- CI Status
- What is Chariott?
- How to develop with Chariott
- Requirements
- Getting started
- How to run the examples and interact with Chariott
- How to run the dog mode demo
- Trademarks
- Rust CI
- E2E CI
- Security Audit
Chariott is a gRPC service that provides a common interface for interacting with applications. Applications communicate between each other through Chariott. Chariott provides the necessary services to enable application lifecycle management and communication between applications. This is done by having applications register an intent which Chariott will then fulfil by brokering the communication with the appropriate application to fulfil that intent. Applications which fulfil these intents are known as providers.
Chariott provides gRPC interfaces to interact from a client application. The client application can be written in any language that supports gRPC. The examples in this repository are written in Rust, but the same concepts apply to any language.
Term | Description |
---|---|
Application | As application we describe a client that is interacting with Chariott to lookup providers and interact with them through Chariott using intents |
Provider | A provider is also an application and in addition registers namespaces with intents that it supports to the Chariott endpoints that other applications can use through Chariott |
Intents are the main way to interact with Chariott. Once a provider registers an intent with Chariott, other applications can use that intent to interact with the provider. The intent is a gRPC method that is defined in the provider's protobuf definition. That definition is only used by Chariott itself.
Chariott also provides a gRPC interface for applications to interact with providers and delegates the calls based on the intent to the provider transparently. Therefore, clients don't need to know the location and details of the provider as long as their intent is fulfilled.
Here is a list of the current supported intents:
Intent | Description |
---|---|
Discover | Retrieve native interfaces of providers. This comes in handy if you need specific interaction with a provider that you know is available in the system and you don't want to use Chariott to interact with it. This is also used for retrieving the streaming endpoints of a provider. |
Inspect | Support inspection of functionality, properties and events using a simple query syntax. |
Invoke | Invoke a method on a provider. |
Subscribe | Subscribe to events of a provider. Note that this does not open the streaming channel, this is done through the native streaming endpoint of the provider. |
Read | Read a property of a provider. |
Write | Write a property to a provider. |
More information can be found in the protobuf definitions in ./proto
.
There is a separate document that describes the example applications and scenarios that are supported by Chariott. It can be found here.
The current source is developed and tested under WSL2/Linux running Ubuntu 20.04 on AMD64 architecture. It is not tested against any other configurations. You might experience missing support for other platforms, but please feel free to contribute to close the gaps.
For development and running the examples, we recommend using the
Devcontainer template
provided at .devcontainer/devcontainer.json
. If you decide not to use the
Devcontainer, refer to the devcontainer.json
for a list of the plugins/tools
we use.
Note: If you use Devcontainers and you are running on Windows, make sure to check out the repository on the WSL2 file system in the target distribution you're using.
cargo build --workspace
cargo test --workspace
If you want to use Podman you have to enable Podman in Visual Studio
Code and update the .devcontainer/devcontainer.json
file
with the following additions:
{
// ...
"runArgs": [
"--cap-add=SYS_PTRACE",
"--security-opt",
"seccomp=unconfined",
"--userns=keep-id"
],
// ...
"workspaceMount": "source=${localWorkspaceFolder},target=/workspace,type=bind,Z",
"workspaceFolder": "/workspace",
"containerUser": "vscode",
// ...
}
NOTE: Feel free to use another workspace folder name.
As Chariott's out of the box communication protocol is gRPC, the interaction with the
examples is done through gRPC. To illustrate how to invoke the gRPC methods we
use the grpcurl command line tool with the example application
kv-app. The kv-app is a key-value store that can be used to store
and read state. The state is stored in memory and is not persisted. It also demonstrates
the use of the ess
and keyvalue
crates.
This walkthrough is described in the examples kv-app README.
To run the dog mode demo, please refer to the dog mode demo.
This project may contain trademarks or logos for projects, products, or services. Authorized use of Microsoft trademarks or logos is subject to and must follow Microsoft's Trademark & Brand Guidelines. Use of Microsoft trademarks or logos in modified versions of this project must not cause confusion or imply Microsoft sponsorship. Any use of third-party trademarks or logos are subject to those third-party's policies.