POE::Devel::ProcAlike - Exposing the guts of POE via FUSE
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use POE::Devel::ProcAlike; use POE; # let it do the work! POE::Devel::ProcAlike->spawn(); # create our own "fake" session POE::Session->spawn( 'inline_states' => { '_start' => sub { $_[KERNEL]->alias_set( 'foo' ); $_[KERNEL]->yield( 'timer' ); }, 'timer' => sub { $_[KERNEL]->delay_set( 'timer' => 60 ); } }, 'heap' => { 'fakedata' => 1, 'oomph' => 'haha', }, ); # run the kernel! POE::Kernel->run();
Using this module will let you expose the guts of a running POE program to the filesystem via FUSE. This also includes a lot of debugging information about the running perl process :)
Really, all you have to do is load the module and call it's spawn() method:
use POE::Devel::ProcAlike; POE::Devel::ProcAlike->spawn( ... );
This method will return failure on errors or return success. Normally you don't need to pass any arguments to it, but if you want to do zany things, you can! Note: the spawn() method will construct a singleton.
This constructor accepts either a hashref or a hash, valid options are:
This is a hashref of options to pass to the underlying FUSE component, POE::Component::Fuse's spawn() method. Useful to change the default mountpoint, for example. Setting the mountpoint is a MUST if you have multiple scripts running and want to use this.
The default fuseopts is to enable: umount, mkdir, rmdir, and mountpoint of "/tmp/poefuse_$$". You cannot override those options: alias, vfilesys, and session.
The default is: undef
This is a Filesys::Virtual::Async subclass object you can provide to expose your own data in the filesystem. It will be mounted under /misc in the directory.
There is only a few commands you can use, because this module does nothing except export the data to the filesystem.
This module uses a static alias: "poe-devel-procalike" so you can always interact with it anytime it is loaded.
Tells this module to shut down the underlying FUSE session and terminate itself.
$_[KERNEL]->post( 'poe-devel-procalike', 'shutdown' );
( ONLY for PoCo module authors! )
Registers your Filesys::Virtual::Async subclass with ProcAlike so you can expose your data in the filesystem.
Note: You MUST call() this event so ProcAlike will get the proper caller() info to determine mountpath. Furthermore, ProcAlike only allows one registration per module!
$_[KERNEL]->call( 'poe-devel-procalike', 'register', $myfsv );
Removes your registered object from the filesystem.
Note: You MUST call() this event so ProcAlike will get the proper caller() info to determine mountpath.
$_[KERNEL]->call( 'poe-devel-procalike', 'unregister' );
You can expose your own data in any format you want! The way to do this is to create your own Filesys::Virtual::Async object and give it to ProcAlike. Here's how I would do the logic:
my $ses = $_[KERNEL]->alias_resolve( 'poe-devel-procalike' ); if ( $ses ) { require My::FsV; # a subclass of Filesys::Virtual::Async my $fsv = My::FsV->new( ... ); if ( ! $_[KERNEL]->call( $ses, 'register', $fsv ) ) { warn "unable to register!"; } }
Keep in mind that the alias is static, and you should be executing this code in the "preferred" package. What I mean by this is that ProcAlike will take the info from caller() and determine the mountpoint from it. Here's an example:
POE::Component::SimpleHTTP does a register, it will be mounted in: /modules/poe-component-simplehttp My::Module::SubClass does a register, it will be mounted in: /modules/my-module-subclass
Furthermore, ProcAlike only allows each package to register once, so you have to figure out how to create a singleton and use that if your PoCo has been spawned N times. The reasoning behind this is to have a "uniform" filesystem that would be valid across multiple invocations. If we allowed module authors to register any name, then we would end up with possible collisions and wacky schemes like "$pkg$ses->ID" as the name...
Also, here's a tip: you don't have to implement the entire Filesys::Virtual::Async API because FUSE doesn't use them all! The ones you would have to do is: rmtree, scandir, move, copy, load, readdir, rmdir, mkdir, rename, mknod, unlink, chmod, truncate, chown, utime, stat, write, open. To save even more time, you can subclass the Filesys::Virtual::Async::inMemory module and set readonly to true. Then you would have to subclass only those methods: readdir, stat, open.
tunable parameters
Various people in #poe@magnet suggested having a system where we could do "sysctl-like" stuff with this filesystem. I'm not entirely sure what we can "tune" in regards to POE but if you have any ideas please feel free to drop them my way and we'll see what we can do :)
pipe support
Again, people suggested the idea of "telnetting" into the filesystem via a pipe. The interface could be something like PoCo-DebugShell, and we could expand it to accept zany commands :)
module memory usage
I talked with some people, and this problem is much more complex than you would think it is. If somebody could let me know of a snippet that measures this, I would love to include it in the perl output!
POE::API::Peek crashes
There are some functions that causes segfaults for me! They are: session_memory_size, signals_watched_by_session, and kernel_memory_size. If the situation improves, I would love to reinstate them in ProcAlike and expose the data, so please let me know if it does.
more stats
More stats are always welcome! If you have any ideas, please drop me a line.
None.
POE
Fuse
Filesys::Virtual::Async
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc POE::Devel::ProcAlike
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
http://annocpan.org/dist/POE-Devel-ProcAlike
CPAN Ratings
http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/POE-Devel-ProcAlike
RT: CPAN's request tracker
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=POE-Devel-ProcAlike
Search CPAN
http://search.cpan.org/dist/POE-Devel-ProcAlike
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-poe-devel-procalike at rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=POE-Devel-ProcAlike. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
bug-poe-devel-procalike at rt.cpan.org
Apocalypse <apocal@cpan.org>
Props goes to xantus who got me motivated to write this :)
Copyright 2009 by Apocalypse
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
To install POE::Devel::ProcAlike, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm POE::Devel::ProcAlike
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install POE::Devel::ProcAlike
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.