async
/await
At a high level, async Rust code looks very much like "normal" sequential code:
use futures::executor::block_on; async fn count_to(count: i32) { for i in 0..count { println!("Count is: {i}!"); } } async fn async_main(count: i32) { count_to(count).await; } fn main() { block_on(async_main(10)); }
Key points:
-
Note that this is a simplified example to show the syntax. There is no long running operation or any real concurrency in it!
-
The "async" keyword is syntactic sugar. The compiler replaces the return type with a future.
-
You cannot make
main
async, without additional instructions to the compiler on how to use the returned future. -
You need an executor to run async code.
block_on
blocks the current thread until the provided future has run to completion. -
.await
asynchronously waits for the completion of another operation. Unlikeblock_on
,.await
doesn't block the current thread. -
.await
can only be used inside anasync
function (or block; these are introduced later).