Forks::Super version 0.91
=========================
Forks::Super provides drop-in replacements for the Perl
fork(), wait(), and waitpid() functions with
additional features for spawning background processes
and managing them, including:
* forking to shell command or subroutine
can specify a shell command or a Perl subroutine
(name or code reference) to invoke in the child
process
* timeouts for background processes
can specify a deadline (in relative or absolute
time) for a background process to complete,
with the background process being killed if it does
not complete by its deadline.
* throttling
Limiting the number of simultaneous processes, or
block new processes from starting when the system's
CPU load is too high. Callers can install their own
functions to determine when the system is too busy
to launch another job. More advanced features allow
you to suspend and resume background tasks according
to your own criteria.
* dependencies
Jobs can be specified to wait until other jobs
have started and/or completed before they can begin.
* deferred jobs
Jobs can be specified to start at some specific time in
the future, or to be launched under some specific
future conditions. Arbitrary priorities can be
assigned to jobs so that more urgent jobs will be
launched first.
* simple interprocess communication
Parent process can access a child process's standard
input, output, and error streams to facilitate
interprocess communication. Parent and child processes
can share portable mutex objects to coordinate
their activities.
* timeouts on wait,waitpid calls
extended wait and waitpid functions can take
an optional timeout argument
* operating system features
On some operating systems, the priority and CPU affinity
of the child processes can be set. The module also provides
a (more) portable set of routines for signalling,
suspending, or terminating processes.
* process identifier objects
Return values from fork/wait/waitpid calls are overloaded
objects with methods for process monitoring, signalling,
and interprocess communication.
RECOMMENDED PERL VERSION
The Forks::Super module is recommended for versions of Perl
later than 5.7.2 that implement "deferred" signals (See the
"Deferred Signals (Safe Signals)" section of any recent version
of perlipc), as the signal handlers used in the module are
insufficiently paranoid. However the module will compile
and run with Perl 5.6.
INSTALLATION
The typical installation recipe
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install
usually works. The unit tests assume they are
running on a moderately loaded system; intermittent
failures are more likely on a heavily loaded
system. If "make test" fails, it will often work
if you run it a second time.
It will take about 15 minutes to run the test suite
of the Forks::Super module with "make test". An
alternative is to run
make fasttest
which will run the Forks::Super module tests in
parallel, using the Forks::Super module. Running
"make fasttest" can take about 2-3 minutes, depending
on the number of processors available on your system.
NB: Even the "perl Makefile.PL" step can take up to a
couple of minutes. If you are trying to build this
module with cpanm and you get an error message like
-> FAIL Timed out (> 60s). Use --verbose to retry.
then you'll want to increase your configure timeout, e.g.
cpanm Forks::Super --configure-timeout=300
DEPENDENCIES
Windows users must install the Win32::API module.
The bg_eval function for evaluating Perl code in a
background process requires either the YAML or
Data::Dumper modules. It is a fatal error to use bg_eval
when at least one of these modules can not be found.
Otherwise, Forks::Super recommends and will make
use of the following modules if they are installed,
but will still be able to perform most of its functions
without them:
DateTime::Format::Natural
Proc::ProcessTable
Win32::Process, Win32::API [Windows and Cygwin]
Win32 [Windows]
Sys::CpuAffinity
Sys::CpuLoadX
The Sys::CpuAffinity and Sys::CpuLoadX are bundled with the
Forks::Super module distribution, and may be installed at
the same time. The Sys::CpuAffinity module is also
available as a separate module on CPAN. See "BUNDLED
MODULES", below.
BUNDLED MODULES
This Forks::Super distribution comes bundled with two
additional modules, Sys::CpuAffinity and Sys::CpuLoadX.
You will have the opportunity to install these modules
at the same time that you install the Forks::Super module.
The Sys::CpuAffinity module is for manipulating process
CPU affinities. The Forks::Super module can make use of
this module to control the CPU affinities of background
processes. This is a released module that can also be
retrieved and installed from CPAN.
The Sys::CpuLoadX module is for determining the current
CPU load of your system. The Forks::Super module can make
use of this module to decide whether the system is too
busy to launch additional background tasks. As of Forks::Super
version 0.30, this is an unreleased module and it is only
available bundled with Forks::Super.
Installation of these additional modules is optional. If the
modules are not available, then certain features of the
Forks::Super module may not work.
WINDOWS
Some features of this module do not work or work a
little differently with Windows systems. See the
README.windows file included in this distribution
for important information.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2009-2017, Marty O'Brien.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.