Elixir v1.4 released

Elixir v1.4 brings new features, enhancements and bug fixes. The most notable changes are the addition of the Registry module, the Task.async_stream/3 and Task.async_stream/5 function which aid developers in writing concurrent software, and the new application inference and commands added to Mix.

In this post we will cover the main additions. The complete release notes are also available.

Registry

The Registry is a new module in Elixir’s standard library that allows Elixir developers to implement patterns such as name lookups, code dispatching or even a pubsub system in a simple and scalable way.

Broadly speaking, the Registry is a local, decentralized and scalable key-value process storage. Let’s break this in parts:

Local because keys and values are only accessible to the current node (opposite to distributed)

Decentralized because there is no single entity responsible for managing the registry

Scalable because performance scales linearly with the addition of more cores upon partitioning

A registry may have unique or duplicate keys. Every key-value pair is associated to the process registering the key. Keys are automatically removed once the owner process terminates. Starting, registering and looking up keys is quite straight-forward:

iex > Registry . start_link ( :unique , MyRegistry ) iex > { :ok , _ } = Registry . register ( MyRegistry , "hello" , 1 ) iex > Registry . lookup ( MyRegistry , "hello" ) [{ self (), 1 }]

Finally, huge thanks to Bram Verburg who has performed extensive benchmarks on the registry to show it scales linearly with the number of cores by increasing the number of partitions.

Syntax coloring

Elixir v1.4 introduces the ability to syntax color inspected data structures and IEx automatically relies on this feature to provide syntax coloring for evaluated shell results:

This behaviour can be configured via the :syntax_colors coloring option:

IEx . configure [ colors: [ syntax_colors: [ atom: :cyan , string: :green ]]]

To disable coloring altogether, simply pass an empty list to :syntax_colors .

Task.async_stream

When there is a need to traverse a collection of items concurrently, Elixir developers often resort to tasks:

collection |> Enum . map ( & Task . async ( SomeMod , :function , [ &1 ])) |> Enum . map ( & Task . await / 1 )

The snippet above will spawn a new task by invoking SomeMod.function(element) for every element in the collection and then await for the task results.

However, the snippet above will spawn and run concurrently as many tasks as there are items in the collection. While this may be fine in many occasions, including small collections, sometimes it is necessary to restrict amount of tasks running concurrently, specially when shared resources are involved.

Elixir v1.4 adds Task.async_stream/3 and Task.async_stream/5 which brings some of the lessons we learned from the GenStage project directly into Elixir:

collection |> Task . async_stream ( SomeMod , :function , [], max_concurrency: 8 ) |> Enum . to_list ()

The code above will also start the same SomeMod.function(element) task for every element in the collection except it will also guarantee we have at most 8 tasks being processed at the same time. You can use System.schedulers_online to retrieve the number of cores and balance the processing based on the amount of cores available.

The Task.async_stream functions are also lazy, allowing developers to partially consume the stream until a condition is reached. Furthermore, Task.Supervisor.async_stream/4 and Task.Supervisor.async_stream/6 can be used to ensure the concurrent tasks are spawned under a given supervisor.

Application inference

In previous Mix versions, most of your dependencies had to be added both to your dependencies list and applications list. Here is how a mix.exs would look like:

def application do [ applications: [ :logger , :plug , :postgrex ]] end def deps do [{ :plug , "~> 1.2" }, { :postgrex , "~> 1.0" }] end

This was a common source of confusion and quite error prone as many developers would not list their dependencies in the applications list.

Mix v1.4 now automatically infers your applications list as long as you leave the :applications key empty. The mix.exs above can be rewritten to:

def application do [ extra_applications: [ :logger ]] end def deps do [{ :plug , "~> 1.2" }, { :postgrex , "~> 1.0" }] end

With the above, Mix will automatically build your application list based on your dependencies. Developers now only need to specify which applications shipped as part of Erlang or Elixir that they require, such as :logger .

Finally, if there is a dependency you don’t want to include in the application runtime list, you can do so by specifying the runtime: false option:

{:distillery, "> 0.0.0", runtime: false}

We hope this feature provides a more streamlined workflow for developers who are building releases for their Elixir projects.

Mix install from SCM

Mix v1.4 can now install escripts and archives from both Git and Hex, providing you with even more options for distributing Elixir code.

This makes it possible to distribute CLI applications written in Elixir by publishing a package which builds an escript to Hex. ex_doc has been updated to serve as an example of how to use this new functionality.

Simply running:

mix escript.install hex ex_doc

will fetch ex_doc and its dependencies, build them, and then install ex_doc to ~/.mix/escripts (by default). After adding ~/.mix/escripts to your PATH , running ex_doc is as simple as:

ex_doc

You can now also install archives from Hex in this way. Since they are fetched and built on the user’s machine, they do not have the same limitations as pre-built archives. However, keep in mind archives are loaded on every Mix command and may conflict with modules or dependencies in your projects. For this reason, escripts is the preferred format for sharing executables.

It is also possible to install escripts and archives by providing a Git/GitHub repo. See mix help escript.install and mix help archive.install for more details.

Summing up

The full list of changes is available in our release notes. Don’t forget to check the Install section to get Elixir installed and our Getting Started guide to learn more.

Happy coding!