service_skeleton 1.0.1 → 2.0.1
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- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/.git-blame-ignore-revs +2 -0
- data/.github/workflows/ci.yml +50 -0
- data/.gitignore +0 -7
- data/.rubocop.yml +11 -1
- data/README.md +1 -53
- data/lib/service_skeleton/config.rb +20 -13
- data/lib/service_skeleton/generator.rb +4 -4
- data/lib/service_skeleton/runner.rb +3 -3
- data/lib/service_skeleton/ultravisor_children.rb +2 -1
- data/lib/service_skeleton/ultravisor_loggerstash.rb +9 -1
- data/service_skeleton.gemspec +4 -14
- data/ultravisor/.yardopts +1 -0
- data/ultravisor/Guardfile +9 -0
- data/ultravisor/README.md +404 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor.rb +216 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/child.rb +485 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/child/call.rb +21 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/child/call_receiver.rb +14 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/child/cast.rb +16 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/child/cast_receiver.rb +11 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/child/process_cast_call.rb +39 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/error.rb +25 -0
- data/ultravisor/lib/ultravisor/logging_helpers.rb +32 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/example_group_methods.rb +19 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/example_methods.rb +8 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/spec_helper.rb +56 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/add_child_spec.rb +79 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/call_spec.rb +121 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/cast_spec.rb +111 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/id_spec.rb +21 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/new_spec.rb +152 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/restart_delay_spec.rb +40 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/restart_spec.rb +70 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/run_spec.rb +95 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/shutdown_spec.rb +124 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/spawn_spec.rb +216 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/unsafe_instance_spec.rb +55 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/child/wait_spec.rb +32 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/new_spec.rb +71 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/remove_child_spec.rb +49 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/run_spec.rb +334 -0
- data/ultravisor/spec/ultravisor/shutdown_spec.rb +106 -0
- metadata +48 -64
- data/.travis.yml +0 -11
checksums.yaml
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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---
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: 49be65e767a3910dc054f9409a24ab558181c008549582d139f46db04f4a83b1
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data.tar.gz: 68fd00df7f28da4ae55e3fe19f4935c109646b2873b3ea1f28b6f0d7d7af6942
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SHA512:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: 8c26d8944cbdb9ff40eba5fd7fb4b1f8098f0bbfcb7946712b969a897c7b9fdeb7612e44be5d03603d7e7c11f67ec6389db200e92fef2b323d2f49631e14b994
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+
data.tar.gz: f41813b872ad1308b47c1444ec9e6441ea17a8f7dc68a5e865e7d08b08784cfb35d573e38de4799dfa43ab542e09d58f8bb3127e95b7c9dc08123e0497ea7179
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name: CI
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on:
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pull_request:
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push:
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branches:
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- master
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- main
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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strategy:
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matrix:
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ruby:
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- 2.5
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- 2.6
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- 2.7
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- 3.0
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v2
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- name: Setup ruby
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uses: ruby/setup-ruby@v1
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with:
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ruby-version: ${{ matrix.ruby }}
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bundler-cache: true
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- name: Lint
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run: bundle exec rubocop
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- name: Tests
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run: bundle exec rake test
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publish:
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if: github.event_name == 'push' && (github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' || github.ref == 'refs/heads/master')
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needs: build
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v2
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- name: Release Gem
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uses: discourse/publish-rubygems-action@v2-beta
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env:
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RUBYGEMS_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.RUBYGEMS_API_KEY }}
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GIT_EMAIL: team@discourse.org
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GIT_NAME: discoursebot
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data/.gitignore
CHANGED
data/.rubocop.yml
CHANGED
data/README.md
CHANGED
@@ -448,8 +448,7 @@ portion is the all-uppercase [service name](#the-service-name).
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INFO,buggy=DEBUG,/noisy/i=ERROR
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-
Logging levels can be changed at runtime
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[the HTTP admin interface](#http-admin-interface).
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Logging levels can be changed at runtime via [signals](#default-signals).
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* **`<SERVICENAME>_LOGSTASH_SERVER`** (string; default `""`) -- if set to a
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non-empty string, we will engage the services of the [loggerstash
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unhooked, which saves you having to do it yourself.
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## HTTP Admin Interface
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-
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In these modern times we live in, it seems everything from nuclear reactors to
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toasters can be controlled from a browser. Why should your services be any
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different?
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-
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### HTTP Admin Configuration
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-
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In the spirit of "secure by default", you must explicitly enable the HTTP admin
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interface, and configure an authentication method. To do that, use the
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following environment variables, where `<SERVICENAME>_` is the all-uppercase
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version of [the service name](#the-service-name).
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-
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* **`<SERVICENAME>_HTTP_ADMIN_PORT`** (integer; range 1..65535; default: `""`)
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-- if set to a valid port number (`1` to `65535` inclusive), the HTTP admin
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interface will listen on that port, if also enabled by configuring
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authentication.
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-
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* **`<SERVICENAME>_HTTP_ADMIN_BASIC_AUTH`** (string; default: `""`) -- if set
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to a string containing a username and password separated by a colon, then
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authentication via [HTTP Basic auth](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7617)
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will be supported. Note that in addition to this setting, an admin port must
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also be specified in order for the admin interface to be enabled.
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-
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* **`<SERVICENAME>_HTTP_ADMIN_PROXY_USERNAME_HEADER`** (string; default: `""`)
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-- if set to a non-empty string, then incoming requests will be examined for
|
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a HTTP header with the specified name. If such a header exists and has a
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non-empty value, then the request will be deemed to have been authenticated
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by an upstream authenticating proxy (such as
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[`discourse-auth-proxy`](https://github.com/discourse/discourse-auth-proxy))
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-
as the user given in the header value. Note that in addition to this
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setting, an admin port must also be specified in order for the admin
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interface to be enabled.
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-
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### HTTP Admin Usage
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-
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The HTTP admin interface provides both an interactive, browser-based mode,
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as well as a RESTful interface, which should, in general, provide equivalent
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functionality.
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-
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* Visiting the service's `IP address:port` in a web browser will bring up an HTML
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interface showing all the features that are available. Usage should
|
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(hopefully) be self-explanatory.
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-
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* Visiting the service's `IP address:port` whilst accepting `application/json`
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responses will provide a directory of links to available endpoints which you
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can use to interact with the HTTP admin interface programmatically.
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# Contributing
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Patches can be sent as [a Github pull
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@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ require "loggerstash"
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module ServiceSkeleton
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class Config
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-
attr_reader :logger, :env, :service_name
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+
attr_reader :logger, :pre_run_logger, :env, :service_name
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def initialize(env, service_name, variables)
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@service_name = service_name
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@@ -66,6 +66,11 @@ module ServiceSkeleton
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@logger = Logger.new(log_file || $stderr, shift_age, shift_size)
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# Can be used prior to a call to ultravisor#run. This prevents a race condition
|
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# when a logstash server is configured but the logstash writer is not yet
|
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# initialised. This should never be updated after it is configured.
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@pre_run_logger = Logger.new(log_file || $stderr, shift_age, shift_size)
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if Thread.main
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Thread.main[:thread_map_number] = 0
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else
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thread_map_mutex = Mutex.new
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@logger
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-
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Thread.
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[@logger, @pre_run_logger].each do |logger|
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logger.formatter = ->(s, t, p, m) do
|
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th_n = if Thread.current.name
|
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#:nocov:
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Thread.current.name
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#:nocov:
|
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else
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thread_map_mutex.synchronize do
|
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Thread.current[:thread_map_number] ||= begin
|
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Thread.list.select { |th| th[:thread_map_number] }.length
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end
|
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end
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end
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-
end
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-
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-
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ts = log_enable_timestamps ? "#{t.utc.strftime("%FT%T.%NZ")} " : ""
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"#{ts}#{$$}##{th_n} #{s[0]} [#{p}] #{m}\n"
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end
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end
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@logger.filters = []
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@@ -10,14 +10,14 @@ require "frankenstein/process_metrics"
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require "frankenstein/server"
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require "prometheus/client/registry"
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require "sigdump"
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-
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require_relative "../../ultravisor/lib/ultravisor"
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module ServiceSkeleton
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module Generator
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def generate(config:, metrics_registry:, service_metrics:, service_signal_handlers:)
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Ultravisor.new(logger: config.logger).tap do |ultravisor|
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-
initialize_metrics(ultravisor, config, metrics_registry, service_metrics)
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initialize_loggerstash(ultravisor, config, metrics_registry)
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initialize_metrics(ultravisor, config, metrics_registry, service_metrics)
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initialize_signals(ultravisor, config, service_signal_handlers, metrics_registry)
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end
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end
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end
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if config.metrics_port
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-
config.
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config.pre_run_logger.info(config.service_name) { "Starting metrics server on port #{config.metrics_port}" }
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ultravisor.add_child(
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id: :metrics_server,
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klass: Frankenstein::Server,
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def initialize_loggerstash(ultravisor, config, registry)
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if config.logstash_server && !config.logstash_server.empty?
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-
config.
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+
config.pre_run_logger.info(config.service_name) { "Configuring loggerstash to send to #{config.logstash_server}" }
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ultravisor.add_child(
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id: :logstash_writer,
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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ require "frankenstein/process_metrics"
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require "frankenstein/server"
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require "prometheus/client/registry"
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require "sigdump"
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-
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require_relative "../../ultravisor/lib/ultravisor"
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module ServiceSkeleton
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class Runner
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end
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def run
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-
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-
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@config.pre_run_logger.info(logloc) { "Starting service #{@config.service_name}" }
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@config.pre_run_logger.info(logloc) { (["Environment:"] + @config.env.map { |k, v| "#{k}=#{v.inspect}" }).join("\n ") }
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@ultravisor.run
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end
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id: self.service_name.to_sym,
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klass: self,
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method: :run,
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-
args: [config: config, metrics: metrics_registry]
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+
args: [config: config, metrics: metrics_registry],
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access: :unsafe
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)
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rescue Ultravisor::InvalidKAMError
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raise ServiceSkeleton::Error::InvalidServiceClassError,
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|
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module UltravisorLoggerstash
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def logstash_writer
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#:nocov:
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-
@ultravisor[:logstash_writer].unsafe_instance
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@ultravisor[:logstash_writer].unsafe_instance(wait: false)
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#:nocov:
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end
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+
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# logstash_writer will be nil if the logstash_writer worker is not running
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# Ultravisor's restart policy ensures this will never happen at runtime. But
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# it does happen during startup and shutdown. In this case, we want to skip
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# writing to logstash, not block forever. STDOUT logging will continue.
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def loggerstash_log_message(*args)
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super if !logstash_writer.nil?
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end
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end
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end
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data/service_skeleton.gemspec
CHANGED
@@ -1,16 +1,9 @@
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# frozen_string_literal: true
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begin
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require 'git-version-bump'
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rescue LoadError
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nil
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end
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-
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Gem::Specification.new do |s|
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s.name = "service_skeleton"
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-
s.version =
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-
s.date = GVB.date rescue Time.now.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
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s.version = '2.0.1'
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s.platform = Gem::Platform::RUBY
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@@ -33,23 +26,20 @@ Gem::Specification.new do |s|
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s.required_ruby_version = ">= 2.5.0"
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s.add_runtime_dependency "frankenstein", "~> 2.0"
|
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s.add_runtime_dependency "loggerstash", "
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s.add_runtime_dependency "loggerstash", "~> 1"
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s.add_runtime_dependency "prometheus-client", "~> 2.0"
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s.add_runtime_dependency "sigdump", "~> 0.2"
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s.add_runtime_dependency "to_regexp", "~> 0.2"
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-
s.add_runtime_dependency "
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s.add_runtime_dependency "webrick"
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s.add_development_dependency 'bundler'
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s.add_development_dependency 'github-release'
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s.add_development_dependency 'git-version-bump'
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s.add_development_dependency 'guard-rspec'
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s.add_development_dependency 'guard-rubocop'
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s.add_development_dependency 'rack-test'
|
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s.add_development_dependency 'rake'
|
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s.add_development_dependency 'redcarpet'
|
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s.add_development_dependency 'rspec'
|
51
|
-
s.add_development_dependency 'rubocop'
|
52
|
-
s.add_development_dependency 'rubocop-discourse'
|
42
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s.add_development_dependency 'rubocop-discourse', '~> 2.4.1'
|
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|
s.add_development_dependency 'simplecov'
|
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|
s.add_development_dependency 'yard'
|
55
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|
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
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> # WARNING WARNING WARNING
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>
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> This README is, at least in part, speculative fiction. I practice
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> README-driven development, and as such, not everything described in here
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> actually exists yet, and what does exist may not work right.
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Ultravisor is like a supervisor, but... *ULTRA*. The idea is that you specify
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objects to instantiate and run in threads, and then the Ultravisor makes that
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happen behind the scenes, including logging failures, restarting if necessary,
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and so on. If you're familiar with Erlang supervision trees, then Ultravisor
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will feel familiar to you, because I stole pretty much every good idea that
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is in Ultravisor from Erlang. You will get a lot of very excellent insight
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from reading [the Erlang/OTP Supervision Principles](http://erlang.org/doc/design_principles/sup_princ.html).
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# Usage
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This section gives you a basic overview of the high points of how Ultravisor
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can be used. It is not intended to be an exhaustive reference of all possible
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options; the {Ultravisor} class API documentation provides every possible option
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and its meaning.
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## The Basics
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Start by loading the code:
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require "ultravisor"
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Creating a new Ultravisor is a matter of instantiating a new object:
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u = Ultravisor.new
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In order for it to be useful, though, you'll need to add one or more children
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to the Ultravisor instance, which can either be done as part of the call to
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`.new`, or afterwards, as you see fit:
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# Defining a child in the constructor
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u = Ultravisor.new(children: [{id: :child, klass: Child, method: :run}])
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# OR define it afterwards
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u = Ultravisor.new
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u.add_child(id: :my_child, klass: Child, method: :run)
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Once you have an Ultravisor with children configured, you can set it running:
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u.run
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This will block until the Ultravisor terminates, one way or another.
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We'll learn about other available initialization arguments, and all the other
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features of Ultravisor, in the following sections.
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## Defining Children
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As children are the primary reason Ultravisor exists, it is worth getting a handle
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on them first.
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Defining children, as we saw in the introduction, can be done by calling
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{Ultravisor#add_child} for each child you want to add, or else you can provide
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a list of children to start as part of the {Ultravisor.new} call, using the
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`children` named argument. You can also combine the two approaches, if some
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children are defined statically, while others only get added conditionally.
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Let's take another look at that {Ultravisor#add_child} method from earlier:
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u.add_child(id: :my_child, klass: Child, method: :run)
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First up, every child has an ID. This is fairly straightforward -- it's a
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unique ID (within a given Ultravisor) that refers to the child. Attempting to
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add two children with the same ID will raise an exception.
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The `class` and `method` arguments require a little more explanation. One
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of the foundational principles of "fail fast" is "clean restart" -- that is, if you
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do need to restart something, it's important to start with as clean a state as possible.
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Thus, if a child needs to be restarted, we don't want to reuse an existing object, which
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may be in a messy and unuseable state. Instead, we want a clean, fresh object to work on.
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That's why you specify a `class` when you define a child -- it is a new instance of that
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class that will be used every time the child is started (or restarted).
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The `method` argument might now be obvious. Once the new instance of the
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specified `class` exists, the Ultravisor will call the specified `method` to start
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work happening. It is expected that this method will ***not return***, in most cases.
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So you probably want some sort of infinite loop.
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You might think that this is extremely inflexible, only being able to specify a class
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and a method to call. What if you want to pass in some parameters? Don't worry, we've
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got you covered:
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u.add_child(
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id: :my_child,
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klass: Child,
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args: ['foo', 42, x: 1, y: 2],
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method: :run,
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)
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The call to `Child.new` can take arbitrary arguments, just by defining an array
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for the `args` named parameter. Did you know you can define a hash inside an
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array like `['foo', 'bar', x: 1, y: 2] => ['foo', 'bar', {:x => 1, :y => 2}]`?
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I didn't, either, until I started working on Ultravisor, but you can, and it
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works *exactly* like named parameters in method calls.
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You can also add children after the Ultravisor has been set running:
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u = Ultravisor.new
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u.add_child(id: :c1, klass: SomeWorker, method: :run)
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u.run # => starts running an instance of SomeWorker, doesn't return
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# In another thread...
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u.add_child(id: :c2, klass: OtherWorker, method: go!)
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# An instance of OtherWorker will be created and set running
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If you add a child to an already-running Ultravisor, that child will immediately be
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started running, almost like magic.
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### Ordering of Children
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The order in which children are defined is important. When children are (re)started,
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they are always started in the order they were defined. When children are stopped,
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either because the Ultravisor is shutting down, or because of a [supervision
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strategy](#supervision-strategies), they are always stopped in the *reverse* order
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of their definition.
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All child specifications passed to {Ultravisor.new} always come first, in the
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order they were in the array. Any children defined via calls to
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{Ultravisor#add_child} will go next, in the order the `add_child` calls were
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made.
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## Restarting Children
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One of the fundamental purposes of a supervisor like Ultravisor is that it restarts
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children if they crash, on the principle of "fail fast". There's no point failing fast
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if things don't get automatically fixed. This is the default behaviour of all
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Ultravisor children.
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Controlling how children are restarted is the purpose of the "restart policy",
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which is controlled by the `restart` and `restart_policy` named arguments in
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the child specification. For example, if you want to create a child that will
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only ever be run once, regardless of what happens to it, then use `restart:
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:never`:
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u.add_child(
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id: :my_one_shot_child,
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klass: Child,
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method: :run_maybe,
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restart: :never
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)
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If you want a child which gets restarted if its `method` raises an exception,
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but *not* if it runs to completion without error, then use `restart: :on_failure`:
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u.add_child(
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id: :my_run_once_child,
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klass: Child,
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method: :run_once,
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restart: :on_failure
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)
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### The Limits of Failure
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While restarting is great in general, you don't particularly want to fill your
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logs with an endlessly restarting child -- say, because it doesn't have
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permission to access a database. To solve that problem, an Ultravisor will
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only attempt to restart a child a certain number of times before giving up and
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exiting itself. The parameters of how this works are controlled by the
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`restart_policy`, which is itself a hash:
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u.add_child(
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id: :my_restartable_child,
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klass: Child,
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method: :run,
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restart_policy: {
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period: 5,
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retries: 2,
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delay: 1,
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}
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)
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The meaning of each of the `restart_policy` keys is best explained as part
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of how Ultravisor restarts children.
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When a child needs to be restarted, Ultravisor first waits a little while
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before attempting the restart. The amount of time to wait is specified
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by the `delay` value in the `restart_policy`. Then a new instance of the
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`class` is instantiated, and the `method` is called on that instance.
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The `period` and `retries` values of the `restart_policy` come into play
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when the child exits repeatedly. If a single child needs to be restarted
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more than `retries` times in `period` seconds, then instead of trying to
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restart again, Ultravisor gives up. It doesn't try to start the child
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again, it terminates all the *other* children of the Ultravisor, and
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then it exits. Note that the `delay` between restarts is *not* part
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of the `period`; only time spent actually running the child is
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accounted for.
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## Managed Child Termination
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If children need to be terminated, by default, child threads are simply
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forcibly terminated by calling {Thread#kill} on them. However, for workers
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which hold resources, this can cause problems.
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Thus, it is possible to control both how a child is terminated, and how long
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to wait for that termination to occur, by using the `shutdown` named argument
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when you add a child (either via {Ultravisor#add_child}, or as part of the
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`children` named argument to {Ultravisor.new}), like this:
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u.add_child(
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id: :fancy_worker,
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shutdown: {
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method: :gentle_landing,
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timeout: 30
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}
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)
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When a child with a custom shutdown policy needs to be terminated, the
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method named in the `method` key is called on the instance of `class` that
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represents that child. Once the shutdown has been signalled to the
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worker, up to `timeout` seconds is allowed to elapse. If the child thread has
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not terminated by this time, the thread is forcibly terminated by calling
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{Thread#kill}. This timeout prevents shutdown or group restart from hanging
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indefinitely.
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Note that the `method` specified in the `shutdown` specification should
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signal the worker to terminate, and then return immediately. It should
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*not* wait for termination itself.
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## Supervision Strategies
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When a child needs to be restarted, by default only the child that exited
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will be restarted. However, it is possible to cause other
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children to be restarted as well, if that is necessary. To do that, you
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use the `strategy` named parameter when creating the Ultravisor:
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u = Ultravisor.new(strategy: :one_for_all)
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The possible values for the strategy are:
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* `:one_for_one` -- the default restart strategy, this simply causes the
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child which exited to be started again, in line with its restart policy.
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* `:all_for_one` -- if any child needs to be restarted, all children of the
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Ultravisor get terminated in reverse of their start order, and then all
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children are started again, except those which are `restart: :never`, or
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`restart: :on_failure` which had not already exited without error.
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* `:rest_for_one` -- if any child needs to be restarted, all children of
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the Ultravisor which are *after* the restarted child get terminated
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in reverse of their start order, and then all children are started again,
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except those which are `restart: :never`, or `restart: :on_failure` which
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had not already exited without error.
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## Interacting With Child Objects
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Since the Ultravisor is creating the object instances that run in the worker
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threads, you don't automatically have access to the object instance itself.
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This is somewhat by design -- concurrency bugs are hell. However, there *are*
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ways around this, if you need to.
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### The power of cast / call
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A common approach for interacting with an object in an otherwise concurrent
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environment is the `cast` / `call` pattern. From the outside, the interface
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is quite straightforward:
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```
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u = Ultravisor.new(children: [
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{ id: :castcall, klass: CastCall, method: :run, enable_castcall: true }
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])
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# This will return `nil` immediately
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u[:castcall].cast.some_method
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# This will, at some point in the future, return whatever `CastCall#to_s` could
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u[:castcall].call.some_method
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```
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To enable `cast` / `call` support for a child, you must set the `enable_castcall`
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keyword argument on the child. This is because failing to process `cast`s and
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`call`s can cause all sorts of unpleasant backlogs, so children who intend to
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receive (and process) `cast`s and `call`s must explicitly opt-in.
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The interface to the object from outside is straightforward. You get a
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reference to the instance of {Ultravisor::Child} for the child you want to talk
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to (which is returned by {Ultravisor#add_child}, or {Ultravisor#[]}), and then
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call `child.cast.<method>` or `child.call.<method>`, passing in arguments as
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per normal. Any public method can be the target of the `cast` or `call`, and you
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can pass in any arguments you like, *including blocks* (although bear in mind that
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any blocks passed will be run in the child instance's thread, and many
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concurrency dragons await the unwary).
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The difference between the `cast` and `call` methods is in whether or not a
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return value is expected, and hence when the method call chained through
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`cast` or `call` returns.
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When you call `cast`, the real method call gets queued for later execution,
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and since no return value is expected, the `child.cast.<method>` returns
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`nil` immediately and your code gets on with its day. This is useful
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when you want to tell the worker something, or instruct it to do something,
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but there's no value coming back.
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In comparison, when you call `call`, the real method call still gets queued,
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but the calling code blocks, waiting for the return value from the queued
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method call. This may seem pointless -- why have concurrency that blocks? --
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but the value comes from the synchronisation. The method call only happens
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when the worker loop calls `process_castcall`, which it can do at a time that
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suits it, and when it knows that nothing else is going on that could cause
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problems.
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One thing to be aware of when interacting with a worker instance is that it may
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crash, and be restarted by the Ultravisor, before it gets around to processing
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a queued message. If you used `child.cast`, then the method call is just...
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lost, forever. On the other hand, if you used `child.call`, then an
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{Ultravisor::ChildRestartedError} exception will be raised, which you can deal
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with as you see fit.
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The really interesting part is what happens *inside* the child instance. The
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actual execution of code in response to the method calls passed through `cast`
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and `call` will only happen when the running instance of the child's class
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calls `process_castcall`. When that happens, all pending casts and calls will
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be executed. Since this happens within the same thread as the rest of the
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child instance's code, it's a lot safer than trying to synchronise everything
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with locks.
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You can, of course, just call `process_castcall` repeatedly, however that's a
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somewhat herp-a-derp way of doing it. The `castcall_fd` method in the running
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instance will return an IO object which will become readable whenever there is
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a pending `cast` or `call` to process. Thus, if you're using `IO.select` or
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similar to wait for work to do, you can add `castcall_fd` to the readable set
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and only call `process_castcall` when the relevant IO object comes back. Don't
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actually try *reading* from it yourself; `process_castcall` takes care of all that.
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If you happen to have a child class whose *only* purpose is to process `cast`s
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and `call`s, you should configure the Ultravisor to use `process_castcall_loop`
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as its entry method. This is a wrapper method which blocks on `castcall_fd`
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344
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+
becoming readable, and loops infinitely.
|
345
|
+
|
346
|
+
It is important to remember that not all concurrency bugs can be prevented by
|
347
|
+
using `cast` / `call`. For example, read-modify-write operations will still
|
348
|
+
cause all the same problems they always do, so if you find yourself calling
|
349
|
+
`child.call`, modifying the value returned, and then calling `child.cast`
|
350
|
+
with that modified value, you're in for a bad time.
|
351
|
+
|
352
|
+
|
353
|
+
### Direct (Unsafe) Instance Access
|
354
|
+
|
355
|
+
If you have a worker class which you're *really* sure is safe against concurrent
|
356
|
+
access, you can eschew the convenience and safety of `cast` / `call`, and instead
|
357
|
+
allow direct access to the worker instance object.
|
358
|
+
|
359
|
+
To do this, specify `access: :unsafe` in the child specification, and then
|
360
|
+
call `child.unsafe_instance` to get the instance object currently in play.
|
361
|
+
|
362
|
+
Yes, the multiple mentions of `unsafe` are there deliberately, and no, I won't
|
363
|
+
be removing them. They're there to remind you, always, that what you're doing
|
364
|
+
is unsafe.
|
365
|
+
|
366
|
+
If the child is restarting at the time `child.unsafe_instance` is called,
|
367
|
+
the call will block until the child worker is started again, after which
|
368
|
+
you'll get the newly created worker instance object. The worker could crash
|
369
|
+
again at any time, of course, leaving you with a now out-of-date object
|
370
|
+
that is no longer being actively run. It's up to you to figure out how to
|
371
|
+
deal with that. If the Ultravisor associated with the child
|
372
|
+
has terminated, your call to `child.unsafe_instance` will raise an
|
373
|
+
{Ultravisor::ChildRestartedError}.
|
374
|
+
|
375
|
+
Why yes, Gracie, there *are* a lot of things that can go wrong when using
|
376
|
+
direct instance object access. Still wondering why those `unsafe`s are in
|
377
|
+
the name?
|
378
|
+
|
379
|
+
|
380
|
+
## Supervision Trees
|
381
|
+
|
382
|
+
Whilst a collection of workers is a neat thing to have, more powerful systems
|
383
|
+
can be constructed if supervisors can, themselves, be supervised. Primarily
|
384
|
+
this is useful when recovering from persistent errors, because you can use
|
385
|
+
a higher-level supervisor to restart an entire tree of workers which has one
|
386
|
+
which is having problems.
|
387
|
+
|
388
|
+
Creating a supervision tree is straightforward. Because Ultravisor works by
|
389
|
+
instantiating plain old ruby objects, and Ultravisor is, itself, a plain old
|
390
|
+
ruby class, you use it more-or-less like you would any other object:
|
391
|
+
|
392
|
+
u = Ultravisor.new
|
393
|
+
u.add_child(id: :sub_sup, klass: Ultravisor, method: :run, args: [children: [...]])
|
394
|
+
|
395
|
+
That's all there is to it. Whenever the parent Ultravisor wants to work on the
|
396
|
+
child Ultravisor, it treats it like any other child, asking it to terminate,
|
397
|
+
start, etc, and the child Ultravisor's work consists of terminating, starting,
|
398
|
+
etc all of its children.
|
399
|
+
|
400
|
+
The only difference in default behaviour between a regular worker child and an
|
401
|
+
Ultravisor child is that an Ultravisor's `shutdown` policy is automatically set
|
402
|
+
to `method: :stop!, timeout: :infinity`. This is because it is *very* bad news
|
403
|
+
to forcibly terminate an Ultravisor before its children have stopped -- all
|
404
|
+
those children just get cast into the VM, never to be heard from again.
|