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%SYSTEM.WorkMgr

class %SYSTEM.WorkMgr extends %SYSTEM.AbstractWorkMgr

This class provides an interface to the work queue manager code that allows work to be distributed to multiple processes in order to improve performance. To use this you construct an instance of the work queue manager, then divide the work up into units that can be processed independently and queue each unit of work, and finally wait for the work to be completed. The units of work can output to the current device which will be buffered up and output to the main job's device when that unit of work is signalled as complete. Also all units of work by default are expected to return a %Status value so it can indicate errors, these are returned by the Sync() method (formerly WaitForComplete()) or the WaitOne() or the Wait().

A typical calling sequence is:

  Set queue=$system.WorkMgr.%New() If queue="" ; Report Error, can check %objlasterror for %Status code
  For i=1:1:100 {
  	Set sc=queue.Queue("##class(MyClass).ClassMethod",i) If $$$ISERR(sc) ; Report Error
  }
  Set sc=queue.Sync() If $$$ISERR(sc) ; Report Error
  
The call to create a new WQM instance requests worker jobs from this category's pool attach to the work group you are creating, if there are not enough worker jobs in the pool and the pool is not at the 'MaxActiveWorkers' limit then the framework will start additional workers automatically. The number of worker jobs we start is determined by the work queue manager based on current machine load and characteristics of the CPU the machine is running on. Every work group is guaranteed at least one worker process to be assigned as soon as a unit of work is queued. Additional workers requested for this group will be allocated from the worker pool if there are workers not already processing work units from other groups. These additional workers are allocated on a first come first serve basis. If numberjobs=0 is passed in on the %New call we will not use any workers jobs at all and will do all the processing in the current job in the Sync() method (formerly WaitForComplete()) call.

Call Queue() to queue a unit of work to be run, this takes either a class method call, or a '$$func^rtn' reference and then any arguments you need to pass to this function. We support passing arrays here using the standard '.array' syntax although changes in the array by the work unit are not returned to the caller. As soon as the first Queue() is called a worker will start processing this item of work. It is important to make sure that all the units of work are totally independent and they do not rely on other work units. You must not rely on the order in which the units of work are processed. If the units may be changing a common global you will need to add locking to ensure one worker can not change a global while another worker is in the middle of reading this global. When a unit of work is queued the current security context is stored so the work unit will run inside the current security context. Note that the worker jobs are started by the Super Server and so will run as the operating system user that the Super Server process is setup to use, this may be different to your current logged in operating system user.

Finally call Sync() to wait for all the units of work to be complete, display any output each unit produced and report any errors reported from the work units. Instead of waiting for all work units to complete with the Sync() you can obtain notification of each completion using the WaitOne() interface which is an iterator over the work completion events. Another mechanism to run code when each work unit is completed is the QueueCallback() method.

Work units may write to the public variable %result which will be relayed to the parent process in either the WaitOne() call or in the callback function from the QueueCallback(). Worker jobs are owned by the parent process while they are performing work in this group, so when the parent exits the worker jobs will be released immediately. When the object returned by %New is destroyed this will remove all work associated with this group automatically, and release any workers.

The work queued should not perform exclusive kills or argumentless unlocks as this will interfere with the framework. Use of process private globals are only helpful within a chunk of work and not across chunks as different chunks of work are processed by different workers in different jobs. The size of each chunk should be on the order of thousands of lines of ObjectScript code to ensure the overhead of the framework is not a significant factor, also rather than a few very large chunks (e.g. 4 big chunks) if possible it is better to have a fairly large number (100 say) of chunks as this allows us to scale with CPU cores. Worker jobs once started will remain until they time out given a long enough period of inactivity as these jobs are shared among all work entered into the work queue manager in the same 'category'.

The third argument to %New() is the category which specifies which work queue pool to allocate worker jobs from. These categories are independent of each other so for example 'SQL' work is allocated from a different pool to 'Default' work and the load placed on the system from each of the categories can be tuned.

Method Inventory

Methods

classmethod Attach(token, ByRef sc As %Status) as WorkMgr
If you have called Detach() on a work queue and have the associated token you can pass this into this class method and assuming the work queue still exists it will create an instance of the work queue manager associated this this queue. If it fails then it will return $$$NULLOREF and set sc with the error %Status value.
classmethod DefaultNumWorkers(category="Default") as %Integer
Return the default number of worker jobs we will use if no specific number is specified
method Detach(ByRef token As %String, timeout As %Integer = 86400) as %Status
Detach this oref from the work queue and set token which you can use in another process (or in this process if wanted) to call Attach(). The timeout is how long in seconds we will keep information about this work queue in the system, so if you do not Attach to this within this period of time we will remove all information about this queue and any subsequent call to Attach() will fail.
classmethod Flush() as %Status
Called from a worker job to flush any output produced so far to the parent process. Without this all output from a worker job is buffered until this unit of work is complete and only then is it displayed in the parent process.
classmethod IsWorkerJob() as %Boolean
Returns true/false based on if the current process is a worker job or not.
method NumberWorkers() as %Integer
Return the number of worker jobs that we will request for this group. We request workers as units of work are queued, the first worker is requested when the first unit of work is queued. Once we have requested this number of workers we will not request any more. Note that after a worker is requested it may not be cause any worker to attach to this queue if they are all busy doing other work. If the group is detached it will return -1.
method Pause(timeout As %Integer, ByRef completed As %Boolean = 0) as %Status
Pause any work in this work queue, this stops any workers from picking up additional items from this queue, but leaves the work itself so you can call Resume() at a later point. When no timeout is passed this will return immediately so there could still be work in progress from one of the work units that was being process at the time this function was called. If you pass in a non-null timeout it will wait for up to this timeout value in seconds for work currently in progress to finish. If after the timeout the work in progress has exited it will set completed=1 else this will be 0.
method Queue(work As %String, args... As %String) as %Status
Queues a specific unit of work, you pass the entry point to call in 'work' argument. This can be either '##class(Classname).ClassMethod' or '$$entry^rtn' and it is expected to return a %Status code on completion. To call a function that does not return any value on completion then prepend the class syntax with '=' e.g. '=##class(Classname).ClassMethod' or to call a function do not include the '$$' e.g. 'entry^rtn'. The item being called may also throw exceptions in order to indicate an error happened which is trapped and converted to a %Status value to be returned in the parent process. You can also pass additional arguments including arrays by reference. Note that the size of the data passed in these arguments should be kept relatively small, if there is a large amount of information that needs to be passed then put this in a global. The security context of the caller is recorded when this function is called and is used when the work is executed. Output the work unit makes to the current device will be trapped and relayed to the parent process after this work unit has complted and when the parent process is waiting for work to be completed. If a work unit wishes to flush output before the work unit has completed then then call 'Do $system.WorkMgr.Flush()'
method QueueCallback(work As %String, callback As %String, args... As %String) as %Status
Similar to Queue() except you can also pass in a 'callback' which is a function or class method that is called in the parent process when this unit of work is complete. This function is called with the same arguments the original 'work' is called with so it can tell which unit of work is complete. Also the callback function can access the '%job' public variable which is the $job of the process which really did the work, the '%status' public variable which is the %Status return code from the work unit this is the callback for and '%workqueue' public variable which is the oref of the work queue instance. Any error returned by the work unit will by default be added to the Sync() return %Status, but the callback may alter the the work units %Status by modifying the public variable '%status'. For example if the callback detects a specific error %Status from the work unit and does a 'Set %status=$$$OK' it will mark this error as handled and no error %Status will be added to the return from Sync(). If using the Wait() to wait for the work to be completed the callback can signal that it should return to the caller rather than waiting for more events by setting the public variable '%exit' to 1.
method Resume() as %Status
Resume any work in this work queue which was paused with a call to Pause().

Inherited Members

Inherited Properties

Inherited Methods

Subclasses

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