[ANN] slave-1.2.0.rb

*** THIS IS A CODE CLEANUP RELEASE ONLY ***

SYNOPSIS

   the Slave class forks a process and starts a drb server in the child using
   any object as the server. the process is detached so it is not required
   (nor possible) to wait on the child pid. a Heartbeat is set up between the
   parent and child processes so that the child will exit of the parent exits
   for any reason - preventing orphaned slaves from running indefinitely. the
   purpose of Slaves is to be able to easily set up a collection of objects
   communicating via drb protocols instead of having to use IPC.

   typical usage:

     slave = Slave::new{ AnyObject.new }

     slave.object #=> handle on drb object
     slave.uri #=> uri of the drb object
     slave.socket #=> unix domain socket path for drb object
     slave.psname #=> title shown in ps/top

     object = slave.object

     value = object.any_method #=> use the object normally

   slaves may be configured via the environment, the Slave class, or via the
   ctor for object itself. attributes which may be configured include

     * object : specify the slave object. otherwise block value is used.
     * socket_creation_attempts : specify how many attempts to create a unix domain socket will be made
     * debug : turn on some logging to STDERR
     * psname : specify the name that will appear in 'top' ($0)
     * at_exit : specify a lambda to be called in the *parent* when the child dies
     * dumped : specify that the slave object should *not* be DRbUndumped (default is DRbUndumped)
     * threadsafe : wrap the slave object with ThreadSafe to implement gross thread safety

URIS

   http://rubyforge.org/projects/codeforpeople/
   http://codeforpeople.com/lib/ruby/slave

HISTORY

   1.2.0:
     - cleaned up a bunch of warnings. thanks eric kolve <ekolve@gmail.com>
       for reporting them.

   1.1.0:
     - replaced HeartBeat class with LifeLine.

     - __HUGE__ cleanup of file descriptor/fork management with tons of help
       from skaar and ezra. thanks guys!

     - introduced Slave.object method used to return any object directory from
       a child process. see samples/g.rb.

     - indroduced keyword to automatically make slave objects threadsafe.
       remember that your slave object must be threadsafe because they are
       being server via DRb!!!

   1.0.0:
     - THIS RELEASE IS !! NOT !! BACKWARD COMPATIBLE. NOTE NEW CTOR SYNTAX.

     - detach method also sets up at_exit handler. extra protection from
       zombies.

     - ezra zygmuntowicz asked for a feature whereby a parent could be notified
       when a child exited. obviously such a mechanism should be both async
       and sync. to accomplish this the wait method was extended to support a
       callback with is either sync or async

         slave = Server.new{ Server.new }

         slave.wait and puts 'this is sync!'

         slave.wait(:non_block=>true){ 'this is async!' }

     - patch to getval from skaar<skaar@waste.org>. the impl dropped opts
       delgating to the class method from the instance one.

   0.2.0:
     incorporated joel vanderWerf's patch such that, if no object is passed the
     block is used to create one ONLY in the child. this avoids having a copy
     in both parent and child is that needs to be avoided due to, for instance,
     resource consumption.

   0.0.1:
     - patch from Logan Capaldo adds block form to slave new, block is run in the
       child

     - added a few more samples/*

     - added Slave#wait

     - added status information to slaves

     - added close-on-exec flag to pipes in parent process

   0.0.0:
     - initial version

SAMPLES

   <========< samples/a.rb >========>

   ~ > cat samples/a.rb

     require 'slave'

···

#
     # simple usage is simply to stand up a server object as a slave. you do not
     # need to wait for the server, join it, etc. it will die when the parent
     # process dies - even under 'kill -9' conditions
     #
       class Server
         def add_two n
           n + 2
         end
       end

       slave = Slave.new :object => Server.new

       server = slave.object
       p server.add_two(40) #=> 42

       slave.shutdown

   ~ > ruby samples/a.rb

     42

   <========< samples/b.rb >========>

   ~ > cat samples/b.rb

     require 'slave'
     #
     # if certain operations need to take place in the child only a block can be
     # used
     #
       class Server
         def connect_to_db
           "we only want to do this in the child process!"
           @connection = :postgresql
         end
         attr :connection
       end

       slave = Slave.new('object' => Server.new){|s| s.connect_to_db}

       server = slave.object

       p server.connection #=> :postgresql
     #
     # errors in the child are detected and raised in the parent
     #
       slave = Slave.new('object' => Server.new){|s| s.typo} #=> raises an error!

   ~ > ruby samples/b.rb

     :postgresql
     ./lib/slave.rb:458:in `initialize': undefined method `typo' for #<Server:0xb7567fa4> (NoMethodError)
       from samples/b.rb:22:in `new'
       from samples/b.rb:22

   <========< samples/c.rb >========>

   ~ > cat samples/c.rb

     require 'slave'
     #
     # if no slave object is given the block itself is used to contruct it
     #
       class Server
         def initialize
           "this is run only in the child"
           @pid = Process.pid
         end
         attr 'pid'
       end

       slave = Slave.new{ Server.new }
       server = slave.object

       p Process.pid
       p server.pid # not going to be the same as parents!
     #
     # errors are still detected though
     #
       slave = Slave.new{ fubar } # raises error in parent

   ~ > ruby samples/c.rb

     30103
     30104
     ./lib/slave.rb:458:in `initialize': undefined local variable or method `fubar' for main:Object (NameError)
       from samples/c.rb:21:in `new'
       from samples/c.rb:21

   <========< samples/d.rb >========>

   ~ > cat samples/d.rb

     require 'slave'
     #
     # at_exit hanlders are handled correctly in both child and parent
     #
       at_exit{ p 'parent' }
       slave = Slave.new{ at_exit{ p 'child' }; 'the server is this string' }
     #
     # this will print 'child', then 'parent'
     #

   ~ > ruby samples/d.rb

     "child"
     "parent"

   <========< samples/e.rb >========>

   ~ > cat samples/e.rb

     require 'slave'
     #
     # slaves never outlive their parent. if the parent exits, even under kill -9,
     # the child will die.
     #
       slave = Slave.new{ at_exit{ p 'child' }; 'the server is this string' }

       Process.kill brutal=9, the_parent_pid=Process.pid
     #
     # even though parent dies a nasty death the child will still print 'child'
     #

   ~ > ruby samples/e.rb

     "child"

   <========< samples/f.rb >========>

   ~ > cat samples/f.rb

     require 'slave'
     #
     # slaves created previously are visible to newly created slaves - in this
     # example the child process of slave_a communicates directly with the child
     # process of slave_a
     #
       slave_a = Slave.new{ Array.new }
       slave_b = Slave.new{ slave_a.object }

       a, b = slave_b.object, slave_a.object

       b << 42
       puts a #=> 42

   ~ > ruby samples/f.rb

     42

   <========< samples/g.rb >========>

   ~ > cat samples/g.rb

     require 'slave'
     #
     # Slave.object can used when you want to construct an object in another
     # process. in otherwords you want to fork a process and retrieve a single
     # returned object from that process as opposed to setting up a server.
     #
       this = Process.pid
       that = Slave.object{ Process.pid }

       p 'this' => this, 'that' => that

     #
     # any object can be returned and it can be returned asychronously via a thread
     #
       thread = Slave.object(:async => true){ sleep 2 and [ Process.pid, Time.now ] }
       this = [ Process.pid, Time.now ]
       that = thread.value

       p 'this' => this, 'that' => that

   ~ > ruby samples/g.rb

     {"that"=>30122, "this"=>30121}
     {"that"=>[30123, Fri Dec 08 08:32:37 MST 2006], "this"=>[30121, Fri Dec 08 08:32:35 MST 2006]}

enjoy.

-a
--
if you want others to be happy, practice compassion.
if you want to be happy, practice compassion. -- the dalai lama