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Agent-Windows/OGP64/usr/share/doc/serf/design-guide.txt
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Agent-Windows/OGP64/usr/share/doc/serf/design-guide.txt
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APACHE COMMONS: serf -*-indented-text-*-
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TOPICS
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1. Introduction
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2. Thread Safety
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3. Pool Usage
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4. Bucket Read Functions
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5. Versioning
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6. Bucket lifetimes
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1. INTRODUCTION
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This document details various design choices for the serf library. It
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is intended to be a guide for serf developers. Of course, these design
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principles, choices made, etc are a good source of information for
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users of the serf library, too.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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2. THREAD SAFETY
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The serf library should contain no mutable globals, making it is safe
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to use in a multi-threaded environment.
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Each "object" within the system does not need to be used from multiple
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threads at a time. Thus, they require no internal mutexes, and can
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disable mutexes within APR objects where applicable (e.g. pools that
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are created).
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The objects should not have any thread affinity (i.e. don't use
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thread-local storage). This enables an application to use external
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mutexes to guard entry to the serf objects, which then allows the
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objects to be used from multiple threads.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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3. POOL USAGE
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For general information on the proper use of pools, please see:
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http://cvs.apache.org/viewcvs/*checkout*/apr/docs/pool-design.html
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Within serf itself, the buckets introduce a significant issue related
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to pools. Since it is very possible to end up creating *many* buckets
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within a transaction, and that creation could be proportional to an
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incoming or outgoing data stream, a lot of care must be take to avoid
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tying bucket allocations to pools. If a bucket allocated any internal
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memory against a pool, and if that bucket is created an unbounded
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number of times, then the pool memory could be exhausted.
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Thus, buckets are allocated using a custom allocator which allows the
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memory to be freed when that bucket is no longer needed. This
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contrasts with pools where the "free" operation occurs over a large
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set of objects, which is problematic if some are still in use.
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### need more explanation of strategy/solution ...
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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4. BUCKET READ FUNCTIONS
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The bucket reading and peek functions must not block. Each read
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function should return (up to) the specified amount of data. If
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SERF_READ_ALL_AVAIL is passed, then the function should provide
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whatever is immediately available, without blocking.
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The peek function does not take a requested length because it is
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non-destructive. It is not possible to "read past" any barrier with a
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peek function. Thus, peek should operate like SERF_READ_ALL_AVAIL.
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The return values from the read functions should follow this general
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pattern:
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APR_SUCCESS Some data was returned, and the caller can
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immediately call the read function again to read
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more data.
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NOTE: when bucket behavior tracking is enabled,
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then you must read more data from this bucket
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before returning to the serf context loop. If a
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bucket is not completely drained first, then it is
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possible to deadlock (the server might not read
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anything until you read everything it has already
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given to you).
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APR_EAGAIN Some data was returned, but no more is available
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for now. The caller must "wait for a bit" or wait
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for some event before attempting to read again
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(basically, this simply means re-run the serf
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context loop). Though it shouldn't be done, reading
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again will, in all likelihood, return zero length
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data and APR_EAGAIN again.
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NOTE: when bucket behavior tracking is enabled,
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then it is illegal to immediately read a bucket
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again after it has returned APR_EAGAIN. You must
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run the serf context loop again to (potentially)
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fetch more data for the bucket.
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APR_EOF Some data was returned, and this bucket has no more
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data available and should not be read again. If you
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happen to read it again, then it will return zero
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length data and APR_EOF.
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NOTE: when bucket behavior tracking is enabled,
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then it is illegal to read this bucket ever again.
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other An error has occurred. No data was returned. The
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returned length is undefined.
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In the above paragraphs, when it says "some data was returned", note
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that this could be data of length zero.
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If a length of zero is returned, then the caller should not attempt to
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dereference the data pointer. It may be invalid. Note that there is no
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reason to dereference that pointer, since it doesn't point to any
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valid data.
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Any data returned by the bucket should live as long as the bucket, or
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until the next read or peek occurs.
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The read_bucket function falls into a very different pattern. See its
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doc string for more information.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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5. VERSIONING
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The serf project uses the APR versioning guidelines described here:
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http://apr.apache.org/versioning.html
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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6. BUCKET LIFETIMES
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### flesh out. basically: if you hold a bucket pointer, then you own
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### it. passing a bucket into another transfers ownership. use barrier
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### buckets to limit destruction of a tree of buckets.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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