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Revision: 1.3
Committed: Sat Apr 18 10:17:53 2009 UTC (15 years, 1 month ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.2: +154 -45 lines
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# User Rev Content
1 root 1.1 =head1 NAME
2    
3     AnyEvent::SNMP - adaptor to integrate Net::SNMP into Anyevent.
4    
5     =head1 SYNOPSIS
6    
7     use AnyEvent::SNMP;
8     use Net::SNMP;
9    
10     # just use Net::SNMP and AnyEvent as you like:
11    
12     # use a condvar to transfer results, this is
13     # just an example, you can use a naked callback as well.
14     my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar;
15    
16     # ... start non-blocking snmp request(s)...
17     Net::SNMP->session (-hostname => "127.0.0.1",
18     -community => "public",
19     -nonblocking => 1)
20     ->get_request (-callback => sub { $cv->send (@_) });
21    
22     # ... do something else until the result is required
23     my @result = $cv->wait;
24    
25     =head1 DESCRIPTION
26    
27     This module implements an alternative "event dispatcher" for Net::SNMP,
28     using AnyEvent as a backend.
29    
30     This integrates Net::SNMP into AnyEvent: You can make non-blocking
31     Net::SNMP calls and as long as other parts of your program also use
32     AnyEvent (or some event loop supported by AnyEvent), they will run in
33     parallel.
34    
35     Also, the Net::SNMP scheduler is very inefficient with respect to both CPU
36     and memory usage. Most AnyEvent backends (including the pure-perl backend)
37     fare much better than the Net::SNMP dispatcher.
38    
39     A potential disadvantage is that replacing the dispatcher is not at all
40     a documented thing to do, so future changes in Net::SNP might break this
41     module (or the many similar ones).
42    
43     This module does not export anything and does not require you to do
44     anything special apart from loading it I<before doing any non-blocking
45     requests with Net::SNMP>. It is recommended but not required to load this
46     module before C<Net::SNMP>.
47    
48 root 1.3 =head1 GLOBAL VARIABLES
49    
50     =over 4
51    
52     =item $AnyEvent::SNMP::MAX_OUTSTANDING (default: C<50>, dynamic)
53    
54     Use this package variable to restrict the number of outstanding SNMP
55     requests at any point in time.
56    
57     Net::SNMP is very fast at creating and sending SNMP requests, but much
58     slower at parsing (big, bulk) responses. This makes it easy to request a
59     lot of data that can take many seconds to parse.
60    
61     In the best case, this can lead to unnecessary delays (and even time-outs,
62     as the data has been received but not yet processed) and in the worst
63     case, this can lead to packet loss, when the receive queue overflows and
64     the kernel can no longer accept new packets.
65    
66     To avoid this, you can (and should) limit the number of outstanding requests
67     to a number low enough so that parsing time doesn't introduce noticable delays.
68    
69     Unfortunately, this number depends not only on processing speed and load
70     of the machine running Net::SNMP, but also on the network latency and the
71     speed of your SNMP agents.
72    
73     AnyEvent::SNMP tries to dynamically adjust this number dynamically upwards
74     and downwards.
75    
76     Note that you can use L<Net::SNMP::XS> to speed up parsing of responses
77     considerably.
78    
79     =item $AnyEvent::SNMP::MIN_RECVQUEUE (default: C<4>)
80    
81     =item $AnyEvent::SNMP::MAX_RECVQUEUE (default: C<64>)
82    
83     These values specify the minimum and maximum receive queue length (in
84     units of one response packet).
85    
86     When AnyEvent::SNMP handles $MAX_RECVQUEUE or more packets per iteration
87     it will reduce $MAX_OUTSTANDING. If it handles less than $MIN_RECVQUEUE,
88     it increases $MAX_OUTSTANDING.
89    
90     This has the result of adjusting the number of outstanding requests so that
91     the recv queue is between the minimum and maximu, usually.
92    
93     This algorithm works reasonably well as long as the responses, response
94     latencies and processing times are the same size per packet on average.
95    
96     =back
97    
98     =head1 COMPATIBILITY
99    
100     This module may be used as a drop in replacement for the
101     Net::SNMP::Dispatcher in existing programs. You can still call
102     C<snmp_dispatcher> to start the event-loop, but then you loose the benefit
103     of mixing Net::SNMP events with other events.
104    
105     use AnyEvent::SNMP;
106     use Net::SNMP;
107    
108     # just use Net::SNMP as before
109    
110     # ... start non-blocking snmp request(s)...
111     Net::SNMP->session (
112     -hostname => "127.0.0.1",
113     -community => "public",
114     -nonblocking => 1,
115     )->get_request (-callback => sub { ... });
116    
117     snmp_dispatcher;
118    
119 root 1.1 =cut
120    
121     package AnyEvent::SNMP;
122    
123     no warnings;
124     use strict qw(subs vars);
125    
126     # it is possible to do this without loading
127     # Net::SNMP::Dispatcher, but much more awkward.
128     use Net::SNMP::Dispatcher;
129    
130     sub Net::SNMP::Dispatcher::instance {
131     AnyEvent::SNMP::
132     }
133    
134     use Net::SNMP ();
135     use AnyEvent ();
136    
137 root 1.3 our $VERSION = '0.2';
138 root 1.1
139     $Net::SNMP::DISPATCHER = instance Net::SNMP::Dispatcher;
140    
141     our $MESSAGE_PROCESSING = $Net::SNMP::Dispatcher::MESSAGE_PROCESSING;
142    
143     # avoid the method call
144     my $timer = sub { shift->timer (@_) };
145     AnyEvent::post_detect { $timer = AnyEvent->can ("timer") };
146    
147     our $BUSY;
148     our %TRANSPORT; # address => [count, watcher]
149 root 1.3 our @QUEUE;
150     our $MAX_OUTSTANDING = 50;
151     our $MIN_RECVQUEUE = 4;
152     our $MAX_RECVQUEUE = 64;
153    
154     sub kick_job;
155 root 1.1
156     sub _send_pdu {
157     my ($pdu, $retries) = @_;
158    
159     # mostly copied from Net::SNMP::Dispatch
160    
161     # Pass the PDU to Message Processing so that it can
162     # create the new outgoing message.
163     my $msg = $MESSAGE_PROCESSING->prepare_outgoing_msg ($pdu);
164    
165     if (!defined $msg) {
166     --$BUSY;
167 root 1.3 kick_job;
168 root 1.1 # Inform the command generator about the Message Processing error.
169     $pdu->status_information ($MESSAGE_PROCESSING->error);
170     return;
171     }
172    
173     # Actually send the message.
174     if (!defined $msg->send) {
175     $MESSAGE_PROCESSING->msg_handle_delete ($pdu->msg_id)
176     if $pdu->expect_response;
177    
178     # A crude attempt to recover from temporary failures.
179     if ($retries-- > 0 && ($!{EAGAIN} || $!{EWOULDBLOCK} || $!{ENOSPC})) {
180     my $retry_w; $retry_w = AnyEvent->$timer (after => $pdu->timeout, cb => sub {
181     undef $retry_w;
182     _send_pdu ($pdu, $retries);
183     });
184     } else {
185     --$BUSY;
186 root 1.3 kick_job;
187 root 1.1 }
188    
189     # Inform the command generator about the send() error.
190     $pdu->status_information ($msg->error);
191     return;
192     }
193    
194     # Schedule the timeout handler if the message expects a response.
195     if ($pdu->expect_response) {
196     my $transport = $msg->transport;
197    
198     # register the transport
199     unless ($TRANSPORT{$transport+0}[0]++) {
200     $TRANSPORT{$transport+0}[1] = AnyEvent->io (fh => $transport->socket, poll => 'r', cb => sub {
201 root 1.3 for my $count (1..$MAX_RECVQUEUE) { # handle up to this many requests in one go
202     # Create a new Message object to receive the response
203     my ($msg, $error) = Net::SNMP::Message->new (-transport => $transport);
204    
205     if (!defined $msg) {
206     die sprintf 'Failed to create Message object [%s]', $error;
207     }
208 root 1.1
209 root 1.3 # Read the message from the Transport Layer
210     if (!defined $msg->recv) {
211     if ($transport->connectionless) {
212     if ($count < $MIN_RECVQUEUE && @QUEUE) {
213     ++$MAX_OUTSTANDING;
214     kick_job;
215     }
216     } else {
217     # for some reason, connected-oriented transports seem to need this
218     delete $TRANSPORT{$transport+0}
219     unless --$TRANSPORT{$transport+0}[0];
220     }
221 root 1.1
222 root 1.3 $msg->error;
223     return;
224 root 1.1 }
225    
226 root 1.3 # For connection-oriented Transport Domains, it is possible to
227     # "recv" an empty buffer if reassembly is required.
228     if (!$msg->length) {
229     return;
230     }
231 root 1.1
232 root 1.3 # Hand the message over to Message Processing.
233     if (!defined $MESSAGE_PROCESSING->prepare_data_elements ($msg)) {
234     $MESSAGE_PROCESSING->error;
235     return;
236     }
237 root 1.1
238 root 1.3 # Set the error if applicable.
239     $msg->error ($MESSAGE_PROCESSING->error) if $MESSAGE_PROCESSING->error;
240 root 1.1
241 root 1.3 # Notify the command generator to process the response.
242     $msg->process_response_pdu;
243 root 1.1
244 root 1.3 # Cancel the timeout.
245     my $rtimeout_w = $msg->timeout_id;
246     if ($$rtimeout_w) {
247     undef $$rtimeout_w;
248    
249     --$BUSY;
250     kick_job;
251    
252     unless (--$TRANSPORT{$transport+0}[0]) {
253     delete $TRANSPORT{$transport+0};
254     return;
255     }
256     }
257 root 1.1 }
258    
259 root 1.3 $MAX_OUTSTANDING = (int $MAX_OUTSTANDING * 0.9) || 1;
260 root 1.1 });
261     }
262    
263     $msg->timeout_id (\(my $rtimeout_w =
264     AnyEvent->$timer (after => $pdu->timeout, cb => sub {
265     my $rtimeout_w = $msg->timeout_id;
266     if ($$rtimeout_w) {
267     undef $$rtimeout_w;
268     delete $TRANSPORT{$transport+0}
269     unless --$TRANSPORT{$transport+0}[0];
270     }
271    
272     if ($retries--) {
273     _send_pdu ($pdu, $retries);
274     } else {
275     $MESSAGE_PROCESSING->msg_handle_delete ($pdu->msg_id);
276     $pdu->status_information ("No response from remote host '%s'", $pdu->hostname);
277 root 1.3
278     --$BUSY;
279     kick_job;
280 root 1.1 }
281     })
282     ));
283     } else {
284     --$BUSY;
285 root 1.3 kick_job;
286 root 1.1 }
287     }
288    
289 root 1.3 sub kick_job {
290     while ($BUSY < $MAX_OUTSTANDING) {
291     my $pdu = shift @QUEUE
292     or last;
293    
294     ++$BUSY;
295    
296     _send_pdu $pdu, $pdu->retries;
297     }
298     }
299 root 1.1 sub send_pdu($$$) {
300     my (undef, $pdu, $delay) = @_;
301    
302 root 1.3 # $delay is not very sensibly implemented by AnyEvent::SNMP,
303     # but apparently it is not a very sensible feature.
304 root 1.1 if ($delay > 0) {
305 root 1.3 ++$BUSY;
306 root 1.1 my $delay_w; $delay_w = AnyEvent->$timer (after => $delay, cb => sub {
307     undef $delay_w;
308 root 1.3 --$BUSY;
309     push @QUEUE, $pdu;
310     kick_job;
311 root 1.1 });
312     return 1;
313     }
314    
315 root 1.3 push @QUEUE, $pdu;
316     kick_job;
317    
318 root 1.1 1
319     }
320    
321     sub activate($) {
322     AnyEvent->one_event while $BUSY;
323     }
324    
325     sub one_event($) {
326 root 1.3 AnyEvent->one_event;
327 root 1.1 }
328    
329     =head1 SEE ALSO
330    
331 root 1.3 L<AnyEvent>, L<Net::SNMP>, L<Net::SNMP::XS>, L<Net::SNMP::EV>.
332 root 1.1
333     =head1 AUTHOR
334    
335     Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
336     http://home.schmorp.de/
337    
338     =cut
339    
340     1
341