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Revision: 1.45
Committed: Thu Apr 18 11:16:13 2013 UTC (11 years, 1 month ago) by root
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 AnyEvent::Fork - everything you wanted to use fork() for, but couldn't
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use AnyEvent::Fork;
8
9 AnyEvent::Fork
10 ->new
11 ->require ("MyModule")
12 ->run ("MyModule::server", my $cv = AE::cv);
13
14 my $fh = $cv->recv;
15
16 =head1 DESCRIPTION
17
18 This module allows you to create new processes, without actually forking
19 them from your current process (avoiding the problems of forking), but
20 preserving most of the advantages of fork.
21
22 It can be used to create new worker processes or new independent
23 subprocesses for short- and long-running jobs, process pools (e.g. for use
24 in pre-forked servers) but also to spawn new external processes (such as
25 CGI scripts from a web server), which can be faster (and more well behaved)
26 than using fork+exec in big processes.
27
28 Special care has been taken to make this module useful from other modules,
29 while still supporting specialised environments such as L<App::Staticperl>
30 or L<PAR::Packer>.
31
32 =head2 WHAT THIS MODULE IS NOT
33
34 This module only creates processes and lets you pass file handles and
35 strings to it, and run perl code. It does not implement any kind of RPC -
36 there is no back channel from the process back to you, and there is no RPC
37 or message passing going on.
38
39 If you need some form of RPC, you could use the L<AnyEvent::Fork::RPC>
40 companion module, which adds simple RPC/job queueing to a process created
41 by this module.
42
43 Or you can implement it yourself in whatever way you like, use some
44 message-passing module such as L<AnyEvent::MP>, some pipe such as
45 L<AnyEvent::ZeroMQ>, use L<AnyEvent::Handle> on both sides to send
46 e.g. JSON or Storable messages, and so on.
47
48 =head2 COMPARISON TO OTHER MODULES
49
50 There is an abundance of modules on CPAN that do "something fork", such as
51 L<Parallel::ForkManager>, L<AnyEvent::ForkManager>, L<AnyEvent::Worker>
52 or L<AnyEvent::Subprocess>. There are modules that implement their own
53 process management, such as L<AnyEvent::DBI>.
54
55 The problems that all these modules try to solve are real, however, none
56 of them (from what I have seen) tackle the very real problems of unwanted
57 memory sharing, efficiency, not being able to use event processing or
58 similar modules in the processes they create.
59
60 This module doesn't try to replace any of them - instead it tries to solve
61 the problem of creating processes with a minimum of fuss and overhead (and
62 also luxury). Ideally, most of these would use AnyEvent::Fork internally,
63 except they were written before AnyEvent:Fork was available, so obviously
64 had to roll their own.
65
66 =head2 PROBLEM STATEMENT
67
68 There are two traditional ways to implement parallel processing on UNIX
69 like operating systems - fork and process, and fork+exec and process. They
70 have different advantages and disadvantages that I describe below,
71 together with how this module tries to mitigate the disadvantages.
72
73 =over 4
74
75 =item Forking from a big process can be very slow.
76
77 A 5GB process needs 0.05s to fork on my 3.6GHz amd64 GNU/Linux box. This
78 overhead is often shared with exec (because you have to fork first), but
79 in some circumstances (e.g. when vfork is used), fork+exec can be much
80 faster.
81
82 This module can help here by telling a small(er) helper process to fork,
83 which is faster then forking the main process, and also uses vfork where
84 possible. This gives the speed of vfork, with the flexibility of fork.
85
86 =item Forking usually creates a copy-on-write copy of the parent
87 process.
88
89 For example, modules or data files that are loaded will not use additional
90 memory after a fork. When exec'ing a new process, modules and data files
91 might need to be loaded again, at extra CPU and memory cost. But when
92 forking, literally all data structures are copied - if the program frees
93 them and replaces them by new data, the child processes will retain the
94 old version even if it isn't used, which can suddenly and unexpectedly
95 increase memory usage when freeing memory.
96
97 The trade-off is between more sharing with fork (which can be good or
98 bad), and no sharing with exec.
99
100 This module allows the main program to do a controlled fork, and allows
101 modules to exec processes safely at any time. When creating a custom
102 process pool you can take advantage of data sharing via fork without
103 risking to share large dynamic data structures that will blow up child
104 memory usage.
105
106 In other words, this module puts you into control over what is being
107 shared and what isn't, at all times.
108
109 =item Exec'ing a new perl process might be difficult.
110
111 For example, it is not easy to find the correct path to the perl
112 interpreter - C<$^X> might not be a perl interpreter at all.
113
114 This module tries hard to identify the correct path to the perl
115 interpreter. With a cooperative main program, exec'ing the interpreter
116 might not even be necessary, but even without help from the main program,
117 it will still work when used from a module.
118
119 =item Exec'ing a new perl process might be slow, as all necessary modules
120 have to be loaded from disk again, with no guarantees of success.
121
122 Long running processes might run into problems when perl is upgraded
123 and modules are no longer loadable because they refer to a different
124 perl version, or parts of a distribution are newer than the ones already
125 loaded.
126
127 This module supports creating pre-initialised perl processes to be used as
128 a template for new processes.
129
130 =item Forking might be impossible when a program is running.
131
132 For example, POSIX makes it almost impossible to fork from a
133 multi-threaded program while doing anything useful in the child - in
134 fact, if your perl program uses POSIX threads (even indirectly via
135 e.g. L<IO::AIO> or L<threads>), you cannot call fork on the perl level
136 anymore without risking corruption issues on a number of operating
137 systems.
138
139 This module can safely fork helper processes at any time, by calling
140 fork+exec in C, in a POSIX-compatible way (via L<Proc::FastSpawn>).
141
142 =item Parallel processing with fork might be inconvenient or difficult
143 to implement. Modules might not work in both parent and child.
144
145 For example, when a program uses an event loop and creates watchers it
146 becomes very hard to use the event loop from a child program, as the
147 watchers already exist but are only meaningful in the parent. Worse, a
148 module might want to use such a module, not knowing whether another module
149 or the main program also does, leading to problems.
150
151 Apart from event loops, graphical toolkits also commonly fall into the
152 "unsafe module" category, or just about anything that communicates with
153 the external world, such as network libraries and file I/O modules, which
154 usually don't like being copied and then allowed to continue in two
155 processes.
156
157 With this module only the main program is allowed to create new processes
158 by forking (because only the main program can know when it is still safe
159 to do so) - all other processes are created via fork+exec, which makes it
160 possible to use modules such as event loops or window interfaces safely.
161
162 =back
163
164 =head1 EXAMPLES
165
166 =head2 Create a single new process, tell it to run your worker function.
167
168 AnyEvent::Fork
169 ->new
170 ->require ("MyModule")
171 ->run ("MyModule::worker, sub {
172 my ($master_filehandle) = @_;
173
174 # now $master_filehandle is connected to the
175 # $slave_filehandle in the new process.
176 });
177
178 C<MyModule> might look like this:
179
180 package MyModule;
181
182 sub worker {
183 my ($slave_filehandle) = @_;
184
185 # now $slave_filehandle is connected to the $master_filehandle
186 # in the original prorcess. have fun!
187 }
188
189 =head2 Create a pool of server processes all accepting on the same socket.
190
191 # create listener socket
192 my $listener = ...;
193
194 # create a pool template, initialise it and give it the socket
195 my $pool = AnyEvent::Fork
196 ->new
197 ->require ("Some::Stuff", "My::Server")
198 ->send_fh ($listener);
199
200 # now create 10 identical workers
201 for my $id (1..10) {
202 $pool
203 ->fork
204 ->send_arg ($id)
205 ->run ("My::Server::run");
206 }
207
208 # now do other things - maybe use the filehandle provided by run
209 # to wait for the processes to die. or whatever.
210
211 C<My::Server> might look like this:
212
213 package My::Server;
214
215 sub run {
216 my ($slave, $listener, $id) = @_;
217
218 close $slave; # we do not use the socket, so close it to save resources
219
220 # we could go ballistic and use e.g. AnyEvent here, or IO::AIO,
221 # or anything we usually couldn't do in a process forked normally.
222 while (my $socket = $listener->accept) {
223 # do sth. with new socket
224 }
225 }
226
227 =head2 use AnyEvent::Fork as a faster fork+exec
228
229 This runs C</bin/echo hi>, with standard output redirected to F</tmp/log>
230 and standard error redirected to the communications socket. It is usually
231 faster than fork+exec, but still lets you prepare the environment.
232
233 open my $output, ">/tmp/log" or die "$!";
234
235 AnyEvent::Fork
236 ->new
237 ->eval ('
238 # compile a helper function for later use
239 sub run {
240 my ($fh, $output, @cmd) = @_;
241
242 # perl will clear close-on-exec on STDOUT/STDERR
243 open STDOUT, ">&", $output or die;
244 open STDERR, ">&", $fh or die;
245
246 exec @cmd;
247 }
248 ')
249 ->send_fh ($output)
250 ->send_arg ("/bin/echo", "hi")
251 ->run ("run", my $cv = AE::cv);
252
253 my $stderr = $cv->recv;
254
255 =head1 CONCEPTS
256
257 This module can create new processes either by executing a new perl
258 process, or by forking from an existing "template" process.
259
260 All these processes are called "child processes" (whether they are direct
261 children or not), while the process that manages them is called the
262 "parent process".
263
264 Each such process comes with its own file handle that can be used to
265 communicate with it (it's actually a socket - one end in the new process,
266 one end in the main process), and among the things you can do in it are
267 load modules, fork new processes, send file handles to it, and execute
268 functions.
269
270 There are multiple ways to create additional processes to execute some
271 jobs:
272
273 =over 4
274
275 =item fork a new process from the "default" template process, load code,
276 run it
277
278 This module has a "default" template process which it executes when it is
279 needed the first time. Forking from this process shares the memory used
280 for the perl interpreter with the new process, but loading modules takes
281 time, and the memory is not shared with anything else.
282
283 This is ideal for when you only need one extra process of a kind, with the
284 option of starting and stopping it on demand.
285
286 Example:
287
288 AnyEvent::Fork
289 ->new
290 ->require ("Some::Module")
291 ->run ("Some::Module::run", sub {
292 my ($fork_fh) = @_;
293 });
294
295 =item fork a new template process, load code, then fork processes off of
296 it and run the code
297
298 When you need to have a bunch of processes that all execute the same (or
299 very similar) tasks, then a good way is to create a new template process
300 for them, loading all the modules you need, and then create your worker
301 processes from this new template process.
302
303 This way, all code (and data structures) that can be shared (e.g. the
304 modules you loaded) is shared between the processes, and each new process
305 consumes relatively little memory of its own.
306
307 The disadvantage of this approach is that you need to create a template
308 process for the sole purpose of forking new processes from it, but if you
309 only need a fixed number of processes you can create them, and then destroy
310 the template process.
311
312 Example:
313
314 my $template = AnyEvent::Fork->new->require ("Some::Module");
315
316 for (1..10) {
317 $template->fork->run ("Some::Module::run", sub {
318 my ($fork_fh) = @_;
319 });
320 }
321
322 # at this point, you can keep $template around to fork new processes
323 # later, or you can destroy it, which causes it to vanish.
324
325 =item execute a new perl interpreter, load some code, run it
326
327 This is relatively slow, and doesn't allow you to share memory between
328 multiple processes.
329
330 The only advantage is that you don't have to have a template process
331 hanging around all the time to fork off some new processes, which might be
332 an advantage when there are long time spans where no extra processes are
333 needed.
334
335 Example:
336
337 AnyEvent::Fork
338 ->new_exec
339 ->require ("Some::Module")
340 ->run ("Some::Module::run", sub {
341 my ($fork_fh) = @_;
342 });
343
344 =back
345
346 =head1 THE C<AnyEvent::Fork> CLASS
347
348 This module exports nothing, and only implements a single class -
349 C<AnyEvent::Fork>.
350
351 There are two class constructors that both create new processes - C<new>
352 and C<new_exec>. The C<fork> method creates a new process by forking an
353 existing one and could be considered a third constructor.
354
355 Most of the remaining methods deal with preparing the new process, by
356 loading code, evaluating code and sending data to the new process. They
357 usually return the process object, so you can chain method calls.
358
359 If a process object is destroyed before calling its C<run> method, then
360 the process simply exits. After C<run> is called, all responsibility is
361 passed to the specified function.
362
363 As long as there is any outstanding work to be done, process objects
364 resist being destroyed, so there is no reason to store them unless you
365 need them later - configure and forget works just fine.
366
367 =over 4
368
369 =cut
370
371 package AnyEvent::Fork;
372
373 use common::sense;
374
375 use Errno ();
376
377 use AnyEvent;
378 use AnyEvent::Util ();
379
380 use IO::FDPass;
381
382 our $VERSION = 0.6;
383
384 # the early fork template process
385 our $EARLY;
386
387 # the empty template process
388 our $TEMPLATE;
389
390 sub QUEUE() { 0 }
391 sub FH() { 1 }
392 sub WW() { 2 }
393 sub PID() { 3 }
394 sub CB() { 4 }
395
396 sub _new {
397 my ($self, $fh, $pid) = @_;
398
399 AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking $fh, 1;
400
401 $self = bless [
402 [], # write queue - strings or fd's
403 $fh,
404 undef, # AE watcher
405 $pid,
406 ], $self;
407
408 $self
409 }
410
411 sub _cmd {
412 my $self = shift;
413
414 # ideally, we would want to use "a (w/a)*" as format string, but perl
415 # versions from at least 5.8.9 to 5.16.3 are all buggy and can't unpack
416 # it.
417 push @{ $self->[QUEUE] }, pack "a L/a*", $_[0], $_[1];
418
419 $self->[WW] ||= AE::io $self->[FH], 1, sub {
420 do {
421 # send the next "thing" in the queue - either a reference to an fh,
422 # or a plain string.
423
424 if (ref $self->[QUEUE][0]) {
425 # send fh
426 unless (IO::FDPass::send fileno $self->[FH], fileno ${ $self->[QUEUE][0] }) {
427 return if $! == Errno::EAGAIN || $! == Errno::EWOULDBLOCK;
428 undef $self->[WW];
429 die "AnyEvent::Fork: file descriptor send failure: $!";
430 }
431
432 shift @{ $self->[QUEUE] };
433
434 } else {
435 # send string
436 my $len = syswrite $self->[FH], $self->[QUEUE][0];
437
438 unless ($len) {
439 return if $! == Errno::EAGAIN || $! == Errno::EWOULDBLOCK;
440 undef $self->[3];
441 die "AnyEvent::Fork: command write failure: $!";
442 }
443
444 substr $self->[QUEUE][0], 0, $len, "";
445 shift @{ $self->[QUEUE] } unless length $self->[QUEUE][0];
446 }
447 } while @{ $self->[QUEUE] };
448
449 # everything written
450 undef $self->[WW];
451
452 # invoke run callback, if any
453 $self->[CB]->($self->[FH]) if $self->[CB];
454 };
455
456 () # make sure we don't leak the watcher
457 }
458
459 # fork template from current process, used by AnyEvent::Fork::Early/Template
460 sub _new_fork {
461 my ($fh, $slave) = AnyEvent::Util::portable_socketpair;
462 my $parent = $$;
463
464 my $pid = fork;
465
466 if ($pid eq 0) {
467 require AnyEvent::Fork::Serve;
468 $AnyEvent::Fork::Serve::OWNER = $parent;
469 close $fh;
470 $0 = "$_[1] of $parent";
471 AnyEvent::Fork::Serve::serve ($slave);
472 exit 0;
473 } elsif (!$pid) {
474 die "AnyEvent::Fork::Early/Template: unable to fork template process: $!";
475 }
476
477 AnyEvent::Fork->_new ($fh, $pid)
478 }
479
480 =item my $proc = new AnyEvent::Fork
481
482 Create a new "empty" perl interpreter process and returns its process
483 object for further manipulation.
484
485 The new process is forked from a template process that is kept around
486 for this purpose. When it doesn't exist yet, it is created by a call to
487 C<new_exec> first and then stays around for future calls.
488
489 =cut
490
491 sub new {
492 my $class = shift;
493
494 $TEMPLATE ||= $class->new_exec;
495 $TEMPLATE->fork
496 }
497
498 =item $new_proc = $proc->fork
499
500 Forks C<$proc>, creating a new process, and returns the process object
501 of the new process.
502
503 If any of the C<send_> functions have been called before fork, then they
504 will be cloned in the child. For example, in a pre-forked server, you
505 might C<send_fh> the listening socket into the template process, and then
506 keep calling C<fork> and C<run>.
507
508 =cut
509
510 sub fork {
511 my ($self) = @_;
512
513 my ($fh, $slave) = AnyEvent::Util::portable_socketpair;
514
515 $self->send_fh ($slave);
516 $self->_cmd ("f");
517
518 AnyEvent::Fork->_new ($fh)
519 }
520
521 =item my $proc = new_exec AnyEvent::Fork
522
523 Create a new "empty" perl interpreter process and returns its process
524 object for further manipulation.
525
526 Unlike the C<new> method, this method I<always> spawns a new perl process
527 (except in some cases, see L<AnyEvent::Fork::Early> for details). This
528 reduces the amount of memory sharing that is possible, and is also slower.
529
530 You should use C<new> whenever possible, except when having a template
531 process around is unacceptable.
532
533 The path to the perl interpreter is divined using various methods - first
534 C<$^X> is investigated to see if the path ends with something that sounds
535 as if it were the perl interpreter. Failing this, the module falls back to
536 using C<$Config::Config{perlpath}>.
537
538 =cut
539
540 sub new_exec {
541 my ($self) = @_;
542
543 return $EARLY->fork
544 if $EARLY;
545
546 # first find path of perl
547 my $perl = $;
548
549 # first we try $^X, but the path must be absolute (always on win32), and end in sth.
550 # that looks like perl. this obviously only works for posix and win32
551 unless (
552 ($^O eq "MSWin32" || $perl =~ m%^/%)
553 && $perl =~ m%[/\\]perl(?:[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)+)?(\.exe)?$%i
554 ) {
555 # if it doesn't look perlish enough, try Config
556 require Config;
557 $perl = $Config::Config{perlpath};
558 $perl =~ s/(?:\Q$Config::Config{_exe}\E)?$/$Config::Config{_exe}/;
559 }
560
561 require Proc::FastSpawn;
562
563 my ($fh, $slave) = AnyEvent::Util::portable_socketpair;
564 Proc::FastSpawn::fd_inherit (fileno $slave);
565
566 # new fh's should always be set cloexec (due to $^F),
567 # but hey, not on win32, so we always clear the inherit flag.
568 Proc::FastSpawn::fd_inherit (fileno $fh, 0);
569
570 # quick. also doesn't work in win32. of course. what did you expect
571 #local $ENV{PERL5LIB} = join ":", grep !ref, @INC;
572 my %env = %ENV;
573 $env{PERL5LIB} = join +($^O eq "MSWin32" ? ";" : ":"), grep !ref, @INC;
574
575 my $pid = Proc::FastSpawn::spawn (
576 $perl,
577 ["perl", "-MAnyEvent::Fork::Serve", "-e", "AnyEvent::Fork::Serve::me", fileno $slave, $$],
578 [map "$_=$env{$_}", keys %env],
579 ) or die "unable to spawn AnyEvent::Fork server: $!";
580
581 $self->_new ($fh, $pid)
582 }
583
584 =item $pid = $proc->pid
585
586 Returns the process id of the process I<iff it is a direct child of the
587 process running AnyEvent::Fork>, and C<undef> otherwise.
588
589 Normally, only processes created via C<< AnyEvent::Fork->new_exec >> and
590 L<AnyEvent::Fork::Template> are direct children, and you are responsible
591 to clean up their zombies when they die.
592
593 All other processes are not direct children, and will be cleaned up by
594 AnyEvent::Fork itself.
595
596 =cut
597
598 sub pid {
599 $_[0][PID]
600 }
601
602 =item $proc = $proc->eval ($perlcode, @args)
603
604 Evaluates the given C<$perlcode> as ... Perl code, while setting C<@_> to
605 the strings specified by C<@args>, in the "main" package.
606
607 This call is meant to do any custom initialisation that might be required
608 (for example, the C<require> method uses it). It's not supposed to be used
609 to completely take over the process, use C<run> for that.
610
611 The code will usually be executed after this call returns, and there is no
612 way to pass anything back to the calling process. Any evaluation errors
613 will be reported to stderr and cause the process to exit.
614
615 If you want to execute some code (that isn't in a module) to take over the
616 process, you should compile a function via C<eval> first, and then call
617 it via C<run>. This also gives you access to any arguments passed via the
618 C<send_xxx> methods, such as file handles. See the L<use AnyEvent::Fork as
619 a faster fork+exec> example to see it in action.
620
621 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
622
623 =cut
624
625 sub eval {
626 my ($self, $code, @args) = @_;
627
628 $self->_cmd (e => pack "(w/a*)*", $code, @args);
629
630 $self
631 }
632
633 =item $proc = $proc->require ($module, ...)
634
635 Tries to load the given module(s) into the process
636
637 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
638
639 =cut
640
641 sub require {
642 my ($self, @modules) = @_;
643
644 s%::%/%g for @modules;
645 $self->eval ('require "$_.pm" for @_', @modules);
646
647 $self
648 }
649
650 =item $proc = $proc->send_fh ($handle, ...)
651
652 Send one or more file handles (I<not> file descriptors) to the process,
653 to prepare a call to C<run>.
654
655 The process object keeps a reference to the handles until they have
656 been passed over to the process, so you must not explicitly close the
657 handles. This is most easily accomplished by simply not storing the file
658 handles anywhere after passing them to this method - when AnyEvent::Fork
659 is finished using them, perl will automatically close them.
660
661 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
662
663 Example: pass a file handle to a process, and release it without
664 closing. It will be closed automatically when it is no longer used.
665
666 $proc->send_fh ($my_fh);
667 undef $my_fh; # free the reference if you want, but DO NOT CLOSE IT
668
669 =cut
670
671 sub send_fh {
672 my ($self, @fh) = @_;
673
674 for my $fh (@fh) {
675 $self->_cmd ("h");
676 push @{ $self->[QUEUE] }, \$fh;
677 }
678
679 $self
680 }
681
682 =item $proc = $proc->send_arg ($string, ...)
683
684 Send one or more argument strings to the process, to prepare a call to
685 C<run>. The strings can be any octet strings.
686
687 The protocol is optimised to pass a moderate number of relatively short
688 strings - while you can pass up to 4GB of data in one go, this is more
689 meant to pass some ID information or other startup info, not big chunks of
690 data.
691
692 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
693
694 =cut
695
696 sub send_arg {
697 my ($self, @arg) = @_;
698
699 $self->_cmd (a => pack "(w/a*)*", @arg);
700
701 $self
702 }
703
704 =item $proc->run ($func, $cb->($fh))
705
706 Enter the function specified by the function name in C<$func> in the
707 process. The function is called with the communication socket as first
708 argument, followed by all file handles and string arguments sent earlier
709 via C<send_fh> and C<send_arg> methods, in the order they were called.
710
711 The process object becomes unusable on return from this function - any
712 further method calls result in undefined behaviour.
713
714 The function name should be fully qualified, but if it isn't, it will be
715 looked up in the C<main> package.
716
717 If the called function returns, doesn't exist, or any error occurs, the
718 process exits.
719
720 Preparing the process is done in the background - when all commands have
721 been sent, the callback is invoked with the local communications socket
722 as argument. At this point you can start using the socket in any way you
723 like.
724
725 If the communication socket isn't used, it should be closed on both sides,
726 to save on kernel memory.
727
728 The socket is non-blocking in the parent, and blocking in the newly
729 created process. The close-on-exec flag is set in both.
730
731 Even if not used otherwise, the socket can be a good indicator for the
732 existence of the process - if the other process exits, you get a readable
733 event on it, because exiting the process closes the socket (if it didn't
734 create any children using fork).
735
736 Example: create a template for a process pool, pass a few strings, some
737 file handles, then fork, pass one more string, and run some code.
738
739 my $pool = AnyEvent::Fork
740 ->new
741 ->send_arg ("str1", "str2")
742 ->send_fh ($fh1, $fh2);
743
744 for (1..2) {
745 $pool
746 ->fork
747 ->send_arg ("str3")
748 ->run ("Some::function", sub {
749 my ($fh) = @_;
750
751 # fh is nonblocking, but we trust that the OS can accept these
752 # few octets anyway.
753 syswrite $fh, "hi #$_\n";
754
755 # $fh is being closed here, as we don't store it anywhere
756 });
757 }
758
759 # Some::function might look like this - all parameters passed before fork
760 # and after will be passed, in order, after the communications socket.
761 sub Some::function {
762 my ($fh, $str1, $str2, $fh1, $fh2, $str3) = @_;
763
764 print scalar <$fh>; # prints "hi #1\n" and "hi #2\n" in any order
765 }
766
767 =cut
768
769 sub run {
770 my ($self, $func, $cb) = @_;
771
772 $self->[CB] = $cb;
773 $self->_cmd (r => $func);
774 }
775
776 =back
777
778 =head1 PERFORMANCE
779
780 Now for some unscientific benchmark numbers (all done on an amd64
781 GNU/Linux box). These are intended to give you an idea of the relative
782 performance you can expect, they are not meant to be absolute performance
783 numbers.
784
785 OK, so, I ran a simple benchmark that creates a socket pair, forks, calls
786 exit in the child and waits for the socket to close in the parent. I did
787 load AnyEvent, EV and AnyEvent::Fork, for a total process size of 5100kB.
788
789 2079 new processes per second, using manual socketpair + fork
790
791 Then I did the same thing, but instead of calling fork, I called
792 AnyEvent::Fork->new->run ("CORE::exit") and then again waited for the
793 socket form the child to close on exit. This does the same thing as manual
794 socket pair + fork, except that what is forked is the template process
795 (2440kB), and the socket needs to be passed to the server at the other end
796 of the socket first.
797
798 2307 new processes per second, using AnyEvent::Fork->new
799
800 And finally, using C<new_exec> instead C<new>, using vforks+execs to exec
801 a new perl interpreter and compile the small server each time, I get:
802
803 479 vfork+execs per second, using AnyEvent::Fork->new_exec
804
805 So how can C<< AnyEvent->new >> be faster than a standard fork, even
806 though it uses the same operations, but adds a lot of overhead?
807
808 The difference is simply the process size: forking the 5MB process takes
809 so much longer than forking the 2.5MB template process that the extra
810 overhead is canceled out.
811
812 If the benchmark process grows, the normal fork becomes even slower:
813
814 1340 new processes, manual fork of a 20MB process
815 731 new processes, manual fork of a 200MB process
816 235 new processes, manual fork of a 2000MB process
817
818 What that means (to me) is that I can use this module without having a bad
819 conscience because of the extra overhead required to start new processes.
820
821 =head1 TYPICAL PROBLEMS
822
823 This section lists typical problems that remain. I hope by recognising
824 them, most can be avoided.
825
826 =over 4
827
828 =item leaked file descriptors for exec'ed processes
829
830 POSIX systems inherit file descriptors by default when exec'ing a new
831 process. While perl itself laudably sets the close-on-exec flags on new
832 file handles, most C libraries don't care, and even if all cared, it's
833 often not possible to set the flag in a race-free manner.
834
835 That means some file descriptors can leak through. And since it isn't
836 possible to know which file descriptors are "good" and "necessary" (or
837 even to know which file descriptors are open), there is no good way to
838 close the ones that might harm.
839
840 As an example of what "harm" can be done consider a web server that
841 accepts connections and afterwards some module uses AnyEvent::Fork for the
842 first time, causing it to fork and exec a new process, which might inherit
843 the network socket. When the server closes the socket, it is still open
844 in the child (which doesn't even know that) and the client might conclude
845 that the connection is still fine.
846
847 For the main program, there are multiple remedies available -
848 L<AnyEvent::Fork::Early> is one, creating a process early and not using
849 C<new_exec> is another, as in both cases, the first process can be exec'ed
850 well before many random file descriptors are open.
851
852 In general, the solution for these kind of problems is to fix the
853 libraries or the code that leaks those file descriptors.
854
855 Fortunately, most of these leaked descriptors do no harm, other than
856 sitting on some resources.
857
858 =item leaked file descriptors for fork'ed processes
859
860 Normally, L<AnyEvent::Fork> does start new processes by exec'ing them,
861 which closes file descriptors not marked for being inherited.
862
863 However, L<AnyEvent::Fork::Early> and L<AnyEvent::Fork::Template> offer
864 a way to create these processes by forking, and this leaks more file
865 descriptors than exec'ing them, as there is no way to mark descriptors as
866 "close on fork".
867
868 An example would be modules like L<EV>, L<IO::AIO> or L<Gtk2>. Both create
869 pipes for internal uses, and L<Gtk2> might open a connection to the X
870 server. L<EV> and L<IO::AIO> can deal with fork, but Gtk2 might have
871 trouble with a fork.
872
873 The solution is to either not load these modules before use'ing
874 L<AnyEvent::Fork::Early> or L<AnyEvent::Fork::Template>, or to delay
875 initialising them, for example, by calling C<init Gtk2> manually.
876
877 =item exiting calls object destructors
878
879 This only applies to users of L<AnyEvent::Fork:Early> and
880 L<AnyEvent::Fork::Template>, or when initialising code creates objects
881 that reference external resources.
882
883 When a process created by AnyEvent::Fork exits, it might do so by calling
884 exit, or simply letting perl reach the end of the program. At which point
885 Perl runs all destructors.
886
887 Not all destructors are fork-safe - for example, an object that represents
888 the connection to an X display might tell the X server to free resources,
889 which is inconvenient when the "real" object in the parent still needs to
890 use them.
891
892 This is obviously not a problem for L<AnyEvent::Fork::Early>, as you used
893 it as the very first thing, right?
894
895 It is a problem for L<AnyEvent::Fork::Template> though - and the solution
896 is to not create objects with nontrivial destructors that might have an
897 effect outside of Perl.
898
899 =back
900
901 =head1 PORTABILITY NOTES
902
903 Native win32 perls are somewhat supported (AnyEvent::Fork::Early is a nop,
904 and ::Template is not going to work), and it cost a lot of blood and sweat
905 to make it so, mostly due to the bloody broken perl that nobody seems to
906 care about. The fork emulation is a bad joke - I have yet to see something
907 useful that you can do with it without running into memory corruption
908 issues or other braindamage. Hrrrr.
909
910 Cygwin perl is not supported at the moment due to some hilarious
911 shortcomings of its API - see L<IO::FDPoll> for more details.
912
913 =head1 SEE ALSO
914
915 L<AnyEvent::Fork::Early> (to avoid executing a perl interpreter),
916 L<AnyEvent::Fork::Template> (to create a process by forking the main
917 program at a convenient time), L<AnyEvent::Fork::RPC> (for simple RPC to
918 child processes).
919
920 =head1 AUTHOR AND CONTACT INFORMATION
921
922 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
923 http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent-Fork
924
925 =cut
926
927 1
928