Status: Early development. Not yet ready for production use.
Dala is a native mobile framework for Elixir powered by the BEAM VM.
It brings OTP, lightweight processes, fault tolerance, and the actor model to iOS and Android development while using a Rust-powered native runtime for rendering and platform integration.
Unlike WebView-based frameworks, Dala focuses on native execution, concurrent application architecture, and local-first intelligent applications.
Modern mobile applications are becoming increasingly complex:
- AI/ML pipelines running on-device
- realtime synchronization
- local-first data systems
- streaming workloads
- background processing
- highly concurrent state management
These problems look more like distributed systems than traditional frontend applications.
Dala uses the strengths of the BEAM ecosystem to solve them naturally.
- Native iOS and Android runtime
- Real BEAM VM on mobile devices
- OTP and actor-model concurrency
- Rust-powered rendering and native integrations
- Declarative UI API
- Designed for local-first and AI-powered applications
- High-concurrency architecture
- Binary protocol bridge for low-overhead communication
- Future-focused AOT experimentation inspired by HiPE concepts
Elixir/Erlang
↓
BEAM VM
↓
Rust Native Runtime
↓
iOS / Android
Dala keeps the BEAM runtime as the core execution engine while using Rust for performance-critical systems such as rendering, layout, native APIs, and ML integrations.
Dala is not trying to be another web wrapper for mobile apps.
The goal is to build an OTP-native runtime for modern mobile applications — especially apps that require:
- concurrency
- realtime coordination
- offline-first architecture
- resilient background systems
- on-device AI/ML
- complex local data flows
Dala is experimental and evolving rapidly.
Add to mix.exs:
def deps do
[{:dala, "~> 0.8"}]
endThe dala_new package (separate) provides project generation, deployment tooling, and will import dala_dev which is a live dashboard. Install it as a Mix archive:
mix archive.install hex dala_newdefmodule MyApp.CounterScreen do
use Dala.Spark.Dsl
attributes do
attribute :count, :integer, default: 0
end
screen name: :counter do
column do
gap :space_sm
text "Count: @count", text_size: :xl
button "Increment", on_tap: :increment
end
end
def handle_event(:increment, _params, socket) do
{:noreply, Dala.Socket.assign(socket, :count, socket.assigns.count + 1)}
end
enddefmodule MyApp.CounterScreen do
use Dala.Screen
def mount(_params, _session, socket) do
{:ok, Dala.Socket.assign(socket, :count, 0)}
end
def render(assigns) do
%{
type: :column,
props: %{padding: :space_md, gap: :space_md, background: :background},
children: [
%{type: :text, props: %{text: "Count: #{assigns.count}", text_size: :xl, text_color: :on_background}, children: []},
%{type: :button, props: %{text: "Increment", on_tap: {self(), :increment}}, children: []}
]
}
end
def handle_event("tap", %{"tag" => "increment"}, socket) do
{:noreply, Dala.Socket.assign(socket, :count, socket.assigns.count + 1)}
end
enddefmodule MyApp do
use Dala.App, theme: Dala.Theme.Obsidian
def navigation(_platform) do
screens([MyApp.CounterScreen])
stack(:home, root: MyApp.CounterScreen)
end
def on_start do
{:ok, _pid} = Dala.Screen.start_root(MyApp.CounterScreen)
cookie = Dala.Connectivity.Dist.cookie_from_env("MY_APP_DIST_COOKIE", "my_app")
Dala.Connectivity.Dist.ensure_started(node: :"my_app@127.0.0.1", cookie: cookie)
end
end# Push a new screen
Dala.Socket.push_screen(socket, MyApp.DetailScreen, %{id: 42})
# Pop back
Dala.Socket.pop_screen(socket)
# Tab bar layout
tab_bar([
stack(:home, root: MyApp.HomeScreen, title: "Home"),
stack(:profile, root: MyApp.ProfileScreen, title: "Profile")
])# Named theme
use Dala.App, theme: Dala.Theme.Obsidian
# Override individual tokens
use Dala.App, theme: {Dala.Theme.Obsidian, primary: :rose_500}
# From scratch
use Dala.App, theme: [primary: :emerald_500, background: :gray_950]
# Runtime switch (accessibility, user preference)
Dala.Theme.set(Dala.Theme.Citrus)Built-in themes: Dala.Theme.Obsidian (dark violet), Dala.Theme.Citrus (warm charcoal + lime), Dala.Theme.Birch (warm parchment).
All async — call the function, handle the result in handle_info/2:
# Haptic feedback (synchronous — no handle_info needed)
Dala.Hardware.Haptic.trigger(socket, :success)
# Camera
Dala.Media.Camera.capture_photo(socket)
def handle_info({:camera, :photo, %{path: path}}, socket), do: ...
# Location
Dala.Platform.Location.start(socket, accuracy: :high)
def handle_info({:location, %{lat: lat, lon: lon}}, socket), do: ...
# Push notifications
Dala.Platform.Notify.register_push(socket)
def handle_info({:push_token, :ios, token}, socket), do: ...Also: Dala.Platform.Clipboard, Dala.Platform.Share, Dala.Media.Photos,
Dala.Storage.Files, Dala.Media.Audio, Dala.Ui.Sensor.Motion,
Dala.Hardware.Biometric, Dala.Hardware.Scanner, Dala.Hardware.NFC,
Dala.Ui.Scan, Dala.Permissions.
Additional APIs: Dala.Hardware.Bluetooth (BLE), Dala.Connectivity.Wifi, Dala.Wakelock,
Dala.Storage.Storage, Dala.Storage.Blob, Dala.Platform.Settings, Dala.Platform.State,
Dala.Platform.Linking, Dala.Platform.Background, Dala.Ui.Feedback.Alert, Dala.Ui.Embedded.Webview.
mix dala.connect # tunnel + connect IEx to running device
nl(MyApp.SomeScreen) # hot-push new bytecode, no restart
# In IEx:
Dala.Test.screen(:"my_app_ios@127.0.0.1") #=> MyApp.CounterScreen
Dala.Test.assigns(:"my_app_ios@127.0.0.1") #=> %{count: 3, ...}
Dala.Test.tap(:"my_app_ios@127.0.0.1", :increment)test "increments count" do
{:ok, pid} = Dala.Screen.start_link(MyApp.CounterScreen, %{})
:ok = Dala.Screen.Screen.dispatch(pid, "tap", %{"tag" => "increment"})
assert Dala.Screen.Screen.get_socket(pid).assigns.count == 1
end| Package | Purpose |
|---|---|
dala_dev |
Dev tooling: mix dala.new, mix dala.deploy, mix dala.connect, live dashboard |
dala_new |
Generator project tool |
dala_runtime |
AOT compiler & runtime for BEAM, fix limitations of JIT |
Full documentation at hexdocs.pm/dala, including:
- Getting Started
- Architecture & Prior Art
- Screen Lifecycle
- Components
- Theming
- Navigation
- Device Capabilities
- Testing
MPL-2.0