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=head1 NAME |
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Coro::Multicore - make coro threads on multiple cores with specially supported modules |
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=head1 SYNOPSIS |
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# when you DO control the main event loop, e.g. in the main program |
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use Coro::Multicore; # enable by default |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_disable; |
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AE::cv->recv; # or EV::run, AnyEvent::Loop::run, Event::loop, ... |
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# when you DO NOT control the event loop, e.g. in a module on CPAN |
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# do nothing (see HOW TO USE IT) or something like this: |
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use Coro::Multicore (); # disable by default |
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async { |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_enable; |
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# blocking is safe in your own threads |
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... |
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}; |
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=head1 DESCRIPTION |
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While L threads (unlike ithreads) provide real threads similar to |
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pthreads, python threads and so on, they do not run in parallel to each |
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other even on machines with multiple CPUs or multiple CPU cores. |
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This module lifts this restriction under two very specific but useful |
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conditions: firstly, the coro thread executes in XS code and does not |
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touch any perl data structures, and secondly, the XS code is specially |
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prepared to allow this. |
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This means that, when you call an XS function of a module prepared for it, |
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this XS function can execute in parallel to any other Coro threads. This |
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is useful for both CPU bound tasks (such as cryptography) as well as I/O |
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bound tasks (such as loading an image from disk). It can also be used |
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to do stuff in parallel via APIs that were not meant for this, such as |
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database accesses via DBI. |
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The mechanism to support this is easily added to existing modules |
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and is independent of L or L, and therefore |
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could be used, without changes, with other, similar, modules, or even |
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the perl core, should it gain real thread support anytime soon. See |
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L for more info on how to prepare a |
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module to allow parallel execution. Preparing an existing module is easy, |
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doesn't add much overhead and no dependencies. |
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This module is an L user (and also, if not obvious, uses |
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L). |
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=head1 HOW TO USE IT |
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Quick explanation: decide whether you control the main program/the event |
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loop and choose one of the two styles from the SYNOPSIS. |
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Longer explanation: There are two major modes this module can used in - |
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supported operations run asynchronously either by default, or only when |
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requested. The reason you might not want to enable this module for all |
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operations by default is compatibility with existing code: |
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Since this module integrates into an event loop and you must not normally |
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block and wait for something in an event loop callbacks. Now imagine |
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somebody patches your favourite module (e.g. Digest::MD5) to take |
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advantage of of the Perl Multicore API. |
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Then code that runs in an event loop callback and executes |
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Digest::MD5::md5 would work fine without C - it would |
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simply calculate the MD5 digest and block execution of anything else. But |
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with C enabled, the same operation would try to run other |
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threads. And when those wait for events, there is no event loop anymore, |
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as the event loop thread is busy doing the MD5 calculation, leading to a |
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deadlock. |
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=head2 USE IT IN THE MAIN PROGRAM |
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One way to avoid this is to not run perlmulticore enabled functions |
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in any callbacks. A simpler way to ensure it works is to disable |
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C thread switching in event loop callbacks, and enable it |
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everywhere else. |
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Therefore, if you control the event loop, as is usually the case when |
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you write I and not a I, then you can enable C |
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by default, and disable it in your event loop thread: |
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# example 1, separate thread for event loop |
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use EV; |
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use Coro; |
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use Coro::Multicore; |
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async { |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_disable; |
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EV::run; |
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}; |
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# do something else |
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# example 2, run event loop as main program |
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use EV; |
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use Coro; |
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use Coro::Multicore; |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_disable; |
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... initialisation |
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EV::run; |
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The latter form is usually better and more idiomatic - the main thread is |
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the best place to run the event loop. |
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Often you want to do some initialisation before running the event |
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loop. The most efficient way to do that is to put your intialisation code |
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(and main program) into its own thread and run the event loop in your main |
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program: |
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use AnyEvent::Loop; |
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use Coro::Multicore; # enable by default |
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async { |
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load_data; |
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do_other_init; |
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bind_socket; |
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... |
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}; |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_disable; |
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AnyEvent::Loop::run; |
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This has the effect of running the event loop first, so the initialisation |
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code can block if it wants to. |
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If this is too cumbersome but you still want to make sure you can |
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call blocking functions before entering the event loop, you can keep |
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C disabled till you cna run the event loop: |
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use AnyEvent::Loop; |
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use Coro::Multicore (); # disable by default |
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load_data; |
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do_other_init; |
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bind_socket; |
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... |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_disable; # disable for event loop |
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Coro::Multicore::enable 1; # enable for the rest of the program |
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AnyEvent::Loop::run; |
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=head2 USE IT IN A MODULE |
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When you I control the event loop, for example, because you want |
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to use this from a module you published on CPAN, then the previous method |
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doesn't work. |
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However, this is not normally a problem in practise - most modules only |
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do work at request of the caller. In that case, you might not care |
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whether it does block other threads or not, as this would be the callers |
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responsibility (or decision), and by extension, a decision for the main |
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program. |
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So unless you use XS and want your XS functions to run asynchronously, |
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you don't have to worry about C at all - if you |
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happen to call XS functions that are multicore-enabled and your |
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caller has configured things correctly, they will automatically run |
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asynchronously. Or in other words: nothing needs to be done at all, which |
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also means that this method works fine for existing pure-perl modules, |
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without having to change them at all. |
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Only if your module runs it's own L threads could it be an |
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issue - maybe your module implements some kind of job pool and relies |
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on certain operations to run asynchronously. Then you can still use |
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C by not enabling it be default and only enabling it in |
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your own threads: |
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use Coro; |
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use Coro::Multicore (); # note the () to disable by default |
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183
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async { |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_enable; |
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# do things asynchronously by calling perlmulticore-enabled functions |
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}; |
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189
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=head2 EXPORTS |
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191
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This module does not (at the moment) export any symbols. It does, however, |
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export "behaviour" - if you use the default import, then Coro::Multicore |
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will be enabled for all threads and all callers in the whole program: |
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195
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use Coro::Multicore; |
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197
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In a module where you don't control what else might be loaded and run, you |
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might want to be more conservative, and not import anything. This has the |
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effect of not enabling the functionality by default, so you have to enable |
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it per scope: |
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202
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use Coro::Multicore (); |
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204
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sub myfunc { |
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Coro::Multicore::scoped_enable; |
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207
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# from here to the end of this function, and in any functions |
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# called from this function, tasks will be executed asynchronously. |
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} |
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211
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=head1 API FUNCTIONS |
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213
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=over 4 |
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215
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=item $previous = Coro::Multicore::enable [$enable] |
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217
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This function enables (if C<$enable> is true) or disables (if C<$enable> |
218
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is false) the multicore functionality globally. By default, it is enabled. |
219
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220
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This can be used to effectively disable this module's functionality by |
221
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default, and enable it only for selected threads or scopes, by calling |
222
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C. |
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224
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Note that this setting nonly affects the I - it will not |
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reflect whether multicore functionality is enabled for the current thread. |
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227
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The function returns the previous value of the enable flag. |
228
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229
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=item Coro::Multicore::scoped_enable |
230
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231
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This function instructs Coro::Multicore to handle all requests executed |
232
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in the current coro thread, from the call to the end of the current scope. |
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234
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Calls to C and C don't nest very well at |
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the moment, so don't nest them. |
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=item Coro::Multicore::scoped_disable |
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The opposite of C: instructs Coro::Multicore to |
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I handle the next multicore-enabled request. |
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=back |
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=cut |
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package Coro::Multicore; |
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use Coro (); |
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BEGIN { |
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our $VERSION = '1.06'; |
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use XSLoader; |
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XSLoader::load __PACKAGE__, $VERSION; |
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} |
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sub import { |
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if (@_ > 1) { |
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require Carp; |
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Carp::croak ("Coro::Multicore does not export any symbols"); |
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} |
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enable 1; |
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} |
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our $WATCHER; |
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# called when first thread is started, on first release. can |
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# be called manually, but is not currently a public interface. |
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sub init { |
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require AnyEvent; # maybe load it unconditionally? |
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$WATCHER ||= AE::io (fd, 0, \&poll); |
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} |
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=head1 THREAD SAFETY OF SUPPORTING XS MODULES |
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Just because an XS module supports perlmulticore might not immediately |
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make it reentrant. For example, while you can (try to) call C |
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on the same database handle for the patched C (see the |
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L), this will almost |
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certainly not work, despite C and C being |
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thread safe and reentrant - just not on the same database handle. |
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Many modules have limitations such as these - some can only be called |
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concurrently from a single thread as they use global variables, some |
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can only be called concurrently on different I (e.g. database |
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connections for DBD modules, or digest objects for Digest modules), |
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and some can be called at any time (such as the C function in |
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C). |
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Generally, you only have to be careful with the very few modules that use |
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global variables or rely on C libraries that aren't thread-safe, which |
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should be documented clearly in the module documentation. |
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Most modules are either perfectly reentrant, or at least reentrant as long |
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as you give every thread it's own I object. |
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=head1 EXCEPTIONS AND THREAD CANCELLATION |
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L allows you to cancel threads even when they execute within an XS |
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function (C vs. C methods). Similarly, L allows you |
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to send exceptions (e.g. via the C method) to threads executing |
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inside an XS function. |
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While doing this is questionable and dangerous with normal Coro threads |
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already, they are both supported in this module, although with potentially |
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unwanted effects. The following describes the current implementation and |
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is subject to change. It is described primarily so you can understand what |
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went wrong, if things go wrong. |
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=over 4 |
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314
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=item EXCEPTIONS |
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When a thread that has currently released the perl interpreter (e.g. |
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because it is executing a perlmulticore enabled XS function) receives an exception, it will |
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at first continue normally. |
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320
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After acquiring the perl interpreter again, it will throw the |
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exception it previously received. More specifically, when a thread |
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calls C and has received an exception, then |
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C will not return but instead C. |
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325
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Most code that has been updated for perlmulticore support will not expect |
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this, and might leave internal state corrupted to some extent. |
327
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328
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=item CANCELLATION |
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330
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Unsafe cancellation on a thread that has released the perl interpreter |
331
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frees its resources, but let's the XS code continue at first. This should |
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not lead to corruption on the perl level, as the code isn't allowed to |
333
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touch perl data structures until it reacquires the interpreter. |
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335
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The call to C will then block indefinitely, leaking |
336
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the (OS level) thread. |
337
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338
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Safe cancellation will simply fail in this case, so is still "safe" to |
339
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call. |
340
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341
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=back |
342
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343
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=head1 INTERACTION WITH OTHER SOFTWARE |
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345
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This module is very similar to other environments where perl interpreters |
346
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are moved between threads, such as mod_perl2, and the same caveats apply. |
347
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348
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I want to spell out the most important ones: |
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350
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=over 4 |
351
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352
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=item pthreads usage |
353
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354
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Any creation of pthreads make it impossible to fork portably from a |
355
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perl program, as forking from within a threaded program will leave the |
356
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program in a state similar to a signal handler. While it might work on |
357
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some platforms (as an extension), this might also result in silent data |
358
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corruption. It also seems to work most of the time, so it's hard to test |
359
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for this. |
360
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361
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I recommend using something like L, which can create |
362
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subprocesses safely (via L). |
363
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364
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Similar issues exist for signal handlers, although this module works hard |
365
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to keep safe perl signals safe. |
366
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367
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=item module support |
368
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369
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This module moves the same perl interpreter between different |
370
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threads. Some modules might get confused by that (although this can |
371
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usually be considered a bug). This is a rare case though. |
372
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373
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=item event loop reliance |
374
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375
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To be able to wake up programs waiting for results, this module relies on |
376
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an active event loop (via L). This is used to notify the perl |
377
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interpreter when the asynchronous task is done. |
378
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379
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Since event loops typically fail to work properly after a fork, this means |
380
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that some operations that were formerly working will now hang after fork. |
381
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382
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A workaround is to call C after a fork to |
383
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disable the module. |
384
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385
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Future versions of this module might do this automatically. |
386
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387
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=back |
388
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389
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=head1 BUGS |
390
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391
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=over 4 |
392
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393
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=item (OS-) threads are never released |
394
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395
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At the moment, threads that were created once will never be freed. They |
396
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will be reused for asynchronous requests, though, so as long as you limit |
397
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the maximum number of concurrent asynchronous tasks, this will also limit |
398
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the maximum number of threads created. |
399
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400
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The idle threads are not necessarily using a lot of resources: on |
401
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GNU/Linux + glibc, each thread takes about 8KiB of userspace memory + |
402
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whatever the kernel needs (probably less than 8KiB). |
403
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404
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Future versions will likely lift this limitation. |
405
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406
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=item AnyEvent is initalised at module load time |
407
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408
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AnyEvent is initialised on module load, as opposed to at a later time. |
409
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410
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Future versions will likely change this. |
411
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412
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=back |
413
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414
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=head1 AUTHOR |
415
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416
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Marc Lehmann |
417
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|
http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent-XSThreadPool.html |
418
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419
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Additional thanks to Zsbán Ambrus, who gave considerable desing input for |
420
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this module and the perl multicore specification. |
421
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422
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=cut |
423
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424
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1 |
425
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