Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
* josevalim/supervisor-get-callback-module/PR-1000/OTP-13619:
Return callback module in supervisor format_status
|
|
The previous implementation of supervisor:get_callback_module/1
used sys:get_status/1 to get the supervisor inner state and
retrieve the callback module. Such implementation forbids any
other supervisor implementation that has an internal state
different than the #state{} record in supervisor.erl.
This patch allows supervisors to return the callback module
as part of the sys:get_status/1 data, no longer coupling the
callback module implementation with the inner #state{} record.
Notice we have kept the clause matching the previous
sys:get_status/1 reply for backwards compatibility purposes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note that the sleeping time in ct:sleep/1 will be scaled if
the test is run with (for example) cover. When it is important
that the sleep time is not adjusted, use timer:sleep/1.
|
|
|
|
Either rely on the default 30 minutes timetrap, or set the timeout
using the supported methods in common_test.
|
|
Speed up supervisor:count_children/1 for simple_one_for_one
supervisors. This is achieved by avoiding looping through all the
child process and verifying that each one is alive.
For a supervisor with 100,000 'temporary' children the count-time will
drop from approx 25ms to about 0.005ms.
For a supervisor with 100,000 'permanent' or 'transient' children the
count-time will drop from approx 30ms to about 0.005ms.
This avoids having the supervisor block for an extended period while
the count takes place. Under normal circumstances the accuracy of the
result should also improve since the duration is too short for many
processes to die during the count.
|
|
|
|
A bug in supervisor:get_childspec/2 results in
{error, simple_one_for_one} being returned on every call when the
supervisor strategy is simple_one_for_one.
This commit includes a small refactoring which brings together the
two 'start_child' clauses to make the code easier to follow.
|
|
If a child of a simple_one_for_one returns ignore from its start
function no longer store the child for any restart type. It is not
possible to restart or delete the child because the supervisor is a
simple_one_for_one.
Previously a simple_one_for_one would crash, potentially without
shutting down all of its children, when it tried to shutdown a child
with undefined pid.
Previous only one undefined pid child was stored in a simple_one_for_one
supervisor no matter how many times the child start function returned
ignore.
|
|
fbaa0bec replaced the use of now/0 with erlang:monotonic_time/1 but at
the same time introduced a bug in inPeriod/3 so that it would always
return 'true' (the subtraction Time - Now would always result in
a non-positive number that would always be less than Period).
The symptoms of the bug is that when a child has been restarted the
maximum number of times allowed, the supervisor will terminate,
regardless of how much time that elapses between the restarts.
There was no test case that detected this problem. Add the missing
test case to ensure that this bug stays killed.
Reported-by: Rafał Studnicki
|
|
|
|
Add tests of code_change/3 and error handling of supervisor flags.
|
|
Stabilize tests for all kind of machines
Old sparc (and newer smaller) machines timeouts in 'random_ref_comp'
decrease load and increase timeouts.
Supervisor:
Turn up accepted time, since if non-linear it should be much worse,
now the test failes on slow multicore machines
Remove memory tests, they fail sometimes and those tests are not
needed to be tested. Hard to predict GC's and other processes behaviours.
|
|
|
|
In rest_for_one and one_for_all supervisors one child dying can cause
multiple children to be restarted. Previously if the child that caused
the restart is started successfully but another child fails to start,
the supervisor would not terminate this child with the other
successfully restarted children as no record of the pid was kept. Thus
the supervisor would try to start this child again. This could lead to
multiples of the same child or if the child is registered cause repeated
attempts at starting this child - until the max restart threshold was
reached.
Now the child that failed to start becomes the restarting child, instead
of staying with the same child, for the next restart attempt. This has
the following side effects:
1) In one_for_all the new version of the child that original died is
terminated before a restart attempt is made.
2) In rest_for_one all succesfully restarted children are not terminated
and restarting continues from the child that failed to start.
|
|
|
|
If a child fails to start, supervisor relies upon error_logger which does not
work when IO is inhibited. Instead pass the error up the chain and let someone
else use a proper Reason for any possible printouts.
|
|
When an attempt to restart a child failed, supervisor would earlier
keep the execution flow and try to restart the child over and over
again until it either succeeded or the restart frequency limit was
reached. If none of these happened, supervisor would hang forever in
this loop.
This commit adds a timer of 0 ms where the control is left back to the
gen_server which implements the supervisor. This way any incoming
request to the supervisor will be handled - which could help breaking
the infinite loop - e.g. shutdown request for the supervisor or for
the problematic child.
This introduces some incompatibilities in stdlib due to new return
values from supervisor:
* restart_child/2 can now return {error,restarting}
* delete_child/2 can now return {error,restarting}
* which_children/1 returns a list of {Id,Child,Type,Mods},
where Child, in addition to the old pid() or 'undefined',
now also can be 'restarting'.
|
|
Supervisor should never keep child specs for dead temporary children.
|
|
Also, some minor debug help is added to a test case which fails every
now and then.
|
|
Calls to global:whereis_name/1 have been substituted for calls to
global:safe_whereis_name/1 since the latter is not safe at all.
The reason for not doing this earlier is that setting a global lock
masked out a bug concerning the restart of supervised children. The
bug has now been fixed by a modification of global:whereis_name/1.
(Thanks to Ulf Wiger for code contribution.)
|
|
* rickard/alloc-opt/OTP-7775:
Optimize memory allocation
Conflicts:
erts/aclocal.m4
erts/emulator/hipe/hipe_bif_list.m4
erts/preloaded/ebin/erl_prim_loader.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/erlang.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/init.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/otp_ring0.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_file.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_inet.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/prim_zip.beam
erts/preloaded/ebin/zlib.beam
|
|
A number of memory allocation optimizations have been implemented. Most
optimizations reduce contention caused by synchronization between
threads during allocation and deallocation of memory. Most notably:
* Synchronization of memory management in scheduler specific allocator
instances has been rewritten to use lock-free synchronization.
* Synchronization of memory management in scheduler specific
pre-allocators has been rewritten to use lock-free synchronization.
* The 'mseg_alloc' memory segment allocator now use scheduler specific
instances instead of one instance. Apart from reducing contention
this also ensures that memory allocators always create memory
segments on the local NUMA node on a NUMA system.
|
|
* cf/simple_one_for_one_shutdown:
Explain how dynamic child processes are stopped
Stack errors when dynamic children are stopped
Explicitly kill dynamic children in supervisors
Conflicts:
lib/stdlib/doc/src/supervisor.xml
OTP-9647
|
|
Now, in child specification, the shutdown value can also be set to infinity
for worker children. This restriction was removed because this is not always
possible to predict the shutdown time for a worker. This is highly
application-dependent.
|
|
According to the supervisor's documentation:
"Important note on simple-one-for-one supervisors: The dynamically
created child processes of a simple-one-for-one supervisor are not
explicitly killed, regardless of shutdown strategy, but are expected
to terminate when the supervisor does (that is, when an exit signal
from the parent process is received)."
All is fine as long as we stop simple_one_for_one supervisor manually.
Dynamic children catch the exit signal from the supervisor and leave.
But, if this happens when we stop an application, after the top
supervisor has stopped, the application master kills all remaining
processes associated to this application. So, dynamic children that trap
exit signals can be killed during their cleanup (here we mean inside
terminate/2). This is unpredictable and highly time-dependent.
In this commit, supervisor module is patched to explicitly terminate
dynamic children accordingly to the shutdown strategy.
NOTE: Order in which dynamic children are stopped is not defined. In
fact, this is "almost" done at the same time.
|
|
|
|
In the current implementation of supervisors, temporary children
should never be restarted. However, when a temporary child is
restarted as part of a one_for_all or rest_for_one strategy where
the failing process is not the temporary child, the supervisor
still tries to restart it.
Because the supervisor doesn't keep some of the MFA information
of temporary children, this causes the supervisor to hit its
restart limit and crash.
This patch fixes the behaviour by inserting a clause in
terminate_children/2-3 (private function) that will omit temporary
children when building a list of killed processes, to avoid having
the supervisor trying to restart them again.
Only supervisors in need of restarting children used the list, so
the change should be of no impact for the functions that called
terminate_children/2-3 only to kill all children.
The documentation has been modified to make this behaviour
more explicit.
|
|
|
|
erlang:memory is not supported
Replace the count_children_allocator_test with try erlang:memory in
order to make sure there is no attempt at running this test case if
erlang:memory is not supported.
|
|
In R13B proc_lib, gen_server and gen_fsm were all changed to handle
exit reason {shutdown,Term} in the same way as exit reason 'shutdown',
i.e. no crash reports are generated.
This is an update of supervisor to do the same, i.e. handle these two
exit reasons in the same way. This means that for children with
restart type 'transient' there will be no attempt to restart the
process if it terminates with reason {shutdown,Term}, and there will
be no supervisor report.
|
|
Since initial arguments of temporary children under simple_one_for_one
supervisors are not saved, only a list of pids was stored in such
supervisors. When adding/deleting many children, this would scale
badly. To avoid this the list is now changed to a set.
|
|
supervisor:terminate_child/2 was not allowed if the supervisor used
restart strategy simple_one_for_one. This is now changed so that
children of this type of supervisors can be terminated by specifying
the child's Pid.
|
|
terminates" and improved test suite
The bug fix supplied by Filipe David Manana <[email protected]>
did not cover all possible ways that a process may be terminated
as for instance with supervisor:terminate_child. Also there
was a bug in the base case of the patch returning a list of a list instead
of only the list.
Added a timeout for the test cases, eliminated unnecessary sleeps,
improved code.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* ia/supervisor-saves-unnecessary-data/OTP-9064:
Added test case do_not_save_start_parameters_for_temporary_children and fixed dialyzer spec.
Do not save parameter list for any temporary processes
Do not save initial arguments for dynamic temporary processes
Conflicts:
lib/stdlib/test/supervisor_SUITE.erl
|
|
dialyzer spec.
|
|
Previous commit changed the supervisor to not save
parameter lists for temporary processes supervised by simple-one-for-one
supervisors. But it is unnecessary to save them for any
temporary processes as they should not be restarted. Proably the
biggest gain is in the simple-one-for-one case.
Also changed the test case count_children_memory so it does
not test that which_children will produce garbage that must
be reclaimed later. This is a strange thing to test and it is no
longer true for all invocations of which_children.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
children being managed without the memory impact of which_children/1
The function which_children/1 returns a list of the child processes
currently being supervised, but it has the penalty of creating a new
list thereby consuming more memory. In low memory situations it is
often desirable to know which supervisor may have generated many
processes, but the act of discovering the culprit should not cause the
node to crash (or worse a different node if the kernel kills one
randomly). The new function count_children/1 can give an indication
of which supervisor is taxing resources the most without adding to the
burden. Rather than creating a new list, it walks the supervisor's
internal children structure using an accumulator function so that any
used memory can be incrementally collected yet the resulting count can
still be obtained.
The return result of count_children/1 is a property list of counts
containing:
- {specs, Total_Num_Child_Specs}
- {active, Num_Active_Child_Processes_Of_Supervisor_Or_Worker_Type}
- {supervisors, Num_Supervisor_Type_Children_Including_Dead_Processes}
- {workers, Num_Worker_Type_Children_Including_Dead_Processes}
This patch was made in response to mailing list discussions of the
problem diagnosing heavily taxed production systems. I cannot find
the original request, but http://www.erlang.org/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi/4/35060
is my original post of the patch.
|
|
* bg/cleanup-tests:
file_SUITE: eliminate a warning for an unused variable
kernel tests: modernize guard tests
unicode_SUITE: replace deprecated concat_binary/1 with list_to_binary/1
stdlib tests: modernize guard tests
Test suites: fix creation of Emakefiles
|
|
Don't change any guard tests in the id_transform_SUITE
module, because it intentionally use the old guard tests
to test that id_transform can handle them.
|