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Revision: 1.6
Committed: Thu Apr 18 20:17:35 2013 UTC (11 years, 1 month ago) by root
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# Content
1 NAME
2 AnyEvent::Fork - everything you wanted to use fork() for, but couldn't
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 use AnyEvent::Fork;
6
7 AnyEvent::Fork
8 ->new
9 ->require ("MyModule")
10 ->run ("MyModule::server", my $cv = AE::cv);
11
12 my $fh = $cv->recv;
13
14 DESCRIPTION
15 This module allows you to create new processes, without actually forking
16 them from your current process (avoiding the problems of forking), but
17 preserving most of the advantages of fork.
18
19 It can be used to create new worker processes or new independent
20 subprocesses for short- and long-running jobs, process pools (e.g. for
21 use in pre-forked servers) but also to spawn new external processes
22 (such as CGI scripts from a web server), which can be faster (and more
23 well behaved) than using fork+exec in big processes.
24
25 Special care has been taken to make this module useful from other
26 modules, while still supporting specialised environments such as
27 App::Staticperl or PAR::Packer.
28
29 WHAT THIS MODULE IS NOT
30 This module only creates processes and lets you pass file handles and
31 strings to it, and run perl code. It does not implement any kind of RPC
32 - there is no back channel from the process back to you, and there is no
33 RPC or message passing going on.
34
35 If you need some form of RPC, you could use the AnyEvent::Fork::RPC
36 companion module, which adds simple RPC/job queueing to a process
37 created by this module.
38
39 Or you can implement it yourself in whatever way you like, use some
40 message-passing module such as AnyEvent::MP, some pipe such as
41 AnyEvent::ZeroMQ, use AnyEvent::Handle on both sides to send e.g. JSON
42 or Storable messages, and so on.
43
44 COMPARISON TO OTHER MODULES
45 There is an abundance of modules on CPAN that do "something fork", such
46 as Parallel::ForkManager, AnyEvent::ForkManager, AnyEvent::Worker or
47 AnyEvent::Subprocess. There are modules that implement their own process
48 management, such as AnyEvent::DBI.
49
50 The problems that all these modules try to solve are real, however, none
51 of them (from what I have seen) tackle the very real problems of
52 unwanted memory sharing, efficiency, not being able to use event
53 processing or similar modules in the processes they create.
54
55 This module doesn't try to replace any of them - instead it tries to
56 solve the problem of creating processes with a minimum of fuss and
57 overhead (and also luxury). Ideally, most of these would use
58 AnyEvent::Fork internally, except they were written before AnyEvent:Fork
59 was available, so obviously had to roll their own.
60
61 PROBLEM STATEMENT
62 There are two traditional ways to implement parallel processing on UNIX
63 like operating systems - fork and process, and fork+exec and process.
64 They have different advantages and disadvantages that I describe below,
65 together with how this module tries to mitigate the disadvantages.
66
67 Forking from a big process can be very slow.
68 A 5GB process needs 0.05s to fork on my 3.6GHz amd64 GNU/Linux box.
69 This overhead is often shared with exec (because you have to fork
70 first), but in some circumstances (e.g. when vfork is used),
71 fork+exec can be much faster.
72
73 This module can help here by telling a small(er) helper process to
74 fork, which is faster then forking the main process, and also uses
75 vfork where possible. This gives the speed of vfork, with the
76 flexibility of fork.
77
78 Forking usually creates a copy-on-write copy of the parent process.
79 For example, modules or data files that are loaded will not use
80 additional memory after a fork. When exec'ing a new process, modules
81 and data files might need to be loaded again, at extra CPU and
82 memory cost. But when forking, literally all data structures are
83 copied - if the program frees them and replaces them by new data,
84 the child processes will retain the old version even if it isn't
85 used, which can suddenly and unexpectedly increase memory usage when
86 freeing memory.
87
88 The trade-off is between more sharing with fork (which can be good
89 or bad), and no sharing with exec.
90
91 This module allows the main program to do a controlled fork, and
92 allows modules to exec processes safely at any time. When creating a
93 custom process pool you can take advantage of data sharing via fork
94 without risking to share large dynamic data structures that will
95 blow up child memory usage.
96
97 In other words, this module puts you into control over what is being
98 shared and what isn't, at all times.
99
100 Exec'ing a new perl process might be difficult.
101 For example, it is not easy to find the correct path to the perl
102 interpreter - $^X might not be a perl interpreter at all.
103
104 This module tries hard to identify the correct path to the perl
105 interpreter. With a cooperative main program, exec'ing the
106 interpreter might not even be necessary, but even without help from
107 the main program, it will still work when used from a module.
108
109 Exec'ing a new perl process might be slow, as all necessary modules have
110 to be loaded from disk again, with no guarantees of success.
111 Long running processes might run into problems when perl is upgraded
112 and modules are no longer loadable because they refer to a different
113 perl version, or parts of a distribution are newer than the ones
114 already loaded.
115
116 This module supports creating pre-initialised perl processes to be
117 used as a template for new processes.
118
119 Forking might be impossible when a program is running.
120 For example, POSIX makes it almost impossible to fork from a
121 multi-threaded program while doing anything useful in the child - in
122 fact, if your perl program uses POSIX threads (even indirectly via
123 e.g. IO::AIO or threads), you cannot call fork on the perl level
124 anymore without risking corruption issues on a number of operating
125 systems.
126
127 This module can safely fork helper processes at any time, by calling
128 fork+exec in C, in a POSIX-compatible way (via Proc::FastSpawn).
129
130 Parallel processing with fork might be inconvenient or difficult to
131 implement. Modules might not work in both parent and child.
132 For example, when a program uses an event loop and creates watchers
133 it becomes very hard to use the event loop from a child program, as
134 the watchers already exist but are only meaningful in the parent.
135 Worse, a module might want to use such a module, not knowing whether
136 another module or the main program also does, leading to problems.
137
138 Apart from event loops, graphical toolkits also commonly fall into
139 the "unsafe module" category, or just about anything that
140 communicates with the external world, such as network libraries and
141 file I/O modules, which usually don't like being copied and then
142 allowed to continue in two processes.
143
144 With this module only the main program is allowed to create new
145 processes by forking (because only the main program can know when it
146 is still safe to do so) - all other processes are created via
147 fork+exec, which makes it possible to use modules such as event
148 loops or window interfaces safely.
149
150 EXAMPLES
151 Create a single new process, tell it to run your worker function.
152 AnyEvent::Fork
153 ->new
154 ->require ("MyModule")
155 ->run ("MyModule::worker, sub {
156 my ($master_filehandle) = @_;
157
158 # now $master_filehandle is connected to the
159 # $slave_filehandle in the new process.
160 });
161
162 "MyModule" might look like this:
163
164 package MyModule;
165
166 sub worker {
167 my ($slave_filehandle) = @_;
168
169 # now $slave_filehandle is connected to the $master_filehandle
170 # in the original prorcess. have fun!
171 }
172
173 Create a pool of server processes all accepting on the same socket.
174 # create listener socket
175 my $listener = ...;
176
177 # create a pool template, initialise it and give it the socket
178 my $pool = AnyEvent::Fork
179 ->new
180 ->require ("Some::Stuff", "My::Server")
181 ->send_fh ($listener);
182
183 # now create 10 identical workers
184 for my $id (1..10) {
185 $pool
186 ->fork
187 ->send_arg ($id)
188 ->run ("My::Server::run");
189 }
190
191 # now do other things - maybe use the filehandle provided by run
192 # to wait for the processes to die. or whatever.
193
194 "My::Server" might look like this:
195
196 package My::Server;
197
198 sub run {
199 my ($slave, $listener, $id) = @_;
200
201 close $slave; # we do not use the socket, so close it to save resources
202
203 # we could go ballistic and use e.g. AnyEvent here, or IO::AIO,
204 # or anything we usually couldn't do in a process forked normally.
205 while (my $socket = $listener->accept) {
206 # do sth. with new socket
207 }
208 }
209
210 use AnyEvent::Fork as a faster fork+exec
211 This runs "/bin/echo hi", with standard output redirected to /tmp/log
212 and standard error redirected to the communications socket. It is
213 usually faster than fork+exec, but still lets you prepare the
214 environment.
215
216 open my $output, ">/tmp/log" or die "$!";
217
218 AnyEvent::Fork
219 ->new
220 ->eval ('
221 # compile a helper function for later use
222 sub run {
223 my ($fh, $output, @cmd) = @_;
224
225 # perl will clear close-on-exec on STDOUT/STDERR
226 open STDOUT, ">&", $output or die;
227 open STDERR, ">&", $fh or die;
228
229 exec @cmd;
230 }
231 ')
232 ->send_fh ($output)
233 ->send_arg ("/bin/echo", "hi")
234 ->run ("run", my $cv = AE::cv);
235
236 my $stderr = $cv->recv;
237
238 CONCEPTS
239 This module can create new processes either by executing a new perl
240 process, or by forking from an existing "template" process.
241
242 All these processes are called "child processes" (whether they are
243 direct children or not), while the process that manages them is called
244 the "parent process".
245
246 Each such process comes with its own file handle that can be used to
247 communicate with it (it's actually a socket - one end in the new
248 process, one end in the main process), and among the things you can do
249 in it are load modules, fork new processes, send file handles to it, and
250 execute functions.
251
252 There are multiple ways to create additional processes to execute some
253 jobs:
254
255 fork a new process from the "default" template process, load code, run
256 it
257 This module has a "default" template process which it executes when
258 it is needed the first time. Forking from this process shares the
259 memory used for the perl interpreter with the new process, but
260 loading modules takes time, and the memory is not shared with
261 anything else.
262
263 This is ideal for when you only need one extra process of a kind,
264 with the option of starting and stopping it on demand.
265
266 Example:
267
268 AnyEvent::Fork
269 ->new
270 ->require ("Some::Module")
271 ->run ("Some::Module::run", sub {
272 my ($fork_fh) = @_;
273 });
274
275 fork a new template process, load code, then fork processes off of it
276 and run the code
277 When you need to have a bunch of processes that all execute the same
278 (or very similar) tasks, then a good way is to create a new template
279 process for them, loading all the modules you need, and then create
280 your worker processes from this new template process.
281
282 This way, all code (and data structures) that can be shared (e.g.
283 the modules you loaded) is shared between the processes, and each
284 new process consumes relatively little memory of its own.
285
286 The disadvantage of this approach is that you need to create a
287 template process for the sole purpose of forking new processes from
288 it, but if you only need a fixed number of processes you can create
289 them, and then destroy the template process.
290
291 Example:
292
293 my $template = AnyEvent::Fork->new->require ("Some::Module");
294
295 for (1..10) {
296 $template->fork->run ("Some::Module::run", sub {
297 my ($fork_fh) = @_;
298 });
299 }
300
301 # at this point, you can keep $template around to fork new processes
302 # later, or you can destroy it, which causes it to vanish.
303
304 execute a new perl interpreter, load some code, run it
305 This is relatively slow, and doesn't allow you to share memory
306 between multiple processes.
307
308 The only advantage is that you don't have to have a template process
309 hanging around all the time to fork off some new processes, which
310 might be an advantage when there are long time spans where no extra
311 processes are needed.
312
313 Example:
314
315 AnyEvent::Fork
316 ->new_exec
317 ->require ("Some::Module")
318 ->run ("Some::Module::run", sub {
319 my ($fork_fh) = @_;
320 });
321
322 THE "AnyEvent::Fork" CLASS
323 This module exports nothing, and only implements a single class -
324 "AnyEvent::Fork".
325
326 There are two class constructors that both create new processes - "new"
327 and "new_exec". The "fork" method creates a new process by forking an
328 existing one and could be considered a third constructor.
329
330 Most of the remaining methods deal with preparing the new process, by
331 loading code, evaluating code and sending data to the new process. They
332 usually return the process object, so you can chain method calls.
333
334 If a process object is destroyed before calling its "run" method, then
335 the process simply exits. After "run" is called, all responsibility is
336 passed to the specified function.
337
338 As long as there is any outstanding work to be done, process objects
339 resist being destroyed, so there is no reason to store them unless you
340 need them later - configure and forget works just fine.
341
342 my $proc = new AnyEvent::Fork
343 Create a new "empty" perl interpreter process and returns its
344 process object for further manipulation.
345
346 The new process is forked from a template process that is kept
347 around for this purpose. When it doesn't exist yet, it is created by
348 a call to "new_exec" first and then stays around for future calls.
349
350 $new_proc = $proc->fork
351 Forks $proc, creating a new process, and returns the process object
352 of the new process.
353
354 If any of the "send_" functions have been called before fork, then
355 they will be cloned in the child. For example, in a pre-forked
356 server, you might "send_fh" the listening socket into the template
357 process, and then keep calling "fork" and "run".
358
359 my $proc = new_exec AnyEvent::Fork
360 Create a new "empty" perl interpreter process and returns its
361 process object for further manipulation.
362
363 Unlike the "new" method, this method *always* spawns a new perl
364 process (except in some cases, see AnyEvent::Fork::Early for
365 details). This reduces the amount of memory sharing that is
366 possible, and is also slower.
367
368 You should use "new" whenever possible, except when having a
369 template process around is unacceptable.
370
371 The path to the perl interpreter is divined using various methods -
372 first $^X is investigated to see if the path ends with something
373 that sounds as if it were the perl interpreter. Failing this, the
374 module falls back to using $Config::Config{perlpath}.
375
376 $pid = $proc->pid
377 Returns the process id of the process *iff it is a direct child of
378 the process running AnyEvent::Fork*, and "undef" otherwise.
379
380 Normally, only processes created via "AnyEvent::Fork->new_exec" and
381 AnyEvent::Fork::Template are direct children, and you are
382 responsible to clean up their zombies when they die.
383
384 All other processes are not direct children, and will be cleaned up
385 by AnyEvent::Fork itself.
386
387 $proc = $proc->eval ($perlcode, @args)
388 Evaluates the given $perlcode as ... Perl code, while setting @_ to
389 the strings specified by @args, in the "main" package.
390
391 This call is meant to do any custom initialisation that might be
392 required (for example, the "require" method uses it). It's not
393 supposed to be used to completely take over the process, use "run"
394 for that.
395
396 The code will usually be executed after this call returns, and there
397 is no way to pass anything back to the calling process. Any
398 evaluation errors will be reported to stderr and cause the process
399 to exit.
400
401 If you want to execute some code (that isn't in a module) to take
402 over the process, you should compile a function via "eval" first,
403 and then call it via "run". This also gives you access to any
404 arguments passed via the "send_xxx" methods, such as file handles.
405 See the "use AnyEvent::Fork as a faster fork+exec" example to see it
406 in action.
407
408 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
409
410 $proc = $proc->require ($module, ...)
411 Tries to load the given module(s) into the process
412
413 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
414
415 $proc = $proc->send_fh ($handle, ...)
416 Send one or more file handles (*not* file descriptors) to the
417 process, to prepare a call to "run".
418
419 The process object keeps a reference to the handles until they have
420 been passed over to the process, so you must not explicitly close
421 the handles. This is most easily accomplished by simply not storing
422 the file handles anywhere after passing them to this method - when
423 AnyEvent::Fork is finished using them, perl will automatically close
424 them.
425
426 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
427
428 Example: pass a file handle to a process, and release it without
429 closing. It will be closed automatically when it is no longer used.
430
431 $proc->send_fh ($my_fh);
432 undef $my_fh; # free the reference if you want, but DO NOT CLOSE IT
433
434 $proc = $proc->send_arg ($string, ...)
435 Send one or more argument strings to the process, to prepare a call
436 to "run". The strings can be any octet strings.
437
438 The protocol is optimised to pass a moderate number of relatively
439 short strings - while you can pass up to 4GB of data in one go, this
440 is more meant to pass some ID information or other startup info, not
441 big chunks of data.
442
443 Returns the process object for easy chaining of method calls.
444
445 $proc->run ($func, $cb->($fh))
446 Enter the function specified by the function name in $func in the
447 process. The function is called with the communication socket as
448 first argument, followed by all file handles and string arguments
449 sent earlier via "send_fh" and "send_arg" methods, in the order they
450 were called.
451
452 The process object becomes unusable on return from this function -
453 any further method calls result in undefined behaviour.
454
455 The function name should be fully qualified, but if it isn't, it
456 will be looked up in the "main" package.
457
458 If the called function returns, doesn't exist, or any error occurs,
459 the process exits.
460
461 Preparing the process is done in the background - when all commands
462 have been sent, the callback is invoked with the local
463 communications socket as argument. At this point you can start using
464 the socket in any way you like.
465
466 If the communication socket isn't used, it should be closed on both
467 sides, to save on kernel memory.
468
469 The socket is non-blocking in the parent, and blocking in the newly
470 created process. The close-on-exec flag is set in both.
471
472 Even if not used otherwise, the socket can be a good indicator for
473 the existence of the process - if the other process exits, you get a
474 readable event on it, because exiting the process closes the socket
475 (if it didn't create any children using fork).
476
477 Example: create a template for a process pool, pass a few strings,
478 some file handles, then fork, pass one more string, and run some
479 code.
480
481 my $pool = AnyEvent::Fork
482 ->new
483 ->send_arg ("str1", "str2")
484 ->send_fh ($fh1, $fh2);
485
486 for (1..2) {
487 $pool
488 ->fork
489 ->send_arg ("str3")
490 ->run ("Some::function", sub {
491 my ($fh) = @_;
492
493 # fh is nonblocking, but we trust that the OS can accept these
494 # few octets anyway.
495 syswrite $fh, "hi #$_\n";
496
497 # $fh is being closed here, as we don't store it anywhere
498 });
499 }
500
501 # Some::function might look like this - all parameters passed before fork
502 # and after will be passed, in order, after the communications socket.
503 sub Some::function {
504 my ($fh, $str1, $str2, $fh1, $fh2, $str3) = @_;
505
506 print scalar <$fh>; # prints "hi #1\n" and "hi #2\n" in any order
507 }
508
509 PERFORMANCE
510 Now for some unscientific benchmark numbers (all done on an amd64
511 GNU/Linux box). These are intended to give you an idea of the relative
512 performance you can expect, they are not meant to be absolute
513 performance numbers.
514
515 OK, so, I ran a simple benchmark that creates a socket pair, forks,
516 calls exit in the child and waits for the socket to close in the parent.
517 I did load AnyEvent, EV and AnyEvent::Fork, for a total process size of
518 5100kB.
519
520 2079 new processes per second, using manual socketpair + fork
521
522 Then I did the same thing, but instead of calling fork, I called
523 AnyEvent::Fork->new->run ("CORE::exit") and then again waited for the
524 socket form the child to close on exit. This does the same thing as
525 manual socket pair + fork, except that what is forked is the template
526 process (2440kB), and the socket needs to be passed to the server at the
527 other end of the socket first.
528
529 2307 new processes per second, using AnyEvent::Fork->new
530
531 And finally, using "new_exec" instead "new", using vforks+execs to exec
532 a new perl interpreter and compile the small server each time, I get:
533
534 479 vfork+execs per second, using AnyEvent::Fork->new_exec
535
536 So how can "AnyEvent->new" be faster than a standard fork, even though
537 it uses the same operations, but adds a lot of overhead?
538
539 The difference is simply the process size: forking the 5MB process takes
540 so much longer than forking the 2.5MB template process that the extra
541 overhead is canceled out.
542
543 If the benchmark process grows, the normal fork becomes even slower:
544
545 1340 new processes, manual fork of a 20MB process
546 731 new processes, manual fork of a 200MB process
547 235 new processes, manual fork of a 2000MB process
548
549 What that means (to me) is that I can use this module without having a
550 bad conscience because of the extra overhead required to start new
551 processes.
552
553 TYPICAL PROBLEMS
554 This section lists typical problems that remain. I hope by recognising
555 them, most can be avoided.
556
557 leaked file descriptors for exec'ed processes
558 POSIX systems inherit file descriptors by default when exec'ing a
559 new process. While perl itself laudably sets the close-on-exec flags
560 on new file handles, most C libraries don't care, and even if all
561 cared, it's often not possible to set the flag in a race-free
562 manner.
563
564 That means some file descriptors can leak through. And since it
565 isn't possible to know which file descriptors are "good" and
566 "necessary" (or even to know which file descriptors are open), there
567 is no good way to close the ones that might harm.
568
569 As an example of what "harm" can be done consider a web server that
570 accepts connections and afterwards some module uses AnyEvent::Fork
571 for the first time, causing it to fork and exec a new process, which
572 might inherit the network socket. When the server closes the socket,
573 it is still open in the child (which doesn't even know that) and the
574 client might conclude that the connection is still fine.
575
576 For the main program, there are multiple remedies available -
577 AnyEvent::Fork::Early is one, creating a process early and not using
578 "new_exec" is another, as in both cases, the first process can be
579 exec'ed well before many random file descriptors are open.
580
581 In general, the solution for these kind of problems is to fix the
582 libraries or the code that leaks those file descriptors.
583
584 Fortunately, most of these leaked descriptors do no harm, other than
585 sitting on some resources.
586
587 leaked file descriptors for fork'ed processes
588 Normally, AnyEvent::Fork does start new processes by exec'ing them,
589 which closes file descriptors not marked for being inherited.
590
591 However, AnyEvent::Fork::Early and AnyEvent::Fork::Template offer a
592 way to create these processes by forking, and this leaks more file
593 descriptors than exec'ing them, as there is no way to mark
594 descriptors as "close on fork".
595
596 An example would be modules like EV, IO::AIO or Gtk2. Both create
597 pipes for internal uses, and Gtk2 might open a connection to the X
598 server. EV and IO::AIO can deal with fork, but Gtk2 might have
599 trouble with a fork.
600
601 The solution is to either not load these modules before use'ing
602 AnyEvent::Fork::Early or AnyEvent::Fork::Template, or to delay
603 initialising them, for example, by calling "init Gtk2" manually.
604
605 exiting calls object destructors
606 This only applies to users of AnyEvent::Fork:Early and
607 AnyEvent::Fork::Template, or when initialising code creates objects
608 that reference external resources.
609
610 When a process created by AnyEvent::Fork exits, it might do so by
611 calling exit, or simply letting perl reach the end of the program.
612 At which point Perl runs all destructors.
613
614 Not all destructors are fork-safe - for example, an object that
615 represents the connection to an X display might tell the X server to
616 free resources, which is inconvenient when the "real" object in the
617 parent still needs to use them.
618
619 This is obviously not a problem for AnyEvent::Fork::Early, as you
620 used it as the very first thing, right?
621
622 It is a problem for AnyEvent::Fork::Template though - and the
623 solution is to not create objects with nontrivial destructors that
624 might have an effect outside of Perl.
625
626 PORTABILITY NOTES
627 Native win32 perls are somewhat supported (AnyEvent::Fork::Early is a
628 nop, and ::Template is not going to work), and it cost a lot of blood
629 and sweat to make it so, mostly due to the bloody broken perl that
630 nobody seems to care about. The fork emulation is a bad joke - I have
631 yet to see something useful that you can do with it without running into
632 memory corruption issues or other braindamage. Hrrrr.
633
634 Cygwin perl is not supported at the moment due to some hilarious
635 shortcomings of its API - see IO::FDPoll for more details.
636
637 SEE ALSO
638 AnyEvent::Fork::Early, to avoid executing a perl interpreter at all
639 (part of this distribution).
640
641 AnyEvent::Fork::Template, to create a process by forking the main
642 program at a convenient time (part of this distribution).
643
644 AnyEvent::Fork::RPC, for simple RPC to child processes (on CPAN).
645
646 AUTHOR AND CONTACT INFORMATION
647 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
648 http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent-Fork
649