287 lines
9.9 KiB
Python
287 lines
9.9 KiB
Python
# Copyright 2019, David Wilson
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#
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# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
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#
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# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
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# this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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#
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# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
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# this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
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# and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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#
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# 3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its contributors
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# may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
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# specific prior written permission.
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#
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# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
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# AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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# IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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# ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
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# LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
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# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
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# SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
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# INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
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# CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
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# ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
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# POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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"""
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As Mitogen separates asynchronous IO out to a broker thread, communication
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necessarily involves context switching and waking that thread. When application
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threads and the broker share a CPU, this can be almost invisibly fast - around
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25 microseconds for a full A->B->A round-trip.
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However when threads are scheduled on different CPUs, round-trip delays
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regularly vary wildly, and easily into milliseconds. Many contributing factors
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exist, not least scenarios like:
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1. A is preempted immediately after waking B, but before releasing the GIL.
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2. B wakes from IO wait only to immediately enter futex wait.
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3. A may wait 10ms or more for another timeslice, as the scheduler on its CPU
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runs threads unrelated to its transaction (i.e. not B), wake only to release
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its GIL, before entering IO sleep waiting for a reply from B, which cannot
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exist yet.
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4. B wakes, acquires GIL, performs work, and sends reply to A, causing it to
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wake. B is preempted before releasing GIL.
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5. A wakes from IO wait only to immediately enter futex wait.
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6. B may wait 10ms or more for another timeslice, wake only to release its GIL,
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before sleeping again.
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7. A wakes, acquires GIL, finally receives reply.
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Per above if we are unlucky, on an even moderately busy machine it is possible
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to lose milliseconds just in scheduling delay, and the effect is compounded
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when pairs of threads in process A are communicating with pairs of threads in
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process B using the same scheme, such as when Ansible WorkerProcess is
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communicating with ContextService in the connection multiplexer. In the worst
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case it could involve 4 threads working in lockstep spread across 4 busy CPUs.
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Since multithreading in Python is essentially useless except for waiting on IO
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due to the presence of the GIL, at least in Ansible there is no good reason for
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threads in the same process to run on distinct CPUs - they always operate in
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lockstep due to the GIL, and are thus vulnerable to issues like above.
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Linux lacks any natural API to describe what we want, it only permits
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individual threads to be constrained to run on specific CPUs, and for that
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constraint to be inherited by new threads and forks of the constrained thread.
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This module therefore implements a CPU pinning policy for Ansible processes,
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providing methods that should be called early in any new process, either to
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rebalance which CPU it is pinned to, or in the case of subprocesses, to remove
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the pinning entirely. It is likely to require ongoing tweaking, since pinning
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necessarily involves preventing the scheduler from making load balancing
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decisions.
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"""
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from __future__ import absolute_import
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import ctypes
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import logging
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import mmap
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import multiprocessing
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import os
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import struct
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import mitogen.core
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import mitogen.parent
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LOG = logging.getLogger(__name__)
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try:
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_libc = ctypes.CDLL(None, use_errno=True)
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_strerror = _libc.strerror
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_strerror.restype = ctypes.c_char_p
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_sem_init = _libc.sem_init
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_sem_wait = _libc.sem_wait
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_sem_post = _libc.sem_post
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_sched_setaffinity = _libc.sched_setaffinity
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except (OSError, AttributeError):
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_libc = None
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_strerror = None
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_sem_init = None
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_sem_wait = None
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_sem_post = None
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_sched_setaffinity = None
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class sem_t(ctypes.Structure):
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"""
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Wrap sem_t to allow storing a lock in shared memory.
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"""
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_fields_ = [
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('data', ctypes.c_uint8 * 128),
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]
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def init(self):
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if _sem_init(self.data, 1, 1):
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raise Exception(_strerror(ctypes.get_errno()))
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def acquire(self):
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if _sem_wait(self.data):
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raise Exception(_strerror(ctypes.get_errno()))
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def release(self):
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if _sem_post(self.data):
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raise Exception(_strerror(ctypes.get_errno()))
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class State(ctypes.Structure):
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"""
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Contents of shared memory segment. This allows :meth:`Manager.assign` to be
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called from any child, since affinity assignment must happen from within
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the context of the new child process.
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"""
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_fields_ = [
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('lock', sem_t),
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('counter', ctypes.c_uint8),
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]
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class Policy(object):
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"""
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Process affinity policy.
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"""
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def assign_controller(self):
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"""
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Assign the Ansible top-level policy to this process.
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"""
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def assign_muxprocess(self, index):
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"""
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Assign the MuxProcess policy to this process.
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"""
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def assign_worker(self):
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"""
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Assign the WorkerProcess policy to this process.
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"""
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def assign_subprocess(self):
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"""
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Assign the helper subprocess policy to this process.
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"""
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class FixedPolicy(Policy):
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"""
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:class:`Policy` for machines where the only control method available is
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fixed CPU placement. The scheme here was tested on an otherwise idle 16
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thread machine.
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- The connection multiplexer is pinned to CPU 0.
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- The Ansible top-level (strategy) is pinned to CPU 1.
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- WorkerProcesses are pinned sequentually to 2..N, wrapping around when no
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more CPUs exist.
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- Children such as SSH may be scheduled on any CPU except 0/1.
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If the machine has less than 4 cores available, the top-level and workers
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are pinned between CPU 2..N, i.e. no CPU is reserved for the top-level
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process.
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This could at least be improved by having workers pinned to independent
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cores, before reusing the second hyperthread of an existing core.
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A hook is installed that causes :meth:`reset` to run in the child of any
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process created with :func:`mitogen.parent.popen`, ensuring CPU-intensive
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children like SSH are not forced to share the same core as the (otherwise
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potentially very busy) parent.
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"""
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def __init__(self, cpu_count=None):
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#: For tests.
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self.cpu_count = cpu_count or multiprocessing.cpu_count()
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self.mem = mmap.mmap(-1, 4096)
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self.state = State.from_buffer(self.mem)
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self.state.lock.init()
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if self.cpu_count < 2:
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# uniprocessor
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self._reserve_mux = False
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self._reserve_controller = False
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self._reserve_mask = 0
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self._reserve_shift = 0
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elif self.cpu_count < 4:
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# small SMP
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self._reserve_mux = True
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self._reserve_controller = False
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self._reserve_mask = 1
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self._reserve_shift = 1
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else:
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# big SMP
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self._reserve_mux = True
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self._reserve_controller = True
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self._reserve_mask = 3
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self._reserve_shift = 2
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def _set_affinity(self, descr, mask):
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if descr:
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LOG.debug('CPU mask for %s: %#08x', descr, mask)
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mitogen.parent._preexec_hook = self._clear
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self._set_cpu_mask(mask)
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def _balance(self, descr):
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self.state.lock.acquire()
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try:
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n = self.state.counter
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self.state.counter += 1
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finally:
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self.state.lock.release()
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self._set_cpu(descr, self._reserve_shift + (
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(n % (self.cpu_count - self._reserve_shift))
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))
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def _set_cpu(self, descr, cpu):
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self._set_affinity(descr, 1 << (cpu % self.cpu_count))
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def _clear(self):
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all_cpus = (1 << self.cpu_count) - 1
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self._set_affinity(None, all_cpus & ~self._reserve_mask)
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def assign_controller(self):
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if self._reserve_controller:
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self._set_cpu('Ansible top-level process', 1)
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else:
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self._balance('Ansible top-level process')
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def assign_muxprocess(self, index):
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self._set_cpu('MuxProcess %d' % (index,), index)
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def assign_worker(self):
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self._balance('WorkerProcess')
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def assign_subprocess(self):
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self._clear()
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class LinuxPolicy(FixedPolicy):
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def _mask_to_bytes(self, mask):
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"""
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Convert the (type long) mask to a cpu_set_t.
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"""
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chunks = []
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shiftmask = (2 ** 64) - 1
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for x in range(16):
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chunks.append(struct.pack('<Q', mask & shiftmask))
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mask >>= 64
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return mitogen.core.b('').join(chunks)
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def _get_thread_ids(self):
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try:
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ents = os.listdir('/proc/self/task')
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except OSError:
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LOG.debug('cannot fetch thread IDs for current process')
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return [os.getpid()]
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return [int(s) for s in ents if s.isdigit()]
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def _set_cpu_mask(self, mask):
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s = self._mask_to_bytes(mask)
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for tid in self._get_thread_ids():
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_sched_setaffinity(tid, len(s), s)
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if _sched_setaffinity is not None:
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policy = LinuxPolicy()
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else:
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policy = Policy()
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