ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Download File
/cvs/BDB/BDB.pm
Revision: 1.22
Committed: Mon Dec 10 03:57:27 2007 UTC (16 years, 5 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.21: +3 -2 lines
Log Message:
*** empty log message ***

File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 BDB - Asynchronous Berkeley DB access
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use BDB;
8
9 my $env = db_env_create;
10
11 mkdir "bdtest", 0700;
12 db_env_open
13 $env,
14 "bdtest",
15 BDB::INIT_LOCK | BDB::INIT_LOG | BDB::INIT_MPOOL
16 | BDB::INIT_TXN | BDB::RECOVER | BDB::USE_ENVIRON | BDB::CREATE,
17 0600;
18
19 $env->set_flags (BDB::AUTO_COMMIT | BDB::TXN_NOSYNC, 1);
20
21 my $db = db_create $env;
22 db_open $db, undef, "table", undef, BDB::BTREE, BDB::AUTO_COMMIT | BDB::CREATE
23 | BDB::READ_UNCOMMITTED, 0600;
24 db_put $db, undef, "key", "data", 0, sub {
25 db_del $db, undef, "key";
26 };
27 db_sync $db;
28
29 # automatic result processing with AnyEvent:
30 our $FH; open $FH, "<&=" . BDB::poll_fileno;
31 our $WATCHER = AnyEvent->io (fh => $FH, poll => 'r', cb => \&BDB::poll_cb);
32
33 # automatic result processing with EV:
34 my $WATCHER = EV::io BDB::poll_fileno, EV::READ, \&BDB::poll_cb;
35
36 # with Glib:
37 add_watch Glib::IO BDB::poll_fileno,
38 in => sub { BDB::poll_cb; 1 };
39
40 # or simply flush manually
41 BDB::flush;
42
43
44 =head1 DESCRIPTION
45
46 See the BerkeleyDB documentation (L<http://www.oracle.com/technology/documentation/berkeley-db/db/index.html>).
47 The BDB API is very similar to the C API (the translation has been very faithful).
48
49 See also the example sections in the document below and possibly the eg/
50 subdirectory of the BDB distribution. Last not least see the IO::AIO
51 documentation, as that module uses almost the same asynchronous request
52 model as this module.
53
54 I know this is woefully inadequate documentation. Send a patch!
55
56
57 =head1 REQUEST ANATOMY AND LIFETIME
58
59 Every request method creates a request. which is a C data structure not
60 directly visible to Perl.
61
62 During their existance, bdb requests travel through the following states,
63 in order:
64
65 =over 4
66
67 =item ready
68
69 Immediately after a request is created it is put into the ready state,
70 waiting for a thread to execute it.
71
72 =item execute
73
74 A thread has accepted the request for processing and is currently
75 executing it (e.g. blocking in read).
76
77 =item pending
78
79 The request has been executed and is waiting for result processing.
80
81 While request submission and execution is fully asynchronous, result
82 processing is not and relies on the perl interpreter calling C<poll_cb>
83 (or another function with the same effect).
84
85 =item result
86
87 The request results are processed synchronously by C<poll_cb>.
88
89 The C<poll_cb> function will process all outstanding aio requests by
90 calling their callbacks, freeing memory associated with them and managing
91 any groups they are contained in.
92
93 =item done
94
95 Request has reached the end of its lifetime and holds no resources anymore
96 (except possibly for the Perl object, but its connection to the actual
97 aio request is severed and calling its methods will either do nothing or
98 result in a runtime error).
99
100 =back
101
102 =cut
103
104 package BDB;
105
106 no warnings;
107 use strict 'vars';
108
109 use base 'Exporter';
110
111 BEGIN {
112 our $VERSION = '1.3';
113
114 our @BDB_REQ = qw(
115 db_env_open db_env_close db_env_txn_checkpoint db_env_lock_detect
116 db_env_memp_sync db_env_memp_trickle
117 db_open db_close db_compact db_sync db_put db_get db_pget db_del db_key_range
118 db_txn_commit db_txn_abort db_txn_finish
119 db_c_close db_c_count db_c_put db_c_get db_c_pget db_c_del
120 db_sequence_open db_sequence_close
121 db_sequence_get db_sequence_remove
122 );
123 our @EXPORT = (@BDB_REQ, qw(dbreq_pri dbreq_nice db_env_create db_create));
124 our @EXPORT_OK = qw(
125 poll_fileno poll_cb poll_wait flush
126 min_parallel max_parallel max_idle
127 nreqs nready npending nthreads
128 max_poll_time max_poll_reqs
129 );
130
131 require XSLoader;
132 XSLoader::load ("BDB", $VERSION);
133 }
134
135 =head2 BERKELEYDB FUNCTIONS
136
137 All of these are functions. The create functions simply return a new
138 object and never block. All the remaining functions all take an optional
139 callback as last argument that gets passed the return value. If it is
140 missing, then the function will be executed synchronously, and the return
141 value is returned as normally.
142
143 BDB functions that cannot block (mostly functions that manipulate
144 settings) are method calls on the relevant objects, so the rule of thumb
145 is: if its a method, its not blocking, if its a function, it takes a
146 callback as last argument.
147
148 In the following, C<$int> signifies an integer return value,
149 C<octetstring> is a "binary string" (i.e. a perl string with no character
150 indices >255), C<U32> is an unsigned 32 bit integer, C<int> is some
151 integer, C<NV> is a floating point value.
152
153 The C<SV *> types are generic perl scalars (for input and output of data
154 values), and the C<SV *callback> is the optional callback function to call
155 when the request is completed.
156
157 The various C<DB_ENV> etc. arguments are handles return by
158 C<db_env_create>, C<db_create>, C<txn_begin> and so on. If they have an
159 appended C<_ornull> this means they are optional and you can pass C<undef>
160 for them, resulting a NULL pointer on the C level.
161
162 =head3 BDB functions
163
164 Functions in the BDB namespace, exported by default:
165
166 $env = db_env_create (U32 env_flags = 0)
167 flags: RPCCLIENT
168
169 db_env_open (DB_ENV *env, octetstring db_home, U32 open_flags, int mode, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
170 open_flags: INIT_CDB INIT_LOCK INIT_LOG INIT_MPOOL INIT_REP INIT_TXN RECOVER RECOVER_FATAL USE_ENVIRON USE_ENVIRON_ROOT CREATE LOCKDOWN PRIVATE REGISTER SYSTEM_MEM
171 db_env_close (DB_ENV *env, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
172 db_env_txn_checkpoint (DB_ENV *env, U32 kbyte = 0, U32 min = 0, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
173 flags: FORCE
174 db_env_lock_detect (DB_ENV *env, U32 flags = 0, U32 atype = DB_LOCK_DEFAULT, SV *dummy = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
175 atype: LOCK_DEFAULT LOCK_EXPIRE LOCK_MAXLOCKS LOCK_MAXWRITE LOCK_MINLOCKS LOCK_MINWRITE LOCK_OLDEST LOCK_RANDOM LOCK_YOUNGEST
176 db_env_memp_sync (DB_ENV *env, SV *dummy = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
177 db_env_memp_trickle (DB_ENV *env, int percent, SV *dummy = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
178
179 $db = db_create (DB_ENV *env = 0, U32 flags = 0)
180 flags: XA_CREATE
181
182 db_open (DB *db, DB_TXN_ornull *txnid, octetstring file, octetstring database, int type, U32 flags, int mode, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
183 flags: AUTO_COMMIT CREATE EXCL MULTIVERSION NOMMAP RDONLY READ_UNCOMMITTED THREAD TRUNCATE
184 db_close (DB *db, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
185 flags: DB_NOSYNC
186 db_compact (DB *db, DB_TXN_ornull *txn = 0, SV *start = 0, SV *stop = 0, SV *unused1 = 0, U32 flags = DB_FREE_SPACE, SV *unused2 = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
187 flags: FREELIST_ONLY FREE_SPACE
188 db_sync (DB *db, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
189 db_key_range (DB *db, DB_TXN_ornull *txn, SV *key, SV *key_range, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
190 db_put (DB *db, DB_TXN_ornull *txn, SV *key, SV *data, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
191 flags: APPEND NODUPDATA NOOVERWRITE
192 db_get (DB *db, DB_TXN_ornull *txn, SV *key, SV *data, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
193 flags: CONSUME CONSUME_WAIT GET_BOTH SET_RECNO MULTIPLE READ_COMMITTED READ_UNCOMMITTED RMW
194 db_pget (DB *db, DB_TXN_ornull *txn, SV *key, SV *pkey, SV *data, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
195 flags: CONSUME CONSUME_WAIT GET_BOTH SET_RECNO MULTIPLE READ_COMMITTED READ_UNCOMMITTED RMW
196 db_del (DB *db, DB_TXN_ornull *txn, SV *key, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
197 db_txn_commit (DB_TXN *txn, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
198 flags: TXN_NOSYNC TXN_SYNC
199 db_txn_abort (DB_TXN *txn, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
200
201 db_c_close (DBC *dbc, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
202 db_c_count (DBC *dbc, SV *count, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
203 db_c_put (DBC *dbc, SV *key, SV *data, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
204 flags: AFTER BEFORE CURRENT KEYFIRST KEYLAST NODUPDATA
205 db_c_get (DBC *dbc, SV *key, SV *data, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
206 flags: CURRENT FIRST GET_BOTH GET_BOTH_RANGE GET_RECNO JOIN_ITEM LAST NEXT NEXT_DUP NEXT_NODUP PREV PREV_DUP PREV_NODUP SET SET_RANGE SET_RECNO READ_UNCOMMITTED MULTIPLE MULTIPLE_KEY RMW
207 db_c_pget (DBC *dbc, SV *key, SV *pkey, SV *data, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
208 db_c_del (DBC *dbc, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
209
210 db_sequence_open (DB_SEQUENCE *seq, DB_TXN_ornull *txnid, SV *key, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
211 flags: CREATE EXCL
212 db_sequence_close (DB_SEQUENCE *seq, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
213 db_sequence_get (DB_SEQUENCE *seq, DB_TXN_ornull *txnid, int delta, SV *seq_value, U32 flags = DB_TXN_NOSYNC, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
214 flags: TXN_NOSYNC
215 db_sequence_remove (DB_SEQUENCE *seq, DB_TXN_ornull *txnid = 0, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
216 flags: TXN_NOSYNC
217
218 =head4 db_txn_finish (DB_TXN *txn, U32 flags = 0, SV *callback = &PL_sv_undef)
219
220 This is not actually a Berkeley DB function but a BDB module
221 extension. The background for this exytension is: It is very annoying to
222 have to check every single BDB function for error returns and provide a
223 codepath out of your transaction. While the BDB module still makes this
224 possible, it contains the following extensions:
225
226 When a transaction-protected function returns any operating system
227 error (errno > 0), BDB will set the C<TXN_DEADLOCK> flag on the
228 transaction. This flag is also set by Berkeley DB functions themselves
229 when an operation fails with LOCK_DEADLOCK, and it causes all further
230 operations on that transaction (including C<db_txn_commit>) to fail.
231
232 The C<db_txn_finish> request will look at this flag, and, if it is set,
233 will automatically call C<db_txn_abort> (setting errno to C<LOCK_DEADLOCK>
234 if it isn't set to something else yet). If it isn't set, it will call
235 C<db_txn_commit> and return the error normally.
236
237 How to use this? Easy: just write your transaction normally:
238
239 my $txn = $db_env->txn_begin;
240 db_get $db, $txn, "key", my $data;
241 db_put $db, $txn, "key", $data + 1 unless $! == BDB::NOTFOUND;
242 db_txn_finish $txn;
243 die "transaction failed" if $!;
244
245 That is, handle only the expected errors. If something unexpected happens
246 (EIO, LOCK_NOTGRANTED or a deadlock in either db_get or db_put), then the remaining
247 requests (db_put in this case) will simply be skipped (they will fail with
248 LOCK_DEADLOCK) and the transaction will be aborted.
249
250 You can use the C<< $txn->failed >> method to check wether a transaction
251 has failed in this way and abort further processing (excluding
252 C<db_txn_finish>).
253
254 =head3 DB_ENV/database environment methods
255
256 Methods available on DB_ENV/$env handles:
257
258 DESTROY (DB_ENV_ornull *env)
259 CODE:
260 if (env)
261 env->close (env, 0);
262
263 $int = $env->set_data_dir (const char *dir)
264 $int = $env->set_tmp_dir (const char *dir)
265 $int = $env->set_lg_dir (const char *dir)
266 $int = $env->set_shm_key (long shm_key)
267 $int = $env->set_cachesize (U32 gbytes, U32 bytes, int ncache = 0)
268 $int = $env->set_flags (U32 flags, int onoff)
269 $env->set_errfile (FILE *errfile = 0)
270 $env->set_msgfile (FILE *msgfile = 0)
271 $int = $env->set_verbose (U32 which, int onoff = 1)
272 $int = $env->set_encrypt (const char *password, U32 flags = 0)
273 $int = $env->set_timeout (NV timeout_seconds, U32 flags = SET_TXN_TIMEOUT)
274 $int = $env->set_mp_max_openfd (int maxopenfd);
275 $int = $env->set_mp_max_write (int maxwrite, int maxwrite_sleep);
276 $int = $env->set_mp_mmapsize (int mmapsize_mb)
277 $int = $env->set_lk_detect (U32 detect = DB_LOCK_DEFAULT)
278 $int = $env->set_lk_max_lockers (U32 max)
279 $int = $env->set_lk_max_locks (U32 max)
280 $int = $env->set_lk_max_objects (U32 max)
281 $int = $env->set_lg_bsize (U32 max)
282 $int = $env->set_lg_max (U32 max)
283 $int = $env->mutex_set_increment (U32 increment)
284 $int = $env->mutex_set_tas_spins (U32 tas_spins)
285 $int = $env->mutex_set_max (U32 max)
286 $int = $env->mutex_set_align (U32 align)
287
288 $txn = $env->txn_begin (DB_TXN_ornull *parent = 0, U32 flags = 0)
289 flags: READ_COMMITTED READ_UNCOMMITTED TXN_NOSYNC TXN_NOWAIT TXN_SNAPSHOT TXN_SYNC TXN_WAIT TXN_WRITE_NOSYNC
290
291 =head4 Example:
292
293 use AnyEvent;
294 use BDB;
295
296 our $FH; open $FH, "<&=" . BDB::poll_fileno;
297 our $WATCHER = AnyEvent->io (fh => $FH, poll => 'r', cb => \&BDB::poll_cb);
298
299 BDB::min_parallel 8;
300
301 my $env = db_env_create;
302
303 mkdir "bdtest", 0700;
304 db_env_open
305 $env,
306 "bdtest",
307 BDB::INIT_LOCK | BDB::INIT_LOG | BDB::INIT_MPOOL | BDB::INIT_TXN | BDB::RECOVER | BDB::USE_ENVIRON | BDB::CREATE,
308 0600;
309
310 $env->set_flags (BDB::AUTO_COMMIT | BDB::TXN_NOSYNC, 1);
311
312
313 =head3 DB/database methods
314
315 Methods available on DB/$db handles:
316
317 DESTROY (DB_ornull *db)
318 CODE:
319 if (db)
320 {
321 SV *env = (SV *)db->app_private;
322 db->close (db, 0);
323 SvREFCNT_dec (env);
324 }
325
326 $int = $db->set_cachesize (U32 gbytes, U32 bytes, int ncache = 0)
327 $int = $db->set_flags (U32 flags)
328 flags: CHKSUM ENCRYPT TXN_NOT_DURABLE
329 Btree: DUP DUPSORT RECNUM REVSPLITOFF
330 Hash: DUP DUPSORT
331 Queue: INORDER
332 Recno: RENUMBER SNAPSHOT
333
334 $int = $db->set_encrypt (const char *password, U32 flags)
335 $int = $db->set_lorder (int lorder)
336 $int = $db->set_bt_minkey (U32 minkey)
337 $int = $db->set_re_delim (int delim)
338 $int = $db->set_re_pad (int re_pad)
339 $int = $db->set_re_source (char *source)
340 $int = $db->set_re_len (U32 re_len)
341 $int = $db->set_h_ffactor (U32 h_ffactor)
342 $int = $db->set_h_nelem (U32 h_nelem)
343 $int = $db->set_q_extentsize (U32 extentsize)
344
345 $dbc = $db->cursor (DB_TXN_ornull *txn = 0, U32 flags = 0)
346 flags: READ_COMMITTED READ_UNCOMMITTED WRITECURSOR TXN_SNAPSHOT
347 $seq = $db->sequence (U32 flags = 0)
348
349 =head4 Example:
350
351 my $db = db_create $env;
352 db_open $db, undef, "table", undef, BDB::BTREE, BDB::AUTO_COMMIT | BDB::CREATE | BDB::READ_UNCOMMITTED, 0600;
353
354 for (1..1000) {
355 db_put $db, undef, "key $_", "data $_";
356
357 db_key_range $db, undef, "key $_", my $keyrange;
358 my ($lt, $eq, $gt) = @$keyrange;
359 }
360
361 db_del $db, undef, "key $_" for 1..1000;
362
363 db_sync $db;
364
365
366 =head3 DB_TXN/transaction methods
367
368 Methods available on DB_TXN/$txn handles:
369
370 DESTROY (DB_TXN_ornull *txn)
371 CODE:
372 if (txn)
373 txn->abort (txn);
374
375 $int = $txn->set_timeout (NV timeout_seconds, U32 flags = SET_TXN_TIMEOUT)
376 flags: SET_LOCK_TIMEOUT SET_TXN_TIMEOUT
377
378 $bool = $txn->failed
379 # see db_txn_finish documentation, above
380
381
382 =head3 DBC/cursor methods
383
384 Methods available on DBC/$dbc handles:
385
386 DESTROY (DBC_ornull *dbc)
387 CODE:
388 if (dbc)
389 dbc->c_close (dbc);
390
391 =head4 Example:
392
393 my $c = $db->cursor;
394
395 for (;;) {
396 db_c_get $c, my $key, my $data, BDB::NEXT;
397 warn "<$!,$key,$data>";
398 last if $!;
399 }
400
401 db_c_close $c;
402
403
404 =head3 DB_SEQUENCE/sequence methods
405
406 Methods available on DB_SEQUENCE/$seq handles:
407
408 DESTROY (DB_SEQUENCE_ornull *seq)
409 CODE:
410 if (seq)
411 seq->close (seq, 0);
412
413 $int = $seq->initial_value (db_seq_t value)
414 $int = $seq->set_cachesize (U32 size)
415 $int = $seq->set_flags (U32 flags)
416 flags: SEQ_DEC SEQ_INC SEQ_WRAP
417 $int = $seq->set_range (db_seq_t min, db_seq_t max)
418
419 =head4 Example:
420
421 my $seq = $db->sequence;
422
423 db_sequence_open $seq, undef, "seq", BDB::CREATE;
424 db_sequence_get $seq, undef, 1, my $value;
425
426
427 =head2 SUPPORT FUNCTIONS
428
429 =head3 EVENT PROCESSING AND EVENT LOOP INTEGRATION
430
431 =over 4
432
433 =item $fileno = BDB::poll_fileno
434
435 Return the I<request result pipe file descriptor>. This filehandle must be
436 polled for reading by some mechanism outside this module (e.g. Event or
437 select, see below or the SYNOPSIS). If the pipe becomes readable you have
438 to call C<poll_cb> to check the results.
439
440 See C<poll_cb> for an example.
441
442 =item BDB::poll_cb
443
444 Process some outstanding events on the result pipe. You have to call this
445 regularly. Returns the number of events processed. Returns immediately
446 when no events are outstanding. The amount of events processed depends on
447 the settings of C<BDB::max_poll_req> and C<BDB::max_poll_time>.
448
449 If not all requests were processed for whatever reason, the filehandle
450 will still be ready when C<poll_cb> returns.
451
452 Example: Install an Event watcher that automatically calls
453 BDB::poll_cb with high priority:
454
455 Event->io (fd => BDB::poll_fileno,
456 poll => 'r', async => 1,
457 cb => \&BDB::poll_cb);
458
459 =item BDB::max_poll_reqs $nreqs
460
461 =item BDB::max_poll_time $seconds
462
463 These set the maximum number of requests (default C<0>, meaning infinity)
464 that are being processed by C<BDB::poll_cb> in one call, respectively
465 the maximum amount of time (default C<0>, meaning infinity) spent in
466 C<BDB::poll_cb> to process requests (more correctly the mininum amount
467 of time C<poll_cb> is allowed to use).
468
469 Setting C<max_poll_time> to a non-zero value creates an overhead of one
470 syscall per request processed, which is not normally a problem unless your
471 callbacks are really really fast or your OS is really really slow (I am
472 not mentioning Solaris here). Using C<max_poll_reqs> incurs no overhead.
473
474 Setting these is useful if you want to ensure some level of
475 interactiveness when perl is not fast enough to process all requests in
476 time.
477
478 For interactive programs, values such as C<0.01> to C<0.1> should be fine.
479
480 Example: Install an EV watcher that automatically calls
481 BDB::poll_cb with low priority, to ensure that other parts of the
482 program get the CPU sometimes even under high load.
483
484 # try not to spend much more than 0.1s in poll_cb
485 BDB::max_poll_time 0.1;
486
487 my $bdb_poll = EV::io BDB::poll_fileno, EV::READ, \&BDB::poll_cb);
488
489 =item BDB::poll_wait
490
491 If there are any outstanding requests and none of them in the result
492 phase, wait till the result filehandle becomes ready for reading (simply
493 does a C<select> on the filehandle. This is useful if you want to
494 synchronously wait for some requests to finish).
495
496 See C<nreqs> for an example.
497
498 =item BDB::poll
499
500 Waits until some requests have been handled.
501
502 Returns the number of requests processed, but is otherwise strictly
503 equivalent to:
504
505 BDB::poll_wait, BDB::poll_cb
506
507 =item BDB::flush
508
509 Wait till all outstanding BDB requests have been handled.
510
511 Strictly equivalent to:
512
513 BDB::poll_wait, BDB::poll_cb
514 while BDB::nreqs;
515
516 =back
517
518 =head3 CONTROLLING THE NUMBER OF THREADS
519
520 =over 4
521
522 =item BDB::min_parallel $nthreads
523
524 Set the minimum number of BDB threads to C<$nthreads>. The current
525 default is C<8>, which means eight asynchronous operations can execute
526 concurrently at any one time (the number of outstanding requests,
527 however, is unlimited).
528
529 BDB starts threads only on demand, when an BDB request is queued and
530 no free thread exists. Please note that queueing up a hundred requests can
531 create demand for a hundred threads, even if it turns out that everything
532 is in the cache and could have been processed faster by a single thread.
533
534 It is recommended to keep the number of threads relatively low, as some
535 Linux kernel versions will scale negatively with the number of threads
536 (higher parallelity => MUCH higher latency). With current Linux 2.6
537 versions, 4-32 threads should be fine.
538
539 Under most circumstances you don't need to call this function, as the
540 module selects a default that is suitable for low to moderate load.
541
542 =item BDB::max_parallel $nthreads
543
544 Sets the maximum number of BDB threads to C<$nthreads>. If more than the
545 specified number of threads are currently running, this function kills
546 them. This function blocks until the limit is reached.
547
548 While C<$nthreads> are zero, aio requests get queued but not executed
549 until the number of threads has been increased again.
550
551 This module automatically runs C<max_parallel 0> at program end, to ensure
552 that all threads are killed and that there are no outstanding requests.
553
554 Under normal circumstances you don't need to call this function.
555
556 =item BDB::max_idle $nthreads
557
558 Limit the number of threads (default: 4) that are allowed to idle (i.e.,
559 threads that did not get a request to process within 10 seconds). That
560 means if a thread becomes idle while C<$nthreads> other threads are also
561 idle, it will free its resources and exit.
562
563 This is useful when you allow a large number of threads (e.g. 100 or 1000)
564 to allow for extremely high load situations, but want to free resources
565 under normal circumstances (1000 threads can easily consume 30MB of RAM).
566
567 The default is probably ok in most situations, especially if thread
568 creation is fast. If thread creation is very slow on your system you might
569 want to use larger values.
570
571 =item $oldmaxreqs = BDB::max_outstanding $maxreqs
572
573 This is a very bad function to use in interactive programs because it
574 blocks, and a bad way to reduce concurrency because it is inexact: Better
575 use an C<aio_group> together with a feed callback.
576
577 Sets the maximum number of outstanding requests to C<$nreqs>. If you
578 to queue up more than this number of requests, the next call to the
579 C<poll_cb> (and C<poll_some> and other functions calling C<poll_cb>)
580 function will block until the limit is no longer exceeded.
581
582 The default value is very large, so there is no practical limit on the
583 number of outstanding requests.
584
585 You can still queue as many requests as you want. Therefore,
586 C<max_oustsanding> is mainly useful in simple scripts (with low values) or
587 as a stop gap to shield against fatal memory overflow (with large values).
588
589 =item BDB::set_sync_prepare $cb
590
591 Sets a callback that is called whenever a request is created without an
592 explicit callback. It has to return two code references. The first is used
593 as the request callback, and the second is called to wait until the first
594 callback has been called. The default implementation works like this:
595
596 sub {
597 my $status;
598 (
599 sub { $status = $! },
600 sub { BDB::poll while !defined $status; $! = $status },
601 )
602 }
603
604 =back
605
606 =head3 STATISTICAL INFORMATION
607
608 =over 4
609
610 =item BDB::nreqs
611
612 Returns the number of requests currently in the ready, execute or pending
613 states (i.e. for which their callback has not been invoked yet).
614
615 Example: wait till there are no outstanding requests anymore:
616
617 BDB::poll_wait, BDB::poll_cb
618 while BDB::nreqs;
619
620 =item BDB::nready
621
622 Returns the number of requests currently in the ready state (not yet
623 executed).
624
625 =item BDB::npending
626
627 Returns the number of requests currently in the pending state (executed,
628 but not yet processed by poll_cb).
629
630 =back
631
632 =cut
633
634 set_sync_prepare {
635 my $status;
636 (
637 sub {
638 $status = $!;
639 },
640 sub {
641 BDB::poll while !defined $status;
642 $! = $status;
643 },
644 )
645 };
646
647 min_parallel 8;
648
649 END { flush }
650
651 1;
652
653 =head2 FORK BEHAVIOUR
654
655 This module should do "the right thing" when the process using it forks:
656
657 Before the fork, BDB enters a quiescent state where no requests
658 can be added in other threads and no results will be processed. After
659 the fork the parent simply leaves the quiescent state and continues
660 request/result processing, while the child frees the request/result queue
661 (so that the requests started before the fork will only be handled in the
662 parent). Threads will be started on demand until the limit set in the
663 parent process has been reached again.
664
665 In short: the parent will, after a short pause, continue as if fork had
666 not been called, while the child will act as if BDB has not been used
667 yet.
668
669 =head2 MEMORY USAGE
670
671 Per-request usage:
672
673 Each aio request uses - depending on your architecture - around 100-200
674 bytes of memory. In addition, stat requests need a stat buffer (possibly
675 a few hundred bytes), readdir requires a result buffer and so on. Perl
676 scalars and other data passed into aio requests will also be locked and
677 will consume memory till the request has entered the done state.
678
679 This is not awfully much, so queuing lots of requests is not usually a
680 problem.
681
682 Per-thread usage:
683
684 In the execution phase, some aio requests require more memory for
685 temporary buffers, and each thread requires a stack and other data
686 structures (usually around 16k-128k, depending on the OS).
687
688 =head1 KNOWN BUGS
689
690 Known bugs will be fixed in the next release, except:
691
692 If you use a transaction in any request, and the request returns
693 with an operating system error or DB_LOCK_NOTGRANTED, the internal
694 TXN_DEADLOCK flag will be set on the transaction. See C<db_txn_finish>,
695 above.
696
697 =head1 SEE ALSO
698
699 L<Coro::BDB>, L<IO::AIO>.
700
701 =head1 AUTHOR
702
703 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
704 http://home.schmorp.de/
705
706 =cut
707