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Revision: 1.78
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 AnyEvent::MP - multi-processing/message-passing framework
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use AnyEvent::MP;
8
9 $NODE # contains this node's node ID
10 NODE # returns this node's node ID
11
12 $SELF # receiving/own port id in rcv callbacks
13
14 # initialise the node so it can send/receive messages
15 configure;
16
17 # ports are message destinations
18
19 # sending messages
20 snd $port, type => data...;
21 snd $port, @msg;
22 snd @msg_with_first_element_being_a_port;
23
24 # creating/using ports, the simple way
25 my $simple_port = port { my @msg = @_ };
26
27 # creating/using ports, tagged message matching
28 my $port = port;
29 rcv $port, ping => sub { snd $_[0], "pong" };
30 rcv $port, pong => sub { warn "pong received\n" };
31
32 # create a port on another node
33 my $port = spawn $node, $initfunc, @initdata;
34
35 # monitoring
36 mon $port, $cb->(@msg) # callback is invoked on death
37 mon $port, $otherport # kill otherport on abnormal death
38 mon $port, $otherport, @msg # send message on death
39
40 =head1 CURRENT STATUS
41
42 bin/aemp - stable.
43 AnyEvent::MP - stable API, should work.
44 AnyEvent::MP::Intro - explains most concepts.
45 AnyEvent::MP::Kernel - mostly stable.
46 AnyEvent::MP::Global - stable API, protocol not yet final.
47
48 stay tuned.
49
50 =head1 DESCRIPTION
51
52 This module (-family) implements a simple message passing framework.
53
54 Despite its simplicity, you can securely message other processes running
55 on the same or other hosts, and you can supervise entities remotely.
56
57 For an introduction to this module family, see the L<AnyEvent::MP::Intro>
58 manual page and the examples under F<eg/>.
59
60 =head1 CONCEPTS
61
62 =over 4
63
64 =item port
65
66 A port is something you can send messages to (with the C<snd> function).
67
68 Ports allow you to register C<rcv> handlers that can match all or just
69 some messages. Messages send to ports will not be queued, regardless of
70 anything was listening for them or not.
71
72 =item port ID - C<nodeid#portname>
73
74 A port ID is the concatenation of a node ID, a hash-mark (C<#>) as
75 separator, and a port name (a printable string of unspecified format).
76
77 =item node
78
79 A node is a single process containing at least one port - the node port,
80 which enables nodes to manage each other remotely, and to create new
81 ports.
82
83 Nodes are either public (have one or more listening ports) or private
84 (no listening ports). Private nodes cannot talk to other private nodes
85 currently.
86
87 =item node ID - C<[a-za-Z0-9_\-.:]+>
88
89 A node ID is a string that uniquely identifies the node within a
90 network. Depending on the configuration used, node IDs can look like a
91 hostname, a hostname and a port, or a random string. AnyEvent::MP itself
92 doesn't interpret node IDs in any way.
93
94 =item binds - C<ip:port>
95
96 Nodes can only talk to each other by creating some kind of connection to
97 each other. To do this, nodes should listen on one or more local transport
98 endpoints - binds. Currently, only standard C<ip:port> specifications can
99 be used, which specify TCP ports to listen on.
100
101 =item seeds - C<host:port>
102
103 When a node starts, it knows nothing about the network. To teach the node
104 about the network it first has to contact some other node within the
105 network. This node is called a seed.
106
107 Seeds are transport endpoint(s) of as many nodes as one wants. Those nodes
108 are expected to be long-running, and at least one of those should always
109 be available. When nodes run out of connections (e.g. due to a network
110 error), they try to re-establish connections to some seednodes again to
111 join the network.
112
113 Apart from being sued for seeding, seednodes are not special in any way -
114 every public node can be a seednode.
115
116 =back
117
118 =head1 VARIABLES/FUNCTIONS
119
120 =over 4
121
122 =cut
123
124 package AnyEvent::MP;
125
126 use AnyEvent::MP::Kernel;
127
128 use common::sense;
129
130 use Carp ();
131
132 use AE ();
133
134 use base "Exporter";
135
136 our $VERSION = $AnyEvent::MP::Kernel::VERSION;
137
138 our @EXPORT = qw(
139 NODE $NODE *SELF node_of after
140 configure
141 snd rcv mon mon_guard kil reg psub spawn
142 port
143 );
144
145 our $SELF;
146
147 sub _self_die() {
148 my $msg = $@;
149 $msg =~ s/\n+$// unless ref $msg;
150 kil $SELF, die => $msg;
151 }
152
153 =item $thisnode = NODE / $NODE
154
155 The C<NODE> function returns, and the C<$NODE> variable contains, the node
156 ID of the node running in the current process. This value is initialised by
157 a call to C<configure>.
158
159 =item $nodeid = node_of $port
160
161 Extracts and returns the node ID from a port ID or a node ID.
162
163 =item configure $profile, key => value...
164
165 =item configure key => value...
166
167 Before a node can talk to other nodes on the network (i.e. enter
168 "distributed mode") it has to configure itself - the minimum a node needs
169 to know is its own name, and optionally it should know the addresses of
170 some other nodes in the network to discover other nodes.
171
172 This function configures a node - it must be called exactly once (or
173 never) before calling other AnyEvent::MP functions.
174
175 =over 4
176
177 =item step 1, gathering configuration from profiles
178
179 The function first looks up a profile in the aemp configuration (see the
180 L<aemp> commandline utility). The profile name can be specified via the
181 named C<profile> parameter or can simply be the first parameter). If it is
182 missing, then the nodename (F<uname -n>) will be used as profile name.
183
184 The profile data is then gathered as follows:
185
186 First, all remaining key => value pairs (all of which are conveniently
187 undocumented at the moment) will be interpreted as configuration
188 data. Then they will be overwritten by any values specified in the global
189 default configuration (see the F<aemp> utility), then the chain of
190 profiles chosen by the profile name (and any C<parent> attributes).
191
192 That means that the values specified in the profile have highest priority
193 and the values specified directly via C<configure> have lowest priority,
194 and can only be used to specify defaults.
195
196 If the profile specifies a node ID, then this will become the node ID of
197 this process. If not, then the profile name will be used as node ID. The
198 special node ID of C<anon/> will be replaced by a random node ID.
199
200 =item step 2, bind listener sockets
201
202 The next step is to look up the binds in the profile, followed by binding
203 aemp protocol listeners on all binds specified (it is possible and valid
204 to have no binds, meaning that the node cannot be contacted form the
205 outside. This means the node cannot talk to other nodes that also have no
206 binds, but it can still talk to all "normal" nodes).
207
208 If the profile does not specify a binds list, then a default of C<*> is
209 used, meaning the node will bind on a dynamically-assigned port on every
210 local IP address it finds.
211
212 =item step 3, connect to seed nodes
213
214 As the last step, the seeds list from the profile is passed to the
215 L<AnyEvent::MP::Global> module, which will then use it to keep
216 connectivity with at least one node at any point in time.
217
218 =back
219
220 Example: become a distributed node using the locla node name as profile.
221 This should be the most common form of invocation for "daemon"-type nodes.
222
223 configure
224
225 Example: become an anonymous node. This form is often used for commandline
226 clients.
227
228 configure nodeid => "anon/";
229
230 Example: configure a node using a profile called seed, which si suitable
231 for a seed node as it binds on all local addresses on a fixed port (4040,
232 customary for aemp).
233
234 # use the aemp commandline utility
235 # aemp profile seed nodeid anon/ binds '*:4040'
236
237 # then use it
238 configure profile => "seed";
239
240 # or simply use aemp from the shell again:
241 # aemp run profile seed
242
243 # or provide a nicer-to-remember nodeid
244 # aemp run profile seed nodeid "$(hostname)"
245
246 =item $SELF
247
248 Contains the current port id while executing C<rcv> callbacks or C<psub>
249 blocks.
250
251 =item *SELF, SELF, %SELF, @SELF...
252
253 Due to some quirks in how perl exports variables, it is impossible to
254 just export C<$SELF>, all the symbols named C<SELF> are exported by this
255 module, but only C<$SELF> is currently used.
256
257 =item snd $port, type => @data
258
259 =item snd $port, @msg
260
261 Send the given message to the given port, which can identify either a
262 local or a remote port, and must be a port ID.
263
264 While the message can be almost anything, it is highly recommended to
265 use a string as first element (a port ID, or some word that indicates a
266 request type etc.) and to consist if only simple perl values (scalars,
267 arrays, hashes) - if you think you need to pass an object, think again.
268
269 The message data logically becomes read-only after a call to this
270 function: modifying any argument (or values referenced by them) is
271 forbidden, as there can be considerable time between the call to C<snd>
272 and the time the message is actually being serialised - in fact, it might
273 never be copied as within the same process it is simply handed to the
274 receiving port.
275
276 The type of data you can transfer depends on the transport protocol: when
277 JSON is used, then only strings, numbers and arrays and hashes consisting
278 of those are allowed (no objects). When Storable is used, then anything
279 that Storable can serialise and deserialise is allowed, and for the local
280 node, anything can be passed. Best rely only on the common denominator of
281 these.
282
283 =item $local_port = port
284
285 Create a new local port object and returns its port ID. Initially it has
286 no callbacks set and will throw an error when it receives messages.
287
288 =item $local_port = port { my @msg = @_ }
289
290 Creates a new local port, and returns its ID. Semantically the same as
291 creating a port and calling C<rcv $port, $callback> on it.
292
293 The block will be called for every message received on the port, with the
294 global variable C<$SELF> set to the port ID. Runtime errors will cause the
295 port to be C<kil>ed. The message will be passed as-is, no extra argument
296 (i.e. no port ID) will be passed to the callback.
297
298 If you want to stop/destroy the port, simply C<kil> it:
299
300 my $port = port {
301 my @msg = @_;
302 ...
303 kil $SELF;
304 };
305
306 =cut
307
308 sub rcv($@);
309
310 sub _kilme {
311 die "received message on port without callback";
312 }
313
314 sub port(;&) {
315 my $id = "$UNIQ." . $ID++;
316 my $port = "$NODE#$id";
317
318 rcv $port, shift || \&_kilme;
319
320 $port
321 }
322
323 =item rcv $local_port, $callback->(@msg)
324
325 Replaces the default callback on the specified port. There is no way to
326 remove the default callback: use C<sub { }> to disable it, or better
327 C<kil> the port when it is no longer needed.
328
329 The global C<$SELF> (exported by this module) contains C<$port> while
330 executing the callback. Runtime errors during callback execution will
331 result in the port being C<kil>ed.
332
333 The default callback received all messages not matched by a more specific
334 C<tag> match.
335
336 =item rcv $local_port, tag => $callback->(@msg_without_tag), ...
337
338 Register (or replace) callbacks to be called on messages starting with the
339 given tag on the given port (and return the port), or unregister it (when
340 C<$callback> is C<$undef> or missing). There can only be one callback
341 registered for each tag.
342
343 The original message will be passed to the callback, after the first
344 element (the tag) has been removed. The callback will use the same
345 environment as the default callback (see above).
346
347 Example: create a port and bind receivers on it in one go.
348
349 my $port = rcv port,
350 msg1 => sub { ... },
351 msg2 => sub { ... },
352 ;
353
354 Example: create a port, bind receivers and send it in a message elsewhere
355 in one go:
356
357 snd $otherport, reply =>
358 rcv port,
359 msg1 => sub { ... },
360 ...
361 ;
362
363 Example: temporarily register a rcv callback for a tag matching some port
364 (e.g. for a rpc reply) and unregister it after a message was received.
365
366 rcv $port, $otherport => sub {
367 my @reply = @_;
368
369 rcv $SELF, $otherport;
370 };
371
372 =cut
373
374 sub rcv($@) {
375 my $port = shift;
376 my ($nodeid, $portid) = split /#/, $port, 2;
377
378 $NODE{$nodeid} == $NODE{""}
379 or Carp::croak "$port: rcv can only be called on local ports, caught";
380
381 while (@_) {
382 if (ref $_[0]) {
383 if (my $self = $PORT_DATA{$portid}) {
384 "AnyEvent::MP::Port" eq ref $self
385 or Carp::croak "$port: rcv can only be called on message matching ports, caught";
386
387 $self->[2] = shift;
388 } else {
389 my $cb = shift;
390 $PORT{$portid} = sub {
391 local $SELF = $port;
392 eval { &$cb }; _self_die if $@;
393 };
394 }
395 } elsif (defined $_[0]) {
396 my $self = $PORT_DATA{$portid} ||= do {
397 my $self = bless [$PORT{$port} || sub { }, { }, $port], "AnyEvent::MP::Port";
398
399 $PORT{$portid} = sub {
400 local $SELF = $port;
401
402 if (my $cb = $self->[1]{$_[0]}) {
403 shift;
404 eval { &$cb }; _self_die if $@;
405 } else {
406 &{ $self->[0] };
407 }
408 };
409
410 $self
411 };
412
413 "AnyEvent::MP::Port" eq ref $self
414 or Carp::croak "$port: rcv can only be called on message matching ports, caught";
415
416 my ($tag, $cb) = splice @_, 0, 2;
417
418 if (defined $cb) {
419 $self->[1]{$tag} = $cb;
420 } else {
421 delete $self->[1]{$tag};
422 }
423 }
424 }
425
426 $port
427 }
428
429 =item $closure = psub { BLOCK }
430
431 Remembers C<$SELF> and creates a closure out of the BLOCK. When the
432 closure is executed, sets up the environment in the same way as in C<rcv>
433 callbacks, i.e. runtime errors will cause the port to get C<kil>ed.
434
435 This is useful when you register callbacks from C<rcv> callbacks:
436
437 rcv delayed_reply => sub {
438 my ($delay, @reply) = @_;
439 my $timer = AE::timer $delay, 0, psub {
440 snd @reply, $SELF;
441 };
442 };
443
444 =cut
445
446 sub psub(&) {
447 my $cb = shift;
448
449 my $port = $SELF
450 or Carp::croak "psub can only be called from within rcv or psub callbacks, not";
451
452 sub {
453 local $SELF = $port;
454
455 if (wantarray) {
456 my @res = eval { &$cb };
457 _self_die if $@;
458 @res
459 } else {
460 my $res = eval { &$cb };
461 _self_die if $@;
462 $res
463 }
464 }
465 }
466
467 =item $guard = mon $port, $cb->(@reason) # call $cb when $port dies
468
469 =item $guard = mon $port, $rcvport # kill $rcvport when $port dies
470
471 =item $guard = mon $port # kill $SELF when $port dies
472
473 =item $guard = mon $port, $rcvport, @msg # send a message when $port dies
474
475 Monitor the given port and do something when the port is killed or
476 messages to it were lost, and optionally return a guard that can be used
477 to stop monitoring again.
478
479 C<mon> effectively guarantees that, in the absence of hardware failures,
480 after starting the monitor, either all messages sent to the port will
481 arrive, or the monitoring action will be invoked after possible message
482 loss has been detected. No messages will be lost "in between" (after
483 the first lost message no further messages will be received by the
484 port). After the monitoring action was invoked, further messages might get
485 delivered again.
486
487 Note that monitoring-actions are one-shot: once messages are lost (and a
488 monitoring alert was raised), they are removed and will not trigger again.
489
490 In the first form (callback), the callback is simply called with any
491 number of C<@reason> elements (no @reason means that the port was deleted
492 "normally"). Note also that I<< the callback B<must> never die >>, so use
493 C<eval> if unsure.
494
495 In the second form (another port given), the other port (C<$rcvport>)
496 will be C<kil>'ed with C<@reason>, if a @reason was specified, i.e. on
497 "normal" kils nothing happens, while under all other conditions, the other
498 port is killed with the same reason.
499
500 The third form (kill self) is the same as the second form, except that
501 C<$rvport> defaults to C<$SELF>.
502
503 In the last form (message), a message of the form C<@msg, @reason> will be
504 C<snd>.
505
506 As a rule of thumb, monitoring requests should always monitor a port from
507 a local port (or callback). The reason is that kill messages might get
508 lost, just like any other message. Another less obvious reason is that
509 even monitoring requests can get lost (for example, when the connection
510 to the other node goes down permanently). When monitoring a port locally
511 these problems do not exist.
512
513 Example: call a given callback when C<$port> is killed.
514
515 mon $port, sub { warn "port died because of <@_>\n" };
516
517 Example: kill ourselves when C<$port> is killed abnormally.
518
519 mon $port;
520
521 Example: send us a restart message when another C<$port> is killed.
522
523 mon $port, $self => "restart";
524
525 =cut
526
527 sub mon {
528 my ($nodeid, $port) = split /#/, shift, 2;
529
530 my $node = $NODE{$nodeid} || add_node $nodeid;
531
532 my $cb = @_ ? shift : $SELF || Carp::croak 'mon: called with one argument only, but $SELF not set,';
533
534 unless (ref $cb) {
535 if (@_) {
536 # send a kill info message
537 my (@msg) = ($cb, @_);
538 $cb = sub { snd @msg, @_ };
539 } else {
540 # simply kill other port
541 my $port = $cb;
542 $cb = sub { kil $port, @_ if @_ };
543 }
544 }
545
546 $node->monitor ($port, $cb);
547
548 defined wantarray
549 and AnyEvent::Util::guard { $node->unmonitor ($port, $cb) }
550 }
551
552 =item $guard = mon_guard $port, $ref, $ref...
553
554 Monitors the given C<$port> and keeps the passed references. When the port
555 is killed, the references will be freed.
556
557 Optionally returns a guard that will stop the monitoring.
558
559 This function is useful when you create e.g. timers or other watchers and
560 want to free them when the port gets killed (note the use of C<psub>):
561
562 $port->rcv (start => sub {
563 my $timer; $timer = mon_guard $port, AE::timer 1, 1, psub {
564 undef $timer if 0.9 < rand;
565 });
566 });
567
568 =cut
569
570 sub mon_guard {
571 my ($port, @refs) = @_;
572
573 #TODO: mon-less form?
574
575 mon $port, sub { 0 && @refs }
576 }
577
578 =item kil $port[, @reason]
579
580 Kill the specified port with the given C<@reason>.
581
582 If no C<@reason> is specified, then the port is killed "normally" (ports
583 monitoring other ports will not necessarily die because a port dies
584 "normally").
585
586 Otherwise, linked ports get killed with the same reason (second form of
587 C<mon>, see above).
588
589 Runtime errors while evaluating C<rcv> callbacks or inside C<psub> blocks
590 will be reported as reason C<< die => $@ >>.
591
592 Transport/communication errors are reported as C<< transport_error =>
593 $message >>.
594
595 =cut
596
597 =item $port = spawn $node, $initfunc[, @initdata]
598
599 Creates a port on the node C<$node> (which can also be a port ID, in which
600 case it's the node where that port resides).
601
602 The port ID of the newly created port is returned immediately, and it is
603 possible to immediately start sending messages or to monitor the port.
604
605 After the port has been created, the init function is called on the remote
606 node, in the same context as a C<rcv> callback. This function must be a
607 fully-qualified function name (e.g. C<MyApp::Chat::Server::init>). To
608 specify a function in the main program, use C<::name>.
609
610 If the function doesn't exist, then the node tries to C<require>
611 the package, then the package above the package and so on (e.g.
612 C<MyApp::Chat::Server>, C<MyApp::Chat>, C<MyApp>) until the function
613 exists or it runs out of package names.
614
615 The init function is then called with the newly-created port as context
616 object (C<$SELF>) and the C<@initdata> values as arguments.
617
618 A common idiom is to pass a local port, immediately monitor the spawned
619 port, and in the remote init function, immediately monitor the passed
620 local port. This two-way monitoring ensures that both ports get cleaned up
621 when there is a problem.
622
623 Example: spawn a chat server port on C<$othernode>.
624
625 # this node, executed from within a port context:
626 my $server = spawn $othernode, "MyApp::Chat::Server::connect", $SELF;
627 mon $server;
628
629 # init function on C<$othernode>
630 sub connect {
631 my ($srcport) = @_;
632
633 mon $srcport;
634
635 rcv $SELF, sub {
636 ...
637 };
638 }
639
640 =cut
641
642 sub _spawn {
643 my $port = shift;
644 my $init = shift;
645
646 local $SELF = "$NODE#$port";
647 eval {
648 &{ load_func $init }
649 };
650 _self_die if $@;
651 }
652
653 sub spawn(@) {
654 my ($nodeid, undef) = split /#/, shift, 2;
655
656 my $id = "$RUNIQ." . $ID++;
657
658 $_[0] =~ /::/
659 or Carp::croak "spawn init function must be a fully-qualified name, caught";
660
661 snd_to_func $nodeid, "AnyEvent::MP::_spawn" => $id, @_;
662
663 "$nodeid#$id"
664 }
665
666 =item after $timeout, @msg
667
668 =item after $timeout, $callback
669
670 Either sends the given message, or call the given callback, after the
671 specified number of seconds.
672
673 This is simply a utility function that comes in handy at times - the
674 AnyEvent::MP author is not convinced of the wisdom of having it, though,
675 so it may go away in the future.
676
677 =cut
678
679 sub after($@) {
680 my ($timeout, @action) = @_;
681
682 my $t; $t = AE::timer $timeout, 0, sub {
683 undef $t;
684 ref $action[0]
685 ? $action[0]()
686 : snd @action;
687 };
688 }
689
690 =back
691
692 =head1 AnyEvent::MP vs. Distributed Erlang
693
694 AnyEvent::MP got lots of its ideas from distributed Erlang (Erlang node
695 == aemp node, Erlang process == aemp port), so many of the documents and
696 programming techniques employed by Erlang apply to AnyEvent::MP. Here is a
697 sample:
698
699 http://www.Erlang.se/doc/programming_rules.shtml
700 http://Erlang.org/doc/getting_started/part_frame.html # chapters 3 and 4
701 http://Erlang.org/download/Erlang-book-part1.pdf # chapters 5 and 6
702 http://Erlang.org/download/armstrong_thesis_2003.pdf # chapters 4 and 5
703
704 Despite the similarities, there are also some important differences:
705
706 =over 4
707
708 =item * Node IDs are arbitrary strings in AEMP.
709
710 Erlang relies on special naming and DNS to work everywhere in the same
711 way. AEMP relies on each node somehow knowing its own address(es) (e.g. by
712 configuration or DNS), but will otherwise discover other odes itself.
713
714 =item * Erlang has a "remote ports are like local ports" philosophy, AEMP
715 uses "local ports are like remote ports".
716
717 The failure modes for local ports are quite different (runtime errors
718 only) then for remote ports - when a local port dies, you I<know> it dies,
719 when a connection to another node dies, you know nothing about the other
720 port.
721
722 Erlang pretends remote ports are as reliable as local ports, even when
723 they are not.
724
725 AEMP encourages a "treat remote ports differently" philosophy, with local
726 ports being the special case/exception, where transport errors cannot
727 occur.
728
729 =item * Erlang uses processes and a mailbox, AEMP does not queue.
730
731 Erlang uses processes that selectively receive messages, and therefore
732 needs a queue. AEMP is event based, queuing messages would serve no
733 useful purpose. For the same reason the pattern-matching abilities of
734 AnyEvent::MP are more limited, as there is little need to be able to
735 filter messages without dequeuing them.
736
737 (But see L<Coro::MP> for a more Erlang-like process model on top of AEMP).
738
739 =item * Erlang sends are synchronous, AEMP sends are asynchronous.
740
741 Sending messages in Erlang is synchronous and blocks the process (and
742 so does not need a queue that can overflow). AEMP sends are immediate,
743 connection establishment is handled in the background.
744
745 =item * Erlang suffers from silent message loss, AEMP does not.
746
747 Erlang makes few guarantees on messages delivery - messages can get lost
748 without any of the processes realising it (i.e. you send messages a, b,
749 and c, and the other side only receives messages a and c).
750
751 AEMP guarantees correct ordering, and the guarantee that after one message
752 is lost, all following ones sent to the same port are lost as well, until
753 monitoring raises an error, so there are no silent "holes" in the message
754 sequence.
755
756 =item * Erlang can send messages to the wrong port, AEMP does not.
757
758 In Erlang it is quite likely that a node that restarts reuses a process ID
759 known to other nodes for a completely different process, causing messages
760 destined for that process to end up in an unrelated process.
761
762 AEMP never reuses port IDs, so old messages or old port IDs floating
763 around in the network will not be sent to an unrelated port.
764
765 =item * Erlang uses unprotected connections, AEMP uses secure
766 authentication and can use TLS.
767
768 AEMP can use a proven protocol - TLS - to protect connections and
769 securely authenticate nodes.
770
771 =item * The AEMP protocol is optimised for both text-based and binary
772 communications.
773
774 The AEMP protocol, unlike the Erlang protocol, supports both programming
775 language independent text-only protocols (good for debugging) and binary,
776 language-specific serialisers (e.g. Storable). By default, unless TLS is
777 used, the protocol is actually completely text-based.
778
779 It has also been carefully designed to be implementable in other languages
780 with a minimum of work while gracefully degrading functionality to make the
781 protocol simple.
782
783 =item * AEMP has more flexible monitoring options than Erlang.
784
785 In Erlang, you can chose to receive I<all> exit signals as messages
786 or I<none>, there is no in-between, so monitoring single processes is
787 difficult to implement. Monitoring in AEMP is more flexible than in
788 Erlang, as one can choose between automatic kill, exit message or callback
789 on a per-process basis.
790
791 =item * Erlang tries to hide remote/local connections, AEMP does not.
792
793 Monitoring in Erlang is not an indicator of process death/crashes, in the
794 same way as linking is (except linking is unreliable in Erlang).
795
796 In AEMP, you don't "look up" registered port names or send to named ports
797 that might or might not be persistent. Instead, you normally spawn a port
798 on the remote node. The init function monitors you, and you monitor the
799 remote port. Since both monitors are local to the node, they are much more
800 reliable (no need for C<spawn_link>).
801
802 This also saves round-trips and avoids sending messages to the wrong port
803 (hard to do in Erlang).
804
805 =back
806
807 =head1 RATIONALE
808
809 =over 4
810
811 =item Why strings for port and node IDs, why not objects?
812
813 We considered "objects", but found that the actual number of methods
814 that can be called are quite low. Since port and node IDs travel over
815 the network frequently, the serialising/deserialising would add lots of
816 overhead, as well as having to keep a proxy object everywhere.
817
818 Strings can easily be printed, easily serialised etc. and need no special
819 procedures to be "valid".
820
821 And as a result, a miniport consists of a single closure stored in a
822 global hash - it can't become much cheaper.
823
824 =item Why favour JSON, why not a real serialising format such as Storable?
825
826 In fact, any AnyEvent::MP node will happily accept Storable as framing
827 format, but currently there is no way to make a node use Storable by
828 default (although all nodes will accept it).
829
830 The default framing protocol is JSON because a) JSON::XS is many times
831 faster for small messages and b) most importantly, after years of
832 experience we found that object serialisation is causing more problems
833 than it solves: Just like function calls, objects simply do not travel
834 easily over the network, mostly because they will always be a copy, so you
835 always have to re-think your design.
836
837 Keeping your messages simple, concentrating on data structures rather than
838 objects, will keep your messages clean, tidy and efficient.
839
840 =back
841
842 =head1 SEE ALSO
843
844 L<AnyEvent::MP::Intro> - a gentle introduction.
845
846 L<AnyEvent::MP::Kernel> - more, lower-level, stuff.
847
848 L<AnyEvent::MP::Global> - network maintainance and port groups, to find
849 your applications.
850
851 L<AnyEvent>.
852
853 =head1 AUTHOR
854
855 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
856 http://home.schmorp.de/
857
858 =cut
859
860 1
861