Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
179 lines (122 loc) · 12.2 KB

ROADMAP.md

File metadata and controls

179 lines (122 loc) · 12.2 KB

rust-libp2p Roadmap

Below is a high level roadmap for the rust-libp2p project. Items are ordered by priority (high to low).

This is a living document. Input is always welcome e.g. via GitHub issues or pull requests.

This is the roadmap of the Rust implementation of libp2p. See also the general libp2p project roadmap.

In the works

WebTransport

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity / optimization todo #2993 QUIC

A WebTransport implementation in rust-libp2p will enable browsers to connect to rust-libp2p server nodes where the latter only have a self-signed TLS certificate. Compared to WebRTC, this would likely be more stable and performant.

AutoNATv2

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity todo Q4/2023 Address pipeline Address pipeline

Implement the new AutoNAT v2 specification. See libp2p/specs#538.

Address pipeline

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity todo Q4/2023 AutoNATv2 AutoNATv2

Be smart on address prioritization. go-libp2p made a lot of progress here. Lots to learn. See libp2p/go-libp2p#2229 and #1896 (comment).

Optimize Hole punching

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Optimization todo

We released hole punching support with rust-libp2p v0.43.0, see also #2052. We are currently collecting data via the punchr project on the hole punching success rate. See also call for action in case you want to help. Based on this data we will likely find many optimizations we can do to our hole punching stack.

Improved Wasm support

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Developer ergonomics todo #2617 WebRTC

The project supports Wasm already today, though the developer experience is cumbersome at best. Properly supporting Wasm opens rust-libp2p to a whole new set of use-cases. I would love for this to happen earlier. Though (a) I think we should prioritize improving existing functionality over new functionality and (b) we don't have high demand for this feature from the community. (One could argue that that demand follows this roadmap item and not the other way round.)

WebRTC in the browser via WASM

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity In progress libp2p/specs#475 Improved WASM support, libp2p/specs#497 #4248

Use the browser's WebRTC stack to support /webrtc and /webrtc-direct from within the browser using rust-libp2p compiled to WASM. This makes rust-libp2p a truly end-to-end solution, enabling users to use rust-libp2p on both the client (browser) and server side.

Attempt to switch from webrtc-rs to str0m

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity todo #3659

Reduce maintenance burden and reduce dependency footprint.

Done

Alpha QUIC support

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity Done Q4/2022 #2883 libp2p/test-plans#53

QUIC has been on the roadmap for a long time. It enables various performance improvements as well as higher hole punching success rates. We are close to finishing a first version with #2289.

WebRTC support (browser-to-server)

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity Done Q4/2022 libp2p/specs#412 libp2p/test-plans#100 WebRTC (browser-to-browser)

We are currently implementing WebRTC for browser-to-server connectivity in #2622. More specifically the server side. This will enable browser nodes to connect to rust-libp2p nodes where the latter only have self-signed TLS certificates. See libp2p/specs#412 for in-depth motivation.

Long term we should enable rust-libp2p running in the browser via Wasm to use the browser's WebRTC stack. Though that should only happen after improved Wasm support, see below.

Kademlia efficient querying

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Optimization done Q1/2023 #2712

Users of rust-libp2p like iroh need this for low latency usage of libp2p-kad. The rust-libp2p maintainers can pick this up unless iroh folks finish the work before that.

Generic connection management

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Developer Ergonomics done Q1/2023 #2824

Today connection management functionality in rust-libp2p is limited. Building abstractions on top is cumbersome and inefficient. See #2824. Making connection management generic allows users to build advanced and efficient abstractions on top of rust-libp2p.

Cross Behaviour communication

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Developer ergonomics Done Q1/2023 #2680 #2832 Kademlia client mode

Today NetworkBehaviour implementations like Kademlia, GossipSub or Circuit Relay v2 can not communicate with each other, i.e. cannot make use of information known by another NetworkBehaviour implementation. Users need to write the wiring code by hand to e.g. enable Kademlia to learn protocols supported by a remote peer from Identify.

This roadmap item contains exchanging standard information about remote peers (e.g. supported protocols) between NetworkBehaviour implementations.

Long term we might consider a generic approach for NetworkBehaviours to exchange data. Though that would deserve its own roadmap item.

QUIC - implement hole punching

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity done Q3/2023 #2883

Add hole punching support for QUIC. See also DCUtR specification on usage with QUIC.

Kademlia client mode

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Optimization Done Q2/2023 #2032 Cross behaviour communication

Kademlia client mode will enhance routing table health and thus have a positive impact on all Kademlia operations.

QUIC - evaluate and move to quinn

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity done Q3/2023 #2883

We added alpha support for QUIC in Q4/2022 wrapping quinn-proto. Evaluate using quinn directly, replacing the wrapper.

Automate port-forwarding e.g. via UPnP

Category Status Target Completion Tracking Dependencies Dependents
Connectivity done #4156

Leverage protocols like UPnP to configure port-forwarding on ones router when behind NAT and/or firewall. Another technique in addition to hole punching increasing the probability for a node to become publicly reachable when behind a firewall and/or NAT.