20002016 Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. How to Implement an Alternative Carrier for the Erlang Distribution Patrik Nyblom 2000-10-17 PA2 alt_dist.xml

This section describes how to implement an own carrier protocol for the Erlang distribution. The distribution is normally carried by TCP/IP. Here is explained a method for replacing TCP/IP with another protocol.

The section is a step-by-step explanation of the example application (in the Kernel application directory). The application implements distribution over Unix domain sockets and is written for the Sun Solaris 2 operating environment. The mechanisms are however general and apply to any operating system Erlang runs on. The reason the C code is not made portable, is simply readability.

This section was written a long time ago. Most of it is still valid, but some things have changed since then. Most notably is the driver interface. Some updates have been made to the documentation of the driver presented here, but more can be done and is planned for the future. The reader is encouraged to read the erl_driver and driver_entry documentation also.

Introduction

To implement a new carrier for the Erlang distribution, the main steps are as follows.

Writing an Erlang Driver

First, the protocol must be available to the Erlang machine, which involves writing an Erlang driver. A port program cannot be used, an Erlang driver is required. Erlang drivers can be:

Statically linked to the emulator, which can be an alternative when using the open source distribution of Erlang, or

Dynamically loaded into the Erlang machines address space, which is the only alternative if a precompiled version of Erlang is to be used

Writing an Erlang driver is not easy. The driver is written as some callback functions called by the Erlang emulator when data is sent to the driver, or the driver has any data available on a file descriptor. As the driver callback routines execute in the main thread of the Erlang machine, the callback functions can perform no blocking activity whatsoever. The callbacks are only to set up file descriptors for waiting and/or read/write available data. All I/O must be non-blocking. Driver callbacks are however executed in sequence, why a global state can safely be updated within the routines.

Writing an Erlang Interface for the Driver

When the driver is implemented, one would preferably write an Erlang interface for the driver to be able to test the functionality of the driver separately. This interface can then be used by the distribution module, which will cover the details of the protocol from the .

The easiest path is to mimic the and interfaces, but not much functionality in those modules needs to be implemented. In the example application, only a few of the usual interfaces are implemented, and they are much simplified.

Writing a Distribution Module

When the protocol is available to Erlang through a driver and an Erlang interface module, a distribution module can be written. The distribution module is a module with well-defined callbacks, much like a (there is no compiler support for checking the callbacks, though). This module implements:

The details of finding other nodes (that is, talking to epmd or something similar) Creating a listen port (or similar) Connecting to other nodes Performing the handshakes/cookie verification

There is however a utility module, , which does most of the hard work of handling handshakes, cookies, timers, and ticking. Using makes implementing a distribution module much easier and that is done in the example application.

Creating Boot Scripts

The last step is to create boot scripts to make the protocol implementation available at boot time. The implementation can be debugged by starting the distribution when all the system is running, but in a real system the distribution is to start very early, why a boot script and some command-line parameters are necessary.

This step also implies that the Erlang code in the interface and distribution modules is written in such a way that it can be run in the startup phase. In particular, there can be no calls to the module or to any modules not loaded at boot time. That is, only , , and the application itself can be used.

The Driver

Although Erlang drivers in general can be beyond the scope of this section, a brief introduction seems to be in place.

Drivers in General

An Erlang driver is a native code module written in C (or assembler), which serves as an interface for some special operating system service. This is a general mechanism that is used throughout the Erlang emulator for all kinds of I/O. An Erlang driver can be dynamically linked (or loaded) to the Erlang emulator at runtime by using the Erlang module. Some of the drivers in OTP are however statically linked to the runtime system, but that is more an optimization than a necessity.

The driver data types and the functions available to the driver writer are defined in header file (there is also a deprecated version called , do not use that one) seated in Erlang's include directory (and in $ERL_TOP/erts/emulator/beam in the source code distribution). See that file for function prototypes, and so on.

When writing a driver to make a communications protocol available to Erlang, one should know just about everything worth knowing about that particular protocol. All operation must be non-blocking and all possible situations are to be accounted for in the driver. A non-stable driver will affect and/or crash the whole Erlang runtime system.

The emulator calls the driver in the following situations:

When the driver is loaded. This callback must have a special name and inform the emulator of what callbacks are to be used by returning a pointer to a struct, which is to be properly filled in (see below).

When a port to the driver is opened (by a call from Erlang). This routine is to set up internal data structures and return an opaque data entity of the type , which is a data type large enough to hold a pointer. The pointer returned by this function is the first argument to all other callbacks concerning this particular port. It is usually called the port handle. The emulator only stores the handle and does never try to interpret it, why it can be virtually anything (anything not larger than a pointer that is) and can point to anything if it is a pointer. Usually this pointer refers to a structure holding information about the particular port, as it does in the example.

When an Erlang process sends data to the port. The data arrives as a buffer of bytes, the interpretation is not defined, but is up to the implementor. This callback returns nothing to the caller, answers are sent to the caller as messages (using a routine called available to all drivers). There is also a way to talk in a synchronous way to drivers, described below. There can be an additional callback function for handling data that is fragmented (sent in a deep io-list). That interface gets the data in a form suitable for Unix rather than in a single buffer. There is no need for a distribution driver to implement such a callback, so we will not.

When a file descriptor is signaled for input. This callback is called when the emulator detects input on a file descriptor that the driver has marked for monitoring by using the interface . The mechanism of driver select makes it possible to read non-blocking from file descriptors by calling when reading is needed, and then do the reading in this callback (when reading is possible). The typical scenario is that is called when an Erlang process orders a read operation, and that this routine sends the answer when data is available on the file descriptor.

When a file descriptor is signaled for output. This callback is called in a similar way as the previous, but when writing to a file descriptor is possible. The usual scenario is that Erlang orders writing on a file descriptor and that the driver calls . When the descriptor is ready for output, this callback is called and the driver can try to send the output. Queuing can be involved in such operations, and there are convenient queue routines available to the driver writer to use.

When a port is closed, either by an Erlang process or by the driver calling one of the routines. This routine is to clean up everything connected to one particular port. When other callbacks call a routine, this routine is immediately called. The callback routine issuing the error can make no more use of the data structures for the port, as this routine surely has freed all associated data and closed all file descriptors. If the queue utility available to driver writer is used, this routine is however not called until the queue is empty.

When an Erlang process calls erlang:port_control/3, which is a synchronous interface to drivers. The control interface is used to set driver options, change states of ports, and so on. This interface is used a lot in the example.

When a timer expires. The driver can set timers with the function . When such timers expire, a specific callback function is called. No timers are used in the example.

When the whole driver is unloaded. Every resource allocated by the driver is to be freed.

The Data Structures of the Distribution Driver

The driver used for Erlang distribution is to implement a reliable, order maintaining, variable length packet-oriented protocol. All error correction, resending and such need to be implemented in the driver or by the underlying communications protocol. If the protocol is stream-oriented (as is the case with both TCP/IP and our streamed Unix domain sockets), some mechanism for packaging is needed. We will use the simple method of having a header of four bytes containing the length of the package in a big-endian 32-bit integer. As Unix domain sockets only can be used between processes on the same machine, we do not need to code the integer in some special endianess, but we will do it anyway because in most situation you need to do it. Unix domain sockets are reliable and order maintaining, so we do not need to implement resends and such in the driver.

We start writing the example Unix domain sockets driver by declaring prototypes and filling in a static ErlDrvEntry structure:

( 2) #include ( 3) #include ( 4) #include ( 5) #include ( 6) #include ( 7) #include ( 8) #include ( 9) #include (10) #include (11) #define HAVE_UIO_H (12) #include "erl_driver.h" (13) /* (14) ** Interface routines (15) */ (16) static ErlDrvData uds_start(ErlDrvPort port, char *buff); (17) static void uds_stop(ErlDrvData handle); (18) static void uds_command(ErlDrvData handle, char *buff, int bufflen); (19) static void uds_input(ErlDrvData handle, ErlDrvEvent event); (20) static void uds_output(ErlDrvData handle, ErlDrvEvent event); (21) static void uds_finish(void); (22) static int uds_control(ErlDrvData handle, unsigned int command, (23) char* buf, int count, char** res, int res_size); (24) /* The driver entry */ (25) static ErlDrvEntry uds_driver_entry = { (26) NULL, /* init, N/A */ (27) uds_start, /* start, called when port is opened */ (28) uds_stop, /* stop, called when port is closed */ (29) uds_command, /* output, called when erlang has sent */ (30) uds_input, /* ready_input, called when input (31) descriptor ready */ (32) uds_output, /* ready_output, called when output (33) descriptor ready */ (34) "uds_drv", /* char *driver_name, the argument (35) to open_port */ (36) uds_finish, /* finish, called when unloaded */ (37) NULL, /* void * that is not used (BC) */ (38) uds_control, /* control, port_control callback */ (39) NULL, /* timeout, called on timeouts */ (40) NULL, /* outputv, vector output interface */ (41) NULL, /* ready_async callback */ (42) NULL, /* flush callback */ (43) NULL, /* call callback */ (44) NULL, /* event callback */ (45) ERL_DRV_EXTENDED_MARKER, /* Extended driver interface marker */ (46) ERL_DRV_EXTENDED_MAJOR_VERSION, /* Major version number */ (47) ERL_DRV_EXTENDED_MINOR_VERSION, /* Minor version number */ (48) ERL_DRV_FLAG_SOFT_BUSY, /* Driver flags. Soft busy flag is (49) required for distribution drivers */ (50) NULL, /* Reserved for internal use */ (51) NULL, /* process_exit callback */ (52) NULL /* stop_select callback */ (53) };]]>

On line 1-10 the OS headers needed for the driver are included. As this driver is written for Solaris, we know that the header exists. So the preprocessor variable can be defined before is included on line 12. The definition of will make the I/O vectors used in Erlang's driver queues to correspond to the operating systems ditto, which is very convenient.

On line 16-23 the different callback functions are declared ("forward declarations").

The driver structure is similar for statically linked-in drivers and dynamically loaded. However, some of the fields are to be left empty (that is, initialized to NULL) in the different types of drivers. The first field (the function pointer) is always left blank in a dynamically loaded driver, see line 26. NULL on line 37 is always to be there, the field is no longer used and is retained for backward compatibility. No timers are used in this driver, why no callback for timers is needed. The outputv field (line 40) can be used to implement an interface similar to Unix for output. The Erlang runtime system could previously not use outputv for the distribution, but it can as from ERTS 5.7.2. As this driver was written before ERTS 5.7.2 it does not use the outputv callback. Using the outputv callback is preferred, as it reduces copying of data. (We will however use scatter/gather I/O internally in the driver.)

As from ERTS 5.5.3 the driver interface was extended with version control and the possibility to pass capability information. Capability flags are present on line 48. As from ERTS 5.7.4 flag ERL_DRV_FLAG_SOFT_BUSY is required for drivers that are to be used by the distribution. The soft busy flag implies that the driver can handle calls to the output and outputv callbacks although it has marked itself as busy. This has always been a requirement on drivers used by the distribution, but no capability information has been available about this previously. For more information. see erl_driver:set_busy_port()).

This driver was written before the runtime system had SMP support. The driver will still function in the runtime system with SMP support, but performance will suffer from lock contention on the driver lock used for the driver. This can be alleviated by reviewing and perhaps rewriting the code so that each instance of the driver safely can execute in parallel. When instances safely can execute in parallel, it is safe to enable instance-specific locking on the driver. This is done by passing ERL_DRV_FLAG_USE_PORT_LOCKING as a driver flag. This is left as an exercise for the reader.

Thus, the defined callbacks are as follows:

uds_start

Must initiate data for a port. We do not create any sockets here, only initialize data structures.

uds_stop

Called when a port is closed.

uds_command

Handles messages from Erlang. The messages can either be plain data to be sent or more subtle instructions to the driver. This function is here mostly for data pumping.

uds_input

Called when there is something to read from a socket.

uds_output

Called when it is possible to write to a socket.

uds_finish

Called when the driver is unloaded. A distribution driver will actually (or hopefully) never be unloaded, but we include this for completeness. To be able to clean up after oneself is always a good thing.

uds_control

The erlang:port_control/3 callback, which is used a lot in this implementation.

The ports implemented by this driver operate in two major modes, named command and data. In command mode, only passive reading and writing (like gen_tcp:recv/gen_tcp:send) can be done. The port is in this mode during the distribution handshake. When the connection is up, the port is switched to data mode and all data is immediately read and passed further to the Erlang emulator. In data mode, no data arriving to uds_command is interpreted, only packaged and sent out on the socket. The uds_control callback does the switching between those two modes.

While informs different subsystems that the connection is coming up, the port is to accept data to send. However, the port receives no data, to avoid that data arrives from another node before every kernel subsystem is prepared to handle it. A third mode, named intermediate, is used for this intermediate stage.

An enum is defined for the different types of ports:

The different types are as follows:

portTypeUnknown

The type a port has when it is opened, but not bound to any file descriptor.

portTypeListener

A port that is connected to a listen socket. This port does not do much, no data pumping is done on this socket, but read data is available when one is trying to do an accept on the port.

portTypeAcceptor

This port is to represent the result of an accept operation. It is created when one wants to accept from a listen socket, and it is converted to a portTypeCommand when the accept succeeds.

portTypeConnector

Very similar to portTypeAcceptor, an intermediate stage between the request for a connect operation and that the socket is connected to an accepting ditto in the other end. When the sockets are connected, the port switches type to portTypeCommand.

portTypeCommand

A connected socket (or accepted socket) in command mode mentioned earlier.

portTypeIntermediate

The intermediate stage for a connected socket. There is to be no processing of input for this socket.

portTypeData

The mode where data is pumped through the port and the uds_command routine regards every call as a call where sending is wanted. In this mode, all input available is read and sent to Erlang when it arrives on the socket, much like in the active mode of a socket.

We study the state that is needed for the ports. Notice that not all fields are used for all types of ports. Some space could be saved by using unions, but that would clutter the code with multiple indirections, so here is used one struct for all types of ports, for readability:

This structure is used for all types of ports although some fields are useless for some types. The least memory consuming solution would be to arrange this structure as a union of structures. However, the multiple indirections in the code to access a field in such a structure would clutter the code too much for an example.

The fields in the structure are as follows:

fd

The file descriptor of the socket associated with the port.

port

The port identifier for the port that this structure corresponds to. It is needed for most calls from the driver back to the emulator.

lockfd

If the socket is a listen socket, we use a separate (regular) file for two purposes:

We want a locking mechanism that gives no race conditions, to be sure if another Erlang node uses the listen socket name we require or if the file is only left there from a previous (crashed) session.

We store the creation serial number in the file. The creation is a number that is to change between different instances of different Erlang emulators with the same name, so that process identifiers from one emulator do not become valid when sent to a new emulator with the same distribution name. The creation can be from 0 through 3 (two bits) and is stored in every process identifier sent to another node.

In a system with TCP-based distribution, this data is kept in the Erlang port mapper daemon (), which is contacted when a distributed node starts. The lock file and a convention for the UDS listen socket's name remove the need for when using this distribution module. UDS is always restricted to one host, why avoiding a port mapper is easy.

creation

The creation number for a listen socket, which is calculated as (the value found in the lock-file + 1) rem 4. This creation value is also written back into the lock file, so that the next invocation of the emulator finds our value in the file.

type

The current type/state of the port, which can be one of the values declared above.

name

The name of the socket file (the path prefix removed), which allows for deletion () when the socket is closed.

sent

How many bytes that have been sent over the socket. This can wrap, but that is no problem for the distribution, as the Erlang distribution is only interested in if this value has changed. (The Erlang net_kernel ticker uses this value by calling the driver to fetch it, which is done through the erlang:port_control/3 routine.)

received

How many bytes that are read (received) from the socket, used in similar ways as .

partner

A pointer to another port structure, which is either the listen port from which this port is accepting a connection or conversely. The "partner relation" is always bidirectional.

next

Pointer to next structure in a linked list of all port structures. This list is used when accepting connections and when the driver is unloaded.

buffer_size, buffer_pos, header_pos, buffer

Data for input buffering. For details about the input buffering, see the source code in directory kernel/examples. That certainly goes beyond the scope of this section.

Selected Parts of the Distribution Driver Implementation

The implemenation of the distribution driver is not completely covered here, details about buffering and other things unrelated to driver writing are not explained. Likewise are some peculiarities of the UDS protocol not explained in detail. The chosen protocol is not important.

Prototypes for the driver callback routines can be found in the header file.

The driver initialization routine is (usually) declared with a macro to make the driver easier to port between different operating systems (and flavors of systems). This is the only routine that must have a well-defined name. All other callbacks are reached through the driver structure. The macro to use is named and takes the driver name as parameter:

The routine initializes the single global data structure and returns a pointer to the driver entry. The routine is called when is called from Erlang.

The routine is called when a port is opened from Erlang. In this case, we only allocate a structure and initialize it. Creating the actual socket is left to the routine.

fd = -1; ( 7) ud->lockfd = -1; ( 8) ud->creation = 0; ( 9) ud->port = port; (10) ud->type = portTypeUnknown; (11) ud->name = NULL; (12) ud->buffer_size = 0; (13) ud->buffer_pos = 0; (14) ud->header_pos = 0; (15) ud->buffer = NULL; (16) ud->sent = 0; (17) ud->received = 0; (18) ud->partner = NULL; (19) ud->next = first_data; (20) first_data = ud; (21) (22) return((ErlDrvData) ud); (23) } ]]>

Every data item is initialized, so that no problems arise when a newly created port is closed (without there being any corresponding socket). This routine is called when is called from Erlang.

The routine is the routine called when an Erlang process sends data to the port. This routine handles all asynchronous commands when the port is in command mode and the sending of all data when the port is in data mode:

type == portTypeData || ud->type == portTypeIntermediate) { ( 5) DEBUGF(("Passive do_send %d",bufflen)); ( 6) do_send(ud, buff + 1, bufflen - 1); /* XXX */ ( 7) return; ( 8) } ( 9) if (bufflen == 0) { (10) return; (11) } (12) switch (*buff) { (13) case 'L': (14) if (ud->type != portTypeUnknown) { (15) driver_failure_posix(ud->port, ENOTSUP); (16) return; (17) } (18) uds_command_listen(ud,buff,bufflen); (19) return; (20) case 'A': (21) if (ud->type != portTypeUnknown) { (22) driver_failure_posix(ud->port, ENOTSUP); (23) return; (24) } (25) uds_command_accept(ud,buff,bufflen); (26) return; (27) case 'C': (28) if (ud->type != portTypeUnknown) { (29) driver_failure_posix(ud->port, ENOTSUP); (30) return; (31) } (32) uds_command_connect(ud,buff,bufflen); (33) return; (34) case 'S': (35) if (ud->type != portTypeCommand) { (36) driver_failure_posix(ud->port, ENOTSUP); (37) return; (38) } (39) do_send(ud, buff + 1, bufflen - 1); (40) return; (41) case 'R': (42) if (ud->type != portTypeCommand) { (43) driver_failure_posix(ud->port, ENOTSUP); (44) return; (45) } (46) do_recv(ud); (47) return; (48) default: (49) return; (50) } (51) } ]]>

The command routine takes three parameters; the handle returned for the port by , which is a pointer to the internal port structure, the data buffer, and the length of the data buffer. The buffer is the data sent from Erlang (a list of bytes) converted to an C array (of bytes).

If Erlang sends, for example, the list to the port, the variable is and the variable contains (no NULL termination). Usually the first byte is used as an opcode, which is the case in this driver too (at least when the port is in command mode). The opcodes are defined as follows:

'L'<socket name>

Creates and listens on socket with the specified name.

'A'<listen number as 32-bit big-endian>

Accepts from the listen socket identified by the specified identification number. The identification number is retrieved with the uds_control routine.

'C'<socket name>

Connects to the socket named <socket name>.

'S'<data>

Sends the data <data> on the connected/accepted socket (in command mode). The sending is acknowledged when the data has left this process.

'R'

Receives one packet of data.

"One packet of data" in command 'R' can be explained as follows. This driver always sends data packaged with a 4 byte header containing a big-endian 32-bit integer that represents the length of the data in the packet. There is no need for different packet sizes or some kind of streamed mode, as this driver is for the distribution only. Why is the header word coded explicitly in big-endian when a UDS socket is local to the host? It is good practice when writing a distribution driver, as distribution in practice usually crosses the host boundaries.

On line 4-8 is handled the case where the port is in data mode or intermediate mode and the remaining routine handles the different commands. The routine uses the routine to report errors (see, for example, line 15). Notice that the failure routines make a call to the routine, which will remove the internal port data. The handle (and the casted handle ) is therefore invalid pointers after a call and we should return immediately. The runtime system will send exit signals to all linked processes.

The uds_input routine is called when data is available on a file descriptor previously passed to the routine. This occurs typically when a read command is issued and no data is available. The routine is as follows:

port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_READ, 1); ( 9) } else { (10) driver_failure_eof(ud->port); (11) } (12) return; (13) } (14) /* Got a package */ (15) if (ud->type == portTypeCommand) { (16) ibuf[-1] = 'R'; /* There is always room for a single byte (17) opcode before the actual buffer (18) (where the packet header was) */ (19) driver_output(ud->port,ibuf - 1, res + 1); (20) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_READ,0); (21) return; (22) } else { (23) ibuf[-1] = DIST_MAGIC_RECV_TAG; /* XXX */ (24) driver_output(ud->port,ibuf - 1, res + 1); (25) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_READ,1); (26) } (27) } (28) } ]]>

The routine tries to read data until a packet is read or the routine returns a (an internally defined constant for the module, which means that the read operation resulted in an ). If the port is in command mode, the reading stops when one package is read. If the port is in data mode, the reading continues until the socket buffer is empty (read failure). If no more data can be read and more is wanted (which is always the case when the socket is in data mode), driver_select is called to make the callback be called when more data is available for reading.

When the port is in data mode, all data is sent to Erlang in a format that suits the distribution. In fact, the raw data will never reach any Erlang process, but will be translated/interpreted by the emulator itself and then delivered in the correct format to the correct processes. In the current emulator version, received data is to be tagged with a single byte of 100. That is what the macro is defined to. The tagging of data in the distribution can be changed in the future.

The routine handles other input events (like non-blocking ), but most importantly handle data arriving at the socket by calling :

type == portTypeListener) { ( 5) UdsData *ad = ud->partner; ( 6) struct sockaddr_un peer; ( 7) int pl = sizeof(struct sockaddr_un); ( 8) int fd; ( 9) if ((fd = accept(ud->fd, (struct sockaddr *) &peer, &pl)) < 0) { (10) if (errno != EWOULDBLOCK) { (11) driver_failure_posix(ud->port, errno); (12) return; (13) } (14) return; (15) } (16) SET_NONBLOCKING(fd); (17) ad->fd = fd; (18) ad->partner = NULL; (19) ad->type = portTypeCommand; (20) ud->partner = NULL; (21) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_READ, 0); (22) driver_output(ad->port, "Aok",3); (23) return; (24) } (25) do_recv(ud); (26) } ]]>

The important line is the last line in the function: the routine is called to handle new input. The remaining function handles input on a listen socket, which means that it is to be possible to do an accept on the socket, which is also recognized as a read event.

The output mechanisms are similar to the input. The routine is as follows:

port) == 0) { (19) if ((written = writev(ud->fd, iov, 2)) == eio.size) { (20) ud->sent += written; (21) if (ud->type == portTypeCommand) { (22) driver_output(ud->port, "Sok", 3); (23) } (24) return; (25) } else if (written < 0) { (26) if (errno != EWOULDBLOCK) { (27) driver_failure_eof(ud->port); (28) return; (29) } else { (30) written = 0; (31) } (32) } else { (33) ud->sent += written; (34) } (35) /* Enqueue remaining */ (36) } (37) driver_enqv(ud->port, &eio, written); (38) send_out_queue(ud); (39) } ]]>

This driver uses the system call to send data onto the socket. A combination of writev and the driver output queues is very convenient. An ErlIOVec structure contains a SysIOVec (which is equivalent to the structure defined in . The ErlIOVec also contains an array of ErlDrvBinary pointers, of the same length as the number of buffers in the I/O vector itself. One can use this to allocate the binaries for the queue "manually" in the driver, but here the binary array is filled with NULL values (line 7). The runtime system then allocates its own buffers when is called (line 37).

The routine builds an I/O vector containing the header bytes and the buffer (the opcode has been removed and the buffer length decreased by the output routine). If the queue is empty, we write the data directly to the socket (or at least try to). If any data is left, it is stored in the queue and then we try to send the queue (line 38). An acknowledgement is sent when the message is delivered completely (line 22). The sends acknowledgements if the sending is completed there. If the port is in command mode, the Erlang code serializes the send operations so that only one packet can be waiting for delivery at a time. Therefore the acknowledgement can be sent whenever the queue is empty.

The routine is as follows:

port, &vlen); ( 6) int wrote; ( 7) if (tmp == NULL) { ( 8) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_WRITE, 0); ( 9) if (ud->type == portTypeCommand) { (10) driver_output(ud->port, "Sok", 3); (11) } (12) return 0; (13) } (14) if (vlen > IO_VECTOR_MAX) { (15) vlen = IO_VECTOR_MAX; (16) } (17) if ((wrote = writev(ud->fd, tmp, vlen)) < 0) { (18) if (errno == EWOULDBLOCK) { (19) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, (20) DO_WRITE, 1); (21) return 0; (22) } else { (23) driver_failure_eof(ud->port); (24) return -1; (25) } (26) } (27) driver_deq(ud->port, wrote); (28) ud->sent += wrote; (29) } (30) } ]]>

We simply pick out an I/O vector from the queue (which is the whole queue as a SysIOVec). If the I/O vector is too long (IO_VECTOR_MAX is defined to 16), the vector length is decreased (line 15), otherwise the call (line 17) fails. Writing is tried and anything written is dequeued (line 27). If the write fails with (notice that all sockets are in non-blocking mode), is called to make the routine be called when there is space to write again.

We continue trying to write until the queue is empty or the writing blocks.

The routine above is called from the routine:

type == portTypeConnector) { ( 5) ud->type = portTypeCommand; ( 6) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_WRITE, 0); ( 7) driver_output(ud->port, "Cok",3); ( 8) return; ( 9) } (10) send_out_queue(ud); (11) } ]]>

The routine is simple: it first handles the fact that the output select will concern a socket in the business of connecting (and the connecting blocked). If the socket is in a connected state, it simply sends the output queue. This routine is called when it is possible to write to a socket where we have an output queue, so there is no question what to do.

The driver implements a control interface, which is a synchronous interface called when Erlang calls erlang:port_control/3. Only this interface can control the driver when it is in data mode. It can be called with the following opcodes:

'C'

Sets port in command mode.

'I'

Sets port in intermediate mode.

'D'

Sets port in data mode.

'N'

Gets identification number for listen port. This identification number is used in an accept command to the driver. It is returned as a big-endian 32-bit integer, which is the file identifier for the listen socket.

'S'

Gets statistics, which is the number of bytes received, the number of bytes sent, and the number of bytes pending in the output queue. This data is used when the distribution checks that a connection is alive (ticking). The statistics is returned as three 32-bit big-endian integers.

'T'

Sends a tick message, which is a packet of length 0. Ticking is done when the port is in data mode, so the command for sending data cannot be used (besides it ignores zero length packages in command mode). This is used by the ticker to send dummy data when no other traffic is present.

Note: It is important that the interface for sending ticks is not blocking. This implementation uses erlang:port_control/3, which does not block the caller. If erlang:port_command is used, use erlang:port_command/3 and pass [force] as option list; otherwise the caller can be blocked indefinitely on a busy port and prevent the system from taking down a connection that is not functioning.

'R'

Gets creation number of a listen socket, which is used to dig out the number stored in the lock file to differentiate between invocations of Erlang nodes with the same name.

The control interface gets a buffer to return its value in, but is free to allocate its own buffer if the provided one is too small. The code is as follows:

received); (18) put_packet_length((*res) + 5, ud->sent); (19) put_packet_length((*res) + 9, driver_sizeq(ud->port)); (20) return 13; (21) } (22) case 'C': (23) if (ud->type < portTypeCommand) { (24) return report_control_error(res, res_size, "einval"); (25) } (26) ud->type = portTypeCommand; (27) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_READ, 0); (28) ENSURE(1); (29) **res = 0; (30) return 1; (31) case 'I': (32) if (ud->type < portTypeCommand) { (33) return report_control_error(res, res_size, "einval"); (34) } (35) ud->type = portTypeIntermediate; (36) driver_select(ud->port, (ErlDrvEvent) ud->fd, DO_READ, 0); (37) ENSURE(1); (38) **res = 0; (39) return 1; (40) case 'D': (41) if (ud->type < portTypeCommand) { (42) return report_control_error(res, res_size, "einval"); (43) } (44) ud->type = portTypeData; (45) do_recv(ud); (46) ENSURE(1); (47) **res = 0; (48) return 1; (49) case 'N': (50) if (ud->type != portTypeListener) { (51) return report_control_error(res, res_size, "einval"); (52) } (53) ENSURE(5); (54) (*res)[0] = 0; (55) put_packet_length((*res) + 1, ud->fd); (56) return 5; (57) case 'T': /* tick */ (58) if (ud->type != portTypeData) { (59) return report_control_error(res, res_size, "einval"); (60) } (61) do_send(ud,"",0); (62) ENSURE(1); (63) **res = 0; (64) return 1; (65) case 'R': (66) if (ud->type != portTypeListener) { (67) return report_control_error(res, res_size, "einval"); (68) } (69) ENSURE(2); (70) (*res)[0] = 0; (71) (*res)[1] = ud->creation; (72) return 2; (73) default: (74) return report_control_error(res, res_size, "einval"); (75) } (76) #undef ENSURE (77) } ]]>

The macro (line 5-10) is used to ensure that the buffer is large enough for the answer. We switch on the command and take actions. We always have read select active on a port in data mode (achieved by calling on line 45), but we turn off read selection in intermediate and command modes (line 27 and 36).

The rest of the driver is more or less UDS-specific and not of general interest.

Putting It All Together

To test the distribution, the function can be used. It is useful, as it starts the distribution on a running system, where tracing/debugging can be performed. The routine takes a list as its single argument. The list first element in the list is to be the node name (without the "@hostname") as an atom. The second (and last) element is to be one of the atoms or . In the example case, is preferred.

For net_kernel to find out which distribution module to use, command-line argument is used. It is followed by one or more distribution module names, with suffix "_dist" removed, that is, uds_dist as a distribution module is specified as .

If no epmd (TCP port mapper daemon) is used, also command-line option is to be specified, which makes Erlang skip the epmd startup, both as an OS process and as an Erlang ditto.

The path to the directory where the distribution modules reside must be known at boot. This can be achieved either by specifying ]]> on the command line or by building a boot script containing the applications used for your distribution protocol. (In the uds_dist protocol, only the uds_dist application needs to be added to the script.)

The distribution starts at boot if all the above is specified and an ]]> flag is present at the command line.

Example 1:

$ erl -pa $ERL_TOP/lib/kernel/examples/uds_dist/ebin -proto_dist uds -no_epmd
Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 5.0 
 
Eshell V5.0  (abort with ^G)
1> net_kernel:start([bing,shortnames]).
{ok,<0.30.0>}
(bing@hador)2>

Example 2:

$ erl -pa $ERL_TOP/lib/kernel/examples/uds_dist/ebin -proto_dist uds \ 
      -no_epmd -sname bong
Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 5.0 
 
Eshell V5.0  (abort with ^G)
(bong@hador)1>

The ERL_FLAGS environment variable can be used to store the complicated parameters in:

$ ERL_FLAGS=-pa $ERL_TOP/lib/kernel/examples/uds_dist/ebin \ 
      -proto_dist uds -no_epmd
$ export ERL_FLAGS
$ erl -sname bang
Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 5.0 
 
Eshell V5.0  (abort with ^G)
(bang@hador)1>

should not include the node name.