dangerous
if your input is untrusted and may contain an unbounded line
length. Instead, we can just do:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes $ sourceFile "input.txt" .| decodeUtf8C .| do
len <- lineC lengthCE
liftIO $ print len
This program will print out the length of the first line of the input
file. However, by combining with the peekForeverE
combinator - which
will continuously run a conduit as long as there is some input
available in a chunked stream - we can print out the length of each
line:
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack script --resolver lts-11.7
import Conduit
main :: IO ()
main = runConduitRes $ sourceFile "input.txt" .| decodeUtf8C .| peekForeverE (do
len <- lineC lengthCE
liftIO $ print len)
- How do you deal with an upstream conduit that has a return value? The special fusion functions for it, see the haddocks.
- How do you capture unconsumed leftover values? Again, the special fusion functions for it, see the haddocks.
- How do I run a source, take some of its output, and then run the rest of it later? Connect and resume
Write a conduit that consumes a stream of Int
s. It takes the first
Int
from the stream, and then multiplies all subsequent Int
s by
that number and sends them back downstream. You should use the mapC
function for this.
Take a file and, for each line, print out the number of bytes in the line (try using bytestring directly and then conduit).
Further exercises wanted, please feel free to send PRs!
As of version 1.2.8 of conduit, released September 2016, the above used operators and function names are recommended. However, prior to that, an alternate set of functions and operators was used instead. You may still find code and documentation out there which follows the legacy syntax, so it's worth being aware of it. Basically:
- Instead of
.|
, we had three operators:$=
,=$
, and=$=
. These were all synonyms, and existed for historical reasons. - The
$$
operator is a combination ofrunConduit
and.|
.
To put it simply in code:
x $= y = x .| y
x =$ y = x .| y
x =$= y = x .| y
x $$ y = runConduit (x .| y)
If the old operators seem needlessly confusing/redundant... well, that's why we have new operators :).
Prior to the 1.3.0 release in February 2018, there were different data
types and type synonyms available. In particular, instead of
ConduitT
, we had ConduitM
, and we also had the following synonyms:
type Source m o = ConduitM () o m ()
type Sink i m r = ConduitM i Void m r
type Conduit i m o = ConduitM i o m ()
type Producer m o = forall i. ConduitM i o m ()
type Consumer i m r = forall o. ConduitM i o m r
These older names are all still available, but they've been deprecated to simplify the package.
Some blogs posts making heavy usage of conduit:
- network-conduit, async, and conduit-combinators
- Practical Haskell: Simple File Mirror part 1 and part 2
If you have other articles to include, please send a PR!