From: ko1@... Date: 2020-05-12T22:00:31+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:98303] [Ruby master Feature#16786] Light-weight scheduler for improved concurrency. Issue #16786 has been updated by ko1 (Koichi Sasada). Sorry for late response. First of all, I agree to merge it and try before next release (please wait Matz's comment for merging). There are several considerations. # non-blocking fiber creation API For me, the name `Fiber()` is not clear because there are traditional fibers. How about `Fiber.schedule{ ... }` or something which shows the fiber will be scheduled? It should raise if the scheduler is not set to the thread. # mixing with blocking fiber * I heard that the root fiber (a default fiber per thread) is blocking. It should be noted. * What's happen when a non-blocking fiber creates a blocking fiber (Enumerator, etc) and it runs blocking I/O operation? I think it should be blocking though. However, resuming blocking fiber will be a blocking operation. # Scheduler class Your example shows that the Scheduler class only inherits Object class. Do we need a Fiber::Scheduler class as base class? At least it can provide `Scheduler#fiber` method. # Fiber#resume/.yield for non-blocking fiber I understand they are needed to make scheduler in Ruby, but it is confusing. I think non-blocking fiber should not have an ability to context switch by users outside of scheduler. For example, if a fiber F1 is waiting for a network IO and a fiber F2 resume F1, then it will be blocking until the IO is ready. How about to prohibit context switch by Fiber class methods, but provide `Fiber#Scheduler` methods? ``` # like that class Fiber::Scheduler def resume(fib) = native_impl # or transfer? end class SelectScheduler < Fiber::Scheduler def wait_readable io ready_io = select(...) ready_fiber = ... resume(ready_fiber) end end ``` BTW, hooks are called on root fiber (if a fiber F1 calls blocking IO operations, back to the root fiber and call the hook?) sorry if I missed the explanation. # Scheduler hooks * `wait_readable`, `wait_writable` hooks are easy to understand. However, `wait_any` is not clear for me. * There is a `wait_sleep`, but I'm not sure the hooks are enough or not. * `enter_blocking_region/leave_blocking_region` are strongly connected to the MRI, so I'm not sure we should provide it here. For example, `def notice(type, ...)` which is called by an interpreter with information can hide the details from the method names (user should know the details to utilize the information). # Context switch predictability for atomic operations I'm negative yet about this proposal because we can not predict the context switch completely. Compare with the threading, the predictability is very high, but we can not predict context switch timing 100% because most of non-blocking IO operations can be context switch points. It can violate atomic operations such as mutating Hash/Array/Object/... twice or more at once. I know most of people include Samuel and Matz are optimistic for this issue. I also agree the danger of this kind of violation is very low compare with threading. ## How to provide a safety There are several ideas. * (1) Users understand the code deeply where are context-switching points. * Pros. we don't need to introduce any mechanism. * Cons. difficult to make it perfect (human-readable is not perfect) * (2) Use Mutex correctly and non-blocking fibers are take care about it. * Pros. it is highly compatible with threading. It means we can use same code on multi-threading and multi-nonblocking fiber app. * Cons. users need to use Mutex correctly. Schedulers should manage Mutexs. * (3) Introduce new context-switch control mechanism such as `Fiber.exclude{ ... }` like Ruby 1.8 or `Fiber.blcoking{ ... }` to prevent Fiber scheduling (context-switching) in a block. * Pros. easy to implement. * Cons. users need to use this method correctly. * (4) Introduce `non-context-switch` assertion mechanism such as `Fiber.should_not_switch{ ... }` (user asserts that there is no context-switching point). If there is an IO operation, it cause assertion violate error even if there is only one (itself) non-blocking fiber. * Pros. easy to implement. * Cons. users need to use this method correctly. * (5) ((2) + (4)) Assume locking Mutex as an assertion. * Pros. compatible with Mutex code. * Cons. users need to use Mutex correctly. * (6) Restrict the non-blocking IOs more, for example, only net/http enables it. * Pros. make more predictable. * Cons. concurrency will be reduced. mmm, (5) seems fine? (if any Mutex is locked by a fiber, then fiber context switch will be an error). In general, holding Mutex's lock long time is not recommended. ((7) is using Ractor, a position talk ;p) ## How to survey the existing program? Implement (5) and run some programs can show how many code need atomic operations and can run blocking IO operations are called in such atomic operations. ---------------------------------------- Feature #16786: Light-weight scheduler for improved concurrency. https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16786#change-85541 * Author: ioquatix (Samuel Williams) * Status: Open * Priority: Normal ---------------------------------------- # Abstract We propose to introduce a light weight fiber scheduler, to improve the concurrency of Ruby code with minimal changes. # Background We have been discussing and considering options to improve Ruby scalability for several years. More context can be provided by the following discussions: - https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14736 - https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13618 The final Ruby Concurrency report provides some background on the various issues considered in the latest iteration: https://www.codeotaku.com/journal/2020-04/ruby-concurrency-final-report/index # Proposal We propose to introduce the following concepts: - A `Scheduler` interface which provides hooks for user-supplied event loops. - Non-blocking `Fiber` which can invoke the scheduler when it would otherwise block. ## Scheduler The per-thread fiber scheduler interface is used to intercept blocking operations. A typical implementation would be a wrapper for a gem like EventMachine or Async. This design provides separation of concerns between the event loop implementation and application code. It also allows for layered schedulers which can perform instrumentation, enforce constraints (e.g. during testing) and provide additional logging. You can see a [sample implementation here](https://github.com/socketry/async/pull/56). ```ruby class Scheduler # Wait for the given file descriptor to become readable. def wait_readable(io) end # Wait for the given file descriptor to become writable. def wait_writable(io) end # Wait for the given file descriptor to match the specified events within # the specified timeout. # @param event [Integer] a bit mask of +IO::WAIT_READABLE+, # `IO::WAIT_WRITABLE` and `IO::WAIT_PRIORITY`. # @param timeout [#to_f] the amount of time to wait for the event. def wait_any(io, events, timeout) end # Sleep the current task for the specified duration, or forever if not # specified. # @param duration [#to_f] the amount of time to sleep. def wait_sleep(duration = nil) end # The Ruby virtual machine is going to enter a system level blocking # operation. def enter_blocking_region end # The Ruby virtual machine has completed the system level blocking # operation. def exit_blocking_region end # Intercept the creation of a non-blocking fiber. def fiber(&block) Fiber.new(blocking: false, &block) end # Invoked when the thread exits. def run # Implement event loop here. end end ``` A thread has a non-blocking fiber scheduler. All blocking operations on non-blocking fibers are hooked by the scheduler and the scheduler can switch to another fiber. If any mutex is acquired by a fiber, then a scheduler is not called; the same behaviour as blocking Fiber. Schedulers can be written in Ruby. This is a desirable property as it allows them to be used in different implementations of Ruby easily. To enable non-blocking fiber switching on blocking operations: - Specify a scheduler: `Thread.current.scheduler = Scheduler.new`. - Create several non-blocking fibers: `Fiber.new(blocking:false) {...}`. - As the main fiber exits, `Thread.current.scheduler.run` is invoked which begins executing the event loop until all fibers are finished. ### Time/Duration Arguments Tony Arcieri suggested against using floating point values for time/durations, because they can accumulate rounding errors and other issues. He has a wealth of experience in this area so his advice should be considered carefully. However, I have yet to see these issues happen in an event loop. That being said, round tripping between `struct timeval` and `double`/`VALUE` seems a bit inefficient. One option is to have an opaque argument that responds to `to_f` as well as potentially `seconds` and `microseconds` or some other such interface (could be opaque argument supported by `IO.select` for example). ### File Descriptor Arguments Because of the public C interface we may need to support a specific set of wrappers for CRuby. ```c int rb_io_wait_readable(int); int rb_io_wait_writable(int); int rb_wait_for_single_fd(int fd, int events, struct timeval *tv); ``` One option is to introduce hooks specific to CRuby: ```ruby class Scheduler # Wrapper for rb_io_wait_readable(int) C function. def wait_readable_fd(fd) wait_readable(::IO.from_fd(fd, autoclose: false)) end # Wrapper for rb_io_wait_readable(int) C function. def wait_writable_fd(fd) wait_writable(::IO.from_fd(fd, autoclose: false)) end # Wrapper for rb_wait_for_single_fd(int) C function. def wait_for_single_fd(fd, events, duration) wait_any(::IO.from_fd(fd, autoclose: false), events, duration) end end ``` Alternatively, in CRuby, it may be possible to map from `fd` -> `IO` instance. Most C schedulers only care about file descriptor, so such a mapping will introduce a small performance penalty. In addition, most C level schedulers will not care about `IO` instance. ## Non-blocking Fiber We propose to introduce per-fiber flag `blocking: true/false`. A fiber created by `Fiber.new(blocking: true)` (the default `Fiber.new`) becomes a "blocking Fiber" and has no changes from current Fiber implementation. A fiber created by `Fiber.new(blocking: false)` becomes a "non-blocking Fiber" and it will be scheduled by the per-thread scheduler when the blocking operations (blocking I/O, sleep, and so on) occurs. ```ruby Fiber.new(blocking: false) do puts Fiber.current.blocking? # false # May invoke `Thread.scheduler&.wait_readable`. io.read(...) # May invoke `Thread.scheduler&.wait_writable`. io.write(...) # Will invoke `Thread.scheduler&.wait_sleep`. sleep(n) end.resume ``` Non-blocking fibers also supports `Fiber#resume`, `Fiber#transfer` and `Fiber.yield` which are necessary to create a scheduler. ### Fiber Method We also introduce a new method which simplifes the creation of these non-blocking fibers: ```ruby Fiber do puts Fiber.current.blocking? # false end ``` This method invokes `Scheduler#fiber(...)`. The purpose of this method is to allow the scheduler to internally decide the policy for when to start the fiber, and whether to use symmetric or asymmetric fibers. If no scheduler is specified, it is a error: `RuntimeError.new("No scheduler is available")`. In the future we may expand this to support some kind of default scheduler. ## Non-blocking I/O `IO#nonblock` is an existing interface to control whether I/O uses blocking or non-blocking system calls. We can take advantage of this: - `IO#nonblock = false` prevents that particular IO from utilising the scheduler. This should be the default for `stderr`. - `IO#nonblock = true` enables that particular IO to utilise the scheduler. We should enable this where possible. As proposed by Eric Wong, we believe that making I/O non-blocking by default is the right approach. We have expanded his work in the current implementation. By doing this, when the user writes `Fiber do ... end` they are guaranteed the best possible concurrency possible, without any further changes to code. As an example, one of the tests shows `Net::HTTP.get` being used in this way with no further modifications required. To support this further, consider the counterpoint, that `Net::HTTP.get(..., blocking: false)` is required for concurrent requests. Library code may not expose the relevant options, sevearly limiting the user's ability to improve concurrency, even if that is what they desire. # Implementation We have an evolving implementation here: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/3032 which we will continue to update as the proposal changes. # Evaluation This proposal provides the hooks for scheduling fibers. With regards to performance, there are several things to consider: - The impact of the scheduler design on non-concurrent workloads. We believe it's acceptable. - The impact of the scheduler design on concurrent workloads. Our results are promising. - The impact of different event loops on throughput and latency. We have independent tests which confirm the scalability of the approach. We can control for the first two in this proposal, and depending on the design we may help or hinder the wrapper implementation. In the tests, we provide a basic implementation using `IO.select`. As this proposal is finalised, we will introduce some basic benchmarks using this approach. # Discussion The following points are good ones for discussion: - Handling of file descriptors vs `IO` instances. - Handling of time/duration arguments. - General design and naming conventions. - Potential platform issues (e.g. CRuby vs JRuby vs TruffleRuby, etc). The following is planned to be described by @eregon in another design document: - Semantics of non-blocking mutex (e.g. `Mutex.new(blocking: false)` or some other approach). In the future we hope to extend the scheduler to handle other blocking operations, including name resolution, file I/O (by `io_uring`) and others. -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: