Cache::FastMmap(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Cache::FastMmap(3)NAMECache::FastMmap - Uses an mmap'ed file to act as a shared memory
interprocess cache
SYNOPSIS
use Cache::FastMmap;
# Uses vaguely sane defaults
$Cache = Cache::FastMmap->new();
# $Value must be a reference...
$Cache->set($Key, $Value);
$Value = $Cache->get($Key);
$Cache = Cache::FastMmap->new(raw_values => 1);
# $Value can't be a reference...
$Cache->set($Key, $Value);
$Value = $Cache->get($Key);
ABSTRACT
A shared memory cache through an mmap'ed file. It's core is written in
C for performance. It uses fcntl locking to ensure multiple processes
can safely access the cache at the same time. It uses a basic LRU
algorithm to keep the most used entries in the cache.
DESCRIPTION
In multi-process environments (eg mod_perl, forking daemons, etc), it's
common to want to cache information, but have that cache shared between
processes. Many solutions already exist, and may suit your situation
better:
· MLDBM::Sync - acts as a database, data is not automatically
expired, slow
· IPC::MM - hash implementation is broken, data is not automatically
expired, slow
· Cache::FileCache - lots of features, slow
· Cache::SharedMemoryCache - lots of features, VERY slow. Uses
IPC::ShareLite which freeze/thaws ALL data at each read/write
· DBI - use your favourite RDBMS. can perform well, need a DB server
running. very global. socket connection latency
· Cache::Mmap - similar to this module, in pure perl. slows down with
larger pages
· BerkeleyDB - very fast (data ends up mostly in shared memory cache)
but acts as a database overall, so data is not automatically
expired
In the case I was working on, I needed:
· Automatic expiry and space management
· Very fast access to lots of small items
· The ability to fetch/store many items in one go
Which is why I developed this module. It tries to be quite efficient
through a number of means:
· Core code is written in C for performance
· It uses multiple pages within a file, and uses Fcntl to only lock a
page at a time to reduce contention when multiple processes access
the cache.
· It uses a dual level hashing system (hash to find page, then hash
within each page to find a slot) to make most "get()" calls O(1)
and fast
· On each "set()", if there are slots and page space available, only
the slot has to be updated and the data written at the end of the
used data space. If either runs out, a re-organisation of the page
is performed to create new slots/space which is done in an
efficient way
The class also supports read-through, and write-back or write-through
callbacks to access the real data if it's not in the cache, meaning
that code like this:
my $Value = $Cache->get($Key);
if (!defined $Value) {
$Value = $RealDataSource->get($Key);
$Cache->set($Key, $Value)
}
Isn't required, you instead specify in the constructor:
Cache::FastMmap->new(
...
context => $RealDataSourceHandle,
read_cb => sub { $_[0]->get($_[1]) },
write_cb => sub { $_[0]->set($_[1], $_[2]) },
);
And then:
my $Value = $Cache->get($Key);
$Cache->set($Key, $NewValue);
Will just work and will be read/written to the underlying data source
as needed automatically.
PERFORMANCE
If you're storing relatively large and complex structures into the
cache, then you're limited by the speed of the Storable module. If
you're storing simple structures, or raw data, then Cache::FastMmap has
noticeable performance improvements.
See <http://cpan.robm.fastmail.fm/cache_perf.html> for some comparisons
to other modules.
COMPATIBILITYCache::FastMmap uses mmap to map a file as the shared cache space, and
fcntl to do page locking. This means it should work on most UNIX like
operating systems.
Ash Berlin has written a Win32 layer using MapViewOfFile et al. to
provide support for Win32 platform.
MEMORY SIZE
Because Cache::FastMmap mmap's a shared file into your processes memory
space, this can make each process look quite large, even though it's
just mmap'd memory that's shared between all processes that use the
cache, and may even be swapped out if the cache is getting low usage.
However, the OS will think your process is quite large, which might
mean you hit some BSD::Resource or 'ulimits' you set previously that
you thought were sane, but aren't anymore, so be aware.
CACHE FILES AND OS ISSUES
Because Cache::FastMmap uses an mmap'ed file, when you put values into
the cache, you are actually "dirtying" pages in memory that belong to
the cache file. Your OS will want to write those dirty pages back to
the file on the actual physical disk, but the rate it does that at is
very OS dependent.
In Linux, you have some control over how the OS writes those pages back
using a number of parameters in /proc/sys/vm
dirty_background_ratio
dirty_expire_centisecs
dirty_ratio
dirty_writeback_centisecs
How you tune these depends heavily on your setup.
As an interesting point, if you use a highmem linux kernel, a change
between 2.6.16 and 2.6.20 made the kernel flush memory a LOT more.
There's details in this kernel mailing list thread:
<http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0711.3/0804.html>
In most cases, people are not actually concerned about the persistence
of data in the cache, and so are happy to disable writing of any cache
data back to disk at all. Baically what they want is an in memory only
shared cache. The best way to do that is to use a "tmpfs" filesystem
and put all cache files on there.
For instance, all our machines have a /tmpfs mount point that we create
in /etc/fstab as:
none /tmpfs tmpfs defaults,noatime,size=1000M 0 0
And we put all our cache files on there. The tmpfs filesystem is smart
enough to only use memory as required by files actually on the tmpfs,
so making it 1G in size doesn't actually use 1G of memory, it only uses
as much as the cache files we put on it. In all cases, we ensure that
we never run out of real memory, so the cache files effectively act
just as named access points to shared memory.
Some people have suggested using anonymous mmaped memory. Unfortunately
we need a file descriptor to do the fcntl locking on, so we'd have to
create a separate file on a filesystem somewhere anyway. It seems
easier to just create an explicit "tmpfs" filesystem.
PAGE SIZE AND KEY/VALUE LIMITS
To reduce lock contention, Cache::FastMmap breaks up the file into
pages. When you get/set a value, it hashes the key to get a page, then
locks that page, and uses a hash table within the page to get/store the
actual key/value pair.
One consequence of this is that you cannot store values larger than a
page in the cache at all. Attempting to store values larger than a page
size will fail (the set() function will return false).
Also keep in mind that each page has it's own hash table, and that we
store the key and value data of each item. So if you are expecting to
store large values and/or keys in the cache, you should use page sizes
that are definitely larger than your largest key + value size + a few
kbytes for the overhead.
USAGE
Because the cache uses shared memory through an mmap'd file, you have
to make sure each process connects up to the file. There's probably two
main ways to do this:
· Create the cache in the parent process, and then when it forks,
each child will inherit the same file descriptor, mmap'ed memory,
etc and just work. This is the recommended way. (BEWARE: This only
works under UNIX as Win32 has no concept of forking)
· Explicitly connect up in each forked child to the share file. In
this case, make sure the file already exists and the children
connect with init_file => 0 to avoid deleting the cache contents
and possible race corruption conditions. Also be careful that
multiple children may race to create the file at the same time,
each overwriting and corrupting content. Use a separate lock file
if you must to ensure only one child creates the file. (This is the
only possible way under Win32)
The first way is usually the easiest. If you're using the cache in a
Net::Server based module, you'll want to open the cache in the
"pre_loop_hook", because that's executed before the fork, but after the
process ownership has changed and any chroot has been done.
In mod_perl, just open the cache at the global level in the appropriate
module, which is executed as the server is starting and before it
starts forking children, but you'll probably want to chmod or chown the
file to the permissions of the apache process.
METHODS
new(%Opts)
Create a new Cache::FastMmap object.
Basic global parameters are:
· share_file
File to mmap for sharing of data. default on unix:
/tmp/sharefile-$pid-$time-$random default on windows:
%TEMP%\sharefile-$pid-$time-$random
· init_file
Clear any existing values and re-initialise file. Useful to do
in a parent that forks off children to ensure that file is
empty at the start (default: 0)
Note: This is quite important to do in the parent to ensure a
consistent file structure. The shared file is not perfectly
transaction safe, and so if a child is killed at the wrong
instant, it might leave the the cache file in an inconsistent
state.
· raw_values
Store values as raw binary data rather than using Storable to
free/thaw data structures (default: 0)
· compress
Compress the value (but not the key) before storing into the
cache. If you set this to 1, the module will attempt to require
the Compress::Zlib module and then use the memGzip() function
on the value data before storing into the cache, and
memGunzip() when retrieving data from the cache. Some initial
testing shows that the uncompressing tends to be very fast,
though the compressing can be quite slow, so it's probably best
to use this option only if you know values in the cache are
long lived and have a high hit rate. (default: 0)
· enable_stats
Enable some basic statistics capturing. When enabled, every
read to the cache is counted, and every read to the cache that
finds a value in the cache is also counted. You can then
retrieve these values via the get_statistics() call. This
causes every read action to do a write on a page, which can
cause some more IO, so it's disabled by default. (default: 0)
· expire_time
Maximum time to hold values in the cache in seconds. A value of
0 means does no explicit expiry time, and values are expired
only based on LRU usage. Can be expressed as 1m, 1h, 1d for
minutes/hours/days respectively. (default: 0)
You may specify the cache size as:
· cache_size
Size of cache. Can be expresses as 1k, 1m for kilobytes or
megabytes respectively. Automatically guesses page size/page
count values.
Or specify explicit page size/page count values. If none of these
are specified, the values page_size = 64k and num_pages = 89 are
used.
· page_size
Size of each page. Must be a power of 2 between 4k and 1024k.
If not, is rounded to the nearest value.
· num_pages
Number of pages. Should be a prime number for best hashing
The cache allows the use of callbacks for reading/writing data to
an underlying data store.
· context
Opaque reference passed as the first parameter to any callback
function if specified
· read_cb
Callback to read data from the underlying data store. Called
as:
$read_cb->($context, $Key)
Should return the value to use. This value will be saved in the
cache for future retrievals. Return undef if there is no value
for the given key
· write_cb
Callback to write data to the underlying data store. Called
as:
$write_cb->($context, $Key, $Value, $ExpiryTime)
In 'write_through' mode, it's always called as soon as a
set(...) is called on the Cache::FastMmap class. In
'write_back' mode, it's called when a value is expunged from
the cache if it's been changed by a set(...) rather than read
from the underlying store with the read_cb above.
Note: Expired items do result in the write_cb being called if
'write_back' caching is enabled and the item has been changed.
You can check the $ExpiryTime against "time()" if you only want
to write back values which aren't expired.
Also remember that write_cb may be called in a different
process to the one that placed the data in the cache in the
first place
· delete_cb
Callback to delete data from the underlying data store. Called
as:
$delete_cb->($context, $Key)
Called as soon as remove(...) is called on the Cache::FastMmap
class
· cache_not_found
If set to true, then if the read_cb is called and it returns
undef to say nothing was found, then that information is stored
in the cache, so that next time a get(...) is called on that
key, undef is returned immediately rather than again calling
the read_cb
· write_action
Either 'write_back' or 'write_through'. (default:
write_through)
· allow_recursive
If you're using a callback function, then normally the cache is
not re-enterable, and attempting to call a get/set on the cache
will cause an error. By setting this to one, the cache will
unlock any pages before calling the callback. During the unlock
time, other processes may change data in current cache page,
causing possible unexpected effects. You shouldn't set this
unless you know you want to be able to recall to the cache
within a callback. (default: 0)
· empty_on_exit
When you have 'write_back' mode enabled, then you really want
to make sure all values from the cache are expunged when your
program exits so any changes are written back.
The trick is that we only want to do this in the parent
process, we don't want any child processes to empty the cache
when they exit. So if you set this, it takes the PID via $$,
and only calls empty in the DESTROY method if $$ matches the
pid we captured at the start. (default: 0)
· unlink_on_exit
Unlink the share file when the cache is destroyed.
As with empty_on_exit, this will only unlink the file if the
DESTROY occurs in the same PID that the cache was created in so
that any forked children don't unlink the file.
This value defaults to 1 if the share_file specified does not
already exist. If the share_file specified does already exist,
it defaults to 0.
· catch_deadlocks
Sets an alarm(10) before each page is locked via
fcntl(F_SETLKW) to catch any deadlock. This used to be the
default behaviour, but it's not really needed in the default
case and could clobber sub-second Time::HiRes alarms setup by
other code. Defaults to 0.
get($Key, [ \%Options ])
Search cache for given Key. Returns undef if not found. If read_cb
specified and not found, calls the callback to try and find the
value for the key, and if found (or 'cache_not_found' is set),
stores it into the cache and returns the found value.
%Options is optional, and is used by get_and_set() to control the
locking behaviour. For now, you should probably ignore it unless
you read the code to understand how it works
set($Key, $Value, [ \%Options ])
Store specified key/value pair into cache
%Options is optional, and is used by get_and_set() to control the
locking behaviour. For now, you should probably ignore it unless
you read the code to understand how it works
This method returns true if the value was stored in the cache,
false otherwise. See the PAGE SIZE AND KEY/VALUE LIMITS section for
more details.
get_and_set($Key, $Sub)
Atomically retrieve and set the value of a Key.
The page is locked while retrieving the $Key and is unlocked only
after the value is set, thus guaranteeing the value does not change
betwen the get and set operations.
$Sub is a reference to a subroutine that is called to calculate the
new value to store. $Sub gets $Key and the current value as
parameters, and should return the new value to set in the cache for
the given $Key.
For example, to atomically increment a value in the cache, you can
just use:
$Cache->get_and_set($Key, sub { return ++$_[1]; });
In scalar context, the return value from this function is the *new*
value stored back into the cache.
In list context, a two item array is returned; the new value stored
back into the cache and a boolean that's true if the value was
stored in the cache, false otherwise. See the PAGE SIZE AND
KEY/VALUE LIMITS section for more details.
Notes:
· Do not perform any get/set operations from the callback sub, as
these operations lock the page and you may end up with a dead
lock!
· If your sub does a die/throws an exception, the page will
correctly be unlocked (1.15 onwards)
remove($Key, [ \%Options ])
Delete the given key from the cache
%Options is optional, and is used by get_and_remove() to control
the locking behaviour. For now, you should probably ignore it
unless you read the code to understand how it works
get_and_remove($Key)
Atomically retrieve value of a Key while removing it from the
cache.
The page is locked while retrieving the $Key and is unlocked only
after the value is removed, thus guaranteeing the value stored by
someone else isn't removed by us.
clear()
Clear all items from the cache
Note: If you're using callbacks, this has no effect on items in the
underlying data store. No delete callbacks are made
purge()
Clear all expired items from the cache
Note: If you're using callbacks, this has no effect on items in the
underlying data store. No delete callbacks are made, and no write
callbacks are made for the expired data
empty($OnlyExpired)
Empty all items from the cache, or if $OnlyExpired is true, only
expired items.
Note: If 'write_back' mode is enabled, any changed items are
written back to the underlying store. Expired items are written
back to the underlying store as well.
get_keys($Mode)
Get a list of keys/values held in the cache. May immediately be out
of date because of the shared access nature of the cache
If $Mode == 0, an array of keys is returned
If $Mode == 1, then an array of hashrefs, with 'key',
'last_access', 'expire_time' and 'flags' keys is returned
If $Mode == 2, then hashrefs also contain 'value' key
get_statistics($Clear)
Returns a two value list of (nreads, nreadhits). This only works if
you passed enable_stats in the constructor
nreads is the total number of read attempts done on the cache since
it was created
nreadhits is the total number of read attempts done on the cache
since it was created that found the key/value in the cache
If $Clear is true, the values are reset immediately after they are
retrieved
multi_get($PageKey, [ $Key1, $Key2, ... ])
The two multi_xxx routines act a bit differently to the other
routines. With the multi_get, you pass a separate PageKey value and
then multiple keys. The PageKey value is hashed, and that page
locked. Then that page is searched for each key. It returns a hash
ref of Key => Value items found in that page in the cache.
The main advantage of this is just a speed one, if you happen to
need to search for a lot of items on each call.
For instance, say you have users and a bunch of pieces of separate
information for each user. On a particular run, you need to
retrieve a sub-set of that information for a user. You could do
lots of get() calls, or you could use the 'username' as the page
key, and just use one multi_get() and multi_set() call instead.
A couple of things to note:
1. This makes multi_get()/multi_set() and get()/set()
incompatible. Don't mix calls to the two, because you won't
find the data you're expecting
2. The writeback and callback modes of operation do not work with
multi_get()/multi_set(). Don't attempt to use them together.
multi_set($PageKey, { $Key1 = $Value1, $Key2 => $Value2, ... }, [
\%Options ])>
Store specified key/value pair into cache
INTERNAL METHODS
_expunge_all($Mode, $WB)
Expunge all items from the cache
Expunged items (that have not expired) are written back to the
underlying store if write_back is enabled
_expunge_page($Mode, $WB, $Len)
Expunge items from the current page to make space for $Len bytes
key/value items
Expunged items (that have not expired) are written back to the
underlying store if write_back is enabled
_lock_page($Page)
Lock a given page in the cache, and return an object reference that
when DESTROYed, unlocks the page
INCOMPATIBLE CHANGES
· From 1.15
· Default share_file name is no-longer /tmp/sharefile, but
/tmp/sharefile-$pid-$time. This ensures that different
runs/processes don't interfere with each other, but means you
may not connect up to the file you expect. You should be
choosing an explicit name in most cases.
On Unix systems, you can pass in the environment variable
TMPDIR to override the default directory of /tmp
· The new option unlink_on_exit defaults to true if you pass a
filename for the share_file which doesn't already exist. This
means if you have one process that creates the file, and
another that expects the file to be there, by default it won't
be.
Otherwise the defaults seem sensible to cleanup unneeded share
files rather than leaving them around to accumulate.
· From 1.29
· Default share_file name is no longer /tmp/sharefile-$pid-$time
but /tmp/sharefile-$pid-$time-$random.
· From 1.31
· Before 1.31, if you were using raw_values => 0 mode, then the
write_cb would be called with raw frozen data, rather than the
thawed object. From 1.31 onwards, it correctly calls write_cb
with the thawed object value (eg what was passed to the ->set()
call in the first place)
· From 1.36
· Before 1.36, an alarm(10) would be set before each attempt to
lock a page. The only purpose of this was to detect deadlocks,
which should only happen if the Cache::FastMmap code was buggy,
or a callback function in get_and_set() made another call into
Cache::FastMmap.
However this added unnecessary extra system calls for every
lookup, and for users using Time::HiRes, it could clobber any
existing alarms that had been set with sub-second resolution.
So this has now been made an optional feature via the
catch_deadlocks option passed to new.
SEE ALSO
MLDBM::Sync, IPC::MM, Cache::FileCache, Cache::SharedMemoryCache, DBI,
Cache::Mmap, BerkeleyDB
Latest news/details can also be found at:
<http://cpan.robm.fastmail.fm/cachefastmmap/>
Available on github at:
https://github.com/robmueller/cache-fastmmap/
<https://github.com/robmueller/cache-fastmmap/>
AUTHOR
Rob Mueller <mailto:cpan@robm.fastmail.fm>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2003-2011 by Opera Software Australia Pty Ltd
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.1 2011-07-18 Cache::FastMmap(3)