NAME Gearman::Driver - Manages Gearman workers SYNOPSIS package My::Workers::One; # Yes, you need to do it exactly this way use base qw(Gearman::Driver::Worker); use Moose; # this method will be registered with gearmand as 'My::Workers::One::scale_image' sub scale_image : Job { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } # this method will be registered with gearmand as 'My::Workers::One::do_something_else' sub do_something_else : Job : MinProcesses(2) : MaxProcesses(15) { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } # this method wont be registered with gearmand at all sub do_something_internal { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } 1; package My::Workers::Two; use base qw(Gearman::Driver::Worker); use Moose; # this method will be registered with gearmand as 'My::Workers::Two::scale_image' sub scale_image : Job { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } 1; package main; use Gearman::Driver; my $driver = Gearman::Driver->new( namespaces => [qw(My::Workers)], server => 'localhost:4730,otherhost:4731', interval => 60, ); $driver->run; DESCRIPTION Having hundreds of Gearman workers running in separate processes can consume a lot of RAM. Often many of these workers share the same code/objects, like the database layer using DBIx::Class for example. This is where Gearman::Driver comes in handy: You write some base class which inherits from Gearman::Driver::Worker. Your base class loads your database layer for example. Each of your worker classes inherit from that base class. In the worker classes you can register single methods as jobs with gearmand. It's even possible to control how many workers doing that job/method in parallel. And this is the point where you'll save some RAM: Instead of starting each worker in a separate process Gearman::Driver will fork each worker from the main process. This will take advantage of copy-on-write on Linux and save some RAM. There's only one mandatory parameter which has to be set when calling the constructor: namespaces use Gearman::Driver; my $driver = Gearman::Driver->new( namespaces => [qw(My::Workers)] ); See also: namespaces. If you do not set server (gearmand) attribute the default will be used: "localhost:4730" Each module found in your namespaces will be loaded and introspected, looking for methods having the 'Job' attribute set: package My::Workers::ONE; sub scale_image : Job { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } This method will be registered as job function with gearmand, verify it by doing: plu@mbp ~$ telnet localhost 4730 Trying ::1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. status My::Workers::ONE::scale_image 0 0 1 . ^] telnet> Connection closed. If you dont like to use the full package name you can also specify a custom prefix: package My::Workers::ONE; sub prefix { 'foo_bar_' } sub scale_image : Job { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } This would register 'foo_bar_scale_image' with gearmand. See also: prefix ATTRIBUTES namespaces Will be passed to Module::Find "findallmod" method to load worker modules. Each one of those modules has to be inherited from Gearman::Driver::Worker or a subclass of it. It's also possible to use the full package name to load a single module/file. There is also a method get_namespaces which returns a sorted list of all namespaces. See also: "wanted". * isa: "ArrayRef" * required: "True" wanted * isa: "CodeRef" * required: "False" This CodeRef will be called on each of the modules found in your "namespace". The first and only parameter to this sub is the name of the module. If a true value is returned, the module will be loaded and checked if it's a valid Gearman::Driver::Worker subclass. Let's say you have a namespace called "My::Project": * My::Project::Web * My::Project::Web::Controller::Root * My::Project::Web::Controller::Admin * My::Project::Web::Controller::User * My::Project::Web::Model::DBIC * My::Project::Worker::ScaleImage * My::Project::Worker::RemoveUser To avoid every module being loaded and inspected being a Gearman::Driver::Worker subclass you can use "wanted" to only load classes having "Worker" in the package name: my $driver = Gearman::Driver->new( interval => 0, namespaces => [qw(My::Project)], wanted => sub { return 1 if /Worker/; return 0; }, ); This would only load: * My::Project::Worker::ScaleImage * My::Project::Worker::RemoveUser server A list of Gearman servers the workers should connect to. The format for the server list is: "host[:port][,host[:port]]" See also: Gearman::XS * default: "localhost:4730" * isa: "Str" console_port Gearman::Driver has a telnet management console, see also: Gearman::Driver::Console * default: 47300 * isa: "Int" Set this to 0 to disable management console at all. interval Each n seconds Net::Telnet::Gearman is used in Gearman::Driver::Observer to check status of free/running/busy workers on gearmand. This is used to fork more workers depending on the queue size and the MinProcesses/MaxProcesses attribute of the job method. See also: Gearman::Driver::Worker * default: 5 * isa: "Int" logfile Path to logfile. * isa: "Str" * default: "gearman_driver.log" loglayout See also Log::Log4perl. * isa: "Str" * default: "[%d] %p %m%n" loglevel See also Log::Log4perl. * isa: "Str" * default: "INFO" lib This is just for convenience to extend @INC from command line using "gearman_driver.pl": gearman_driver.pl --lib ./lib --lib /custom/lib --namespaces My::Workers * isa: "Str" unknown_job_callback Whenever Gearman::Driver::Observer sees a job that isnt handled it will call this CodeRef, passing following arguments: * $driver * $status my $driver = Gearman::Driver->new( namespaces => [qw(My::Workers)], unknown_job_callback => sub { my ( $driver, $status ) = @_; # notify nagios here for example } ); $status might look like: $VAR1 = { 'busy' => 0, 'free' => 0, 'name' => 'GDExamples::Sleeper::unknown_job', 'queue' => 6, 'running' => 0 }; INTERNAL ATTRIBUTES This might be interesting for subclassing Gearman::Driver. modules Every worker module loaded by Module::Find will be added to this list. There are also two methods: get_modules and has_modules. * isa: "ArrayRef" * readonly: "True" jobs Stores all Gearman::Driver::Job instances. The key is the name the job gets registered with gearmand. There are also two methods: get_job and has_job. Example: { 'My::Workers::ONE::scale_image' => bless( {...}, 'Gearman::Driver::Job' ), 'My::Workers::ONE::do_something_else' => bless( {...}, 'Gearman::Driver::Job' ), 'My::Workers::TWO::scale_image' => bless( {...}, 'Gearman::Driver::Job' ), } * isa: "HashRef" * readonly: "True" observer Instance of Gearman::Driver::Observer. * isa: "Gearman::Driver::Observer" * readonly: "True" console Instance of Gearman::Driver::Console. * isa: "Gearman::Driver::Console" * readonly: "True" METHODS add_job There's one mandatory param (hashref) with following keys: * decode (optionally) Name of a decoder method in your worker object. * encode (optionally) Name of a encoder method in your worker object. * method (mandatory) Reference to a Class::MOP::Method object which will get invoked. * min_processes (mandatory) Minimum number of processes that should be forked. * max_processes (mandatory) Maximum number of processes that may be forked. * name (mandatory) Job name/alias that method should be registered with Gearman. * object (mandatory) Object that should be passed as first parameter to the job method. Basically you never really need this method if you use "namespaces". But "namespaces" depend on method attributes which some people do hate. In this case, feel free to setup your $driver this way: package My::Workers::One; use Moose; use JSON::XS; extends 'Gearman::Driver::Worker::Base'; sub scale_image { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } # this method will be registered with gearmand as 'My::Workers::One::do_something_else' sub do_something_else { my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_; # do something } sub encode_json { my ( $self, $result ) = @_; return JSON::XS::encode_json($result); } sub decode_json { my ( $self, $workload ) = @_; return JSON::XS::decode_json($workload); } 1; package main; use Gearman::Driver; use My::Workers::One; my $driver = Gearman::Driver->new( server => 'localhost:4730,otherhost:4731', interval => 60, ); my $worker = My::Workers::One->new(); foreach my $method (qw(scale_image do_something_else)) { $driver->add_job( decode => 'decode_json', encode => 'encode_json', max_processes => 5, method => $worker->meta->find_method_by_name($method)->body, min_processes => 1, name => $method, object => $worker, ); } $driver->run; run This must be called after the Gearman::Driver object is instantiated. shutdown Sends TERM signal to all child processes and exits Gearman::Driver. get_namespaces Returns a sorted list of namespaces. get_modules Returns a sorted list of modules. has_modules Returns the count of modules. has_job Params: $name Returns true/false if the job exists. get_job Params: $name Returns the job instance. AUTHOR Johannes Plunien CONTRIBUTORS Uwe Voelker, COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright 2009 by Johannes Plunien This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO * Gearman::Driver::Console * Gearman::Driver::Console::Basic * Gearman::Driver::Job * Gearman::Driver::Observer * Gearman::Driver::Worker * Gearman::XS * Log::Log4perl * Module::Find * Moose * MooseX::Getopt * MooseX::Log::Log4perl * MooseX::MethodAttributes * Net::Telnet::Gearman * POE * REPOSITORY