forked from goodboy/tractor
1
0
Fork 0
'structured concurrent `trio`-"actors"'
Go to file
Tyler Goodlet cf48fdecfe Unify `MsgTypeError` as a `RemoteActorError` subtype
Since in the receive-side error case the source of the exception is the
sender side (normally causing a local `TypeError` at decode time), might
as well bundle the error in remote-capture-style using boxing semantics
around the causing local type error raised from the
`msgspec.msgpack.Decoder.decode()` and with a traceback packed from
`msgspec`-specific knowledge of any field-type spec matching failure.

Deats on new `MsgTypeError` interface:
- includes a `.msg_dict` to get access to any `Decoder.type`-applied
  load of the original (underlying and offending) IPC msg into
  a `dict` form using a vanilla decoder which is normally packed into
  the instance as a `._msg_dict`.
- a public getter to the "supposed offending msg" via `.payload_msg`
  which attempts to take the above `.msg_dict` and load it manually into
  the corresponding `.msg.types.MsgType` struct.
- a constructor `.from_decode()` to make it simple to build out error
  instances from a failed decode scope where the aforementioned
  `msgdict: dict` from the vanilla decode can be provided directly.
- ALSO, we now pack into `MsgTypeError` directly just like ctxc in
  `unpack_error()`

This also completes the while-standing todo for `RemoteActorError` to
contain a ref to the underlying `Error` msg as `._ipc_msg` with public
`@property` access that `defstruct()`-creates a pretty struct version
via `.ipc_msg`.

Internal tweaks for this include:
- `._ipc_msg` is the internal literal `Error`-msg instance if provided
  with `.ipc_msg` the dynamic wrapper as mentioned above.
- `.__init__()` now can still take variable `**extra_msgdata` (similar
  to the `dict`-msgdata as before) to maintain support for subtypes
  which are constructed manually (not only by `pack_error()`) and insert
  their own attrs which get placed in a `._extra_msgdata: dict` if no
  `ipc_msg: Error` is provided as input.
- the `.msgdata` is now a merge of any `._extra_msgdata` and
  a `dict`-casted form of any `._ipc_msg`.
- adjust all previous `.msgdata` field lookups to try equivalent field
  reads on `._ipc_msg: Error`.
- drop default single ws indent from `.tb_str` and do a failover lookup
  to `.msgdata` when `._ipc_msg is None` for the manually constructed
  subtype-instance case.
- add a new class attr `.extra_body_fields: list[str]` to allow subtypes
  to declare attrs they want shown in the `.__repr__()` output, eg.
  `ContextCancelled.canceller`, `StreamOverrun.sender` and
  `MsgTypeError.payload_msg`.
- ^-rework defaults pertaining to-^ with rename from
  `_msgdata_keys` -> `_ipcmsg_keys` with latter now just loading directly
  from the `Error` fields def and `_body_fields: list[str]` just taking
  that value and removing the not-so-useful-in-REPL or already shown
  (i.e. `.tb_str: str`) field names.
- add a new mod level `.pack_from_raise()` helper for auto-boxing RAE
  subtypes constructed manually into `Error`s which is normally how
  `StreamOverrun` and `MsgTypeError` get created in the runtime.
- in support of the above expose a `src_uid: tuple` override to
  `pack_error()` such that the runtime can provide any remote actor id
  when packing a locally-created yet remotely-caused RAE subtype.
- adjust all typing to expect `Error`s over `dict`-msgs.

Adjust some tests to match these changes:
- context and inter-peer-cancel tests to make their `.msgdata` related
  checks against the new `.ipc_msg` as well and `.tb_str` directly.
- toss in an extra sleep to `sleep_a_bit_then_cancel_peer()` to keep the
  'canceller' ctx child task cancelled by it's parent in the 'root' for
  the rte-raised-during-ctxc-handling case (apparently now it's
  returning too fast, cool?).
2024-04-09 10:07:10 -04:00
.github/workflows Go to latest `mypy` version in CI 2022-10-09 18:13:45 -04:00
docs Add longer "required reading" list B) 2023-07-07 14:47:42 -04:00
examples Start a new `._testing.fault_simulation` 2024-04-03 10:19:50 -04:00
nooz Add news file 2023-05-15 09:35:59 -04:00
tests Unify `MsgTypeError` as a `RemoteActorError` subtype 2024-04-09 10:07:10 -04:00
tractor Unify `MsgTypeError` as a `RemoteActorError` subtype 2024-04-09 10:07:10 -04:00
.gitignore Initial commit 2018-07-05 16:01:15 -04:00
LICENSE Re-license code base for distribution under AGPL 2021-12-14 23:33:27 -05:00
MANIFEST.in Include ./docs/README.rst in src dist 2022-07-11 14:25:26 -04:00
NEWS.rst Add summary section 2022-08-03 11:42:53 -04:00
mypy.ini Add mypy.ini lel 2020-01-21 15:28:12 -05:00
pyproject.toml Add (back) a `tractor._testing` sub-pkg 2024-03-13 09:09:08 -04:00
requirements-docs.txt Attempt configuring sphinx-book-theme 2021-06-14 06:31:16 -04:00
requirements-test.txt Add `numpy` for testing optional integrated shm API layer 2023-06-15 12:20:20 -04:00
setup.py Init def of "SC shuttle prot" with "msg-spec-limiting" 2024-03-28 12:38:36 -04:00

docs/README.rst

logo tractor: next-gen Python parallelism

gh_actions Documentation Status

tractor is a structured concurrent, (optionally distributed) multi-processing runtime built on trio.

Fundamentally, tractor gives you parallelism via trio-"actors": independent Python processes (aka non-shared-memory threads) which maintain structured concurrency (SC) end-to-end inside a supervision tree.

Cross-process (and thus cross-host) SC is accomplished through the combined use of our "actor nurseries" and an "SC-transitive IPC protocol" constructed on top of multiple Pythons each running a trio scheduled runtime - a call to trio.run().

We believe the system adheres to the 3 axioms of an "actor model" but likely does not look like what you probably think an "actor model" looks like, and that's intentional.

Where do i start!?

The first step to grok tractor is to get an intermediate knowledge of trio and structured concurrency B)

Some great places to start are, - the seminal blog post - obviously the trio docs - wikipedia's nascent SC page - the fancy diagrams @ libdill-docs

Features

  • It's just a trio API
  • Infinitely nesteable process trees
  • Builtin IPC streaming APIs with task fan-out broadcasting
  • A "native" multi-core debugger REPL using pdbp (a fork & fix of pdb++ thanks to @mdmintz!)
  • Support for a swappable, OS specific, process spawning layer
  • A modular transport stack, allowing for custom serialization (eg. with msgspec), communications protocols, and environment specific IPC primitives
  • Support for spawning process-level-SC, inter-loop one-to-one-task oriented asyncio actors via "infected asyncio" mode
  • structured chadcurrency from the ground up

Run a func in a process

Use trio's style of focussing on tasks as functions:

"""
Run with a process monitor from a terminal using::

    $TERM -e watch -n 0.1  "pstree -a $$" \
        & python examples/parallelism/single_func.py \
        && kill $!

"""
import os

import tractor
import trio


async def burn_cpu():

    pid = os.getpid()

    # burn a core @ ~ 50kHz
    for _ in range(50000):
        await trio.sleep(1/50000/50)

    return os.getpid()


async def main():

    async with tractor.open_nursery() as n:

        portal = await n.run_in_actor(burn_cpu)

        #  burn rubber in the parent too
        await burn_cpu()

        # wait on result from target function
        pid = await portal.result()

    # end of nursery block
    print(f"Collected subproc {pid}")


if __name__ == '__main__':
    trio.run(main)

This runs burn_cpu() in a new process and reaps it on completion of the nursery block.

If you only need to run a sync function and retreive a single result, you might want to check out trio-parallel.

Zombie safe: self-destruct a process tree

tractor tries to protect you from zombies, no matter what.

"""
Run with a process monitor from a terminal using::

    $TERM -e watch -n 0.1  "pstree -a $$" \
        & python examples/parallelism/we_are_processes.py \
        && kill $!

"""
from multiprocessing import cpu_count
import os

import tractor
import trio


async def target():
    print(
        f"Yo, i'm '{tractor.current_actor().name}' "
        f"running in pid {os.getpid()}"
    )

    await trio.sleep_forever()


async def main():

    async with tractor.open_nursery() as n:

        for i in range(cpu_count()):
            await n.run_in_actor(target, name=f'worker_{i}')

        print('This process tree will self-destruct in 1 sec...')
        await trio.sleep(1)

        # raise an error in root actor/process and trigger
        # reaping of all minions
        raise Exception('Self Destructed')


if __name__ == '__main__':
    try:
        trio.run(main)
    except Exception:
        print('Zombies Contained')

If you can create zombie child processes (without using a system signal) it is a bug.

"Native" multi-process debugging

Using the magic of pdbp and our internal IPC, we've been able to create a native feeling debugging experience for any (sub-)process in your tractor tree.

from os import getpid

import tractor
import trio


async def breakpoint_forever():
    "Indefinitely re-enter debugger in child actor."
    while True:
        yield 'yo'
        await tractor.breakpoint()


async def name_error():
    "Raise a ``NameError``"
    getattr(doggypants)


async def main():
    """Test breakpoint in a streaming actor.
    """
    async with tractor.open_nursery(
        debug_mode=True,
        loglevel='error',
    ) as n:

        p0 = await n.start_actor('bp_forever', enable_modules=[__name__])
        p1 = await n.start_actor('name_error', enable_modules=[__name__])

        # retreive results
        stream = await p0.run(breakpoint_forever)
        await p1.run(name_error)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    trio.run(main)

You can run this with:

>>> python examples/debugging/multi_daemon_subactors.py

And, yes, there's a built-in crash handling mode B)

We're hoping to add a respawn-from-repl system soon!

SC compatible bi-directional streaming

Yes, you saw it here first; we provide 2-way streams with reliable, transitive setup/teardown semantics.

Our nascent api is remniscent of trio.Nursery.start() style invocation:

import trio
import tractor


@tractor.context
async def simple_rpc(

    ctx: tractor.Context,
    data: int,

) -> None:
    '''Test a small ping-pong 2-way streaming server.

    '''
    # signal to parent that we're up much like
    # ``trio_typing.TaskStatus.started()``
    await ctx.started(data + 1)

    async with ctx.open_stream() as stream:

        count = 0
        async for msg in stream:

            assert msg == 'ping'
            await stream.send('pong')
            count += 1

        else:
            assert count == 10


async def main() -> None:

    async with tractor.open_nursery() as n:

        portal = await n.start_actor(
            'rpc_server',
            enable_modules=[__name__],
        )

        # XXX: this syntax requires py3.9
        async with (

            portal.open_context(
                simple_rpc,
                data=10,
            ) as (ctx, sent),

            ctx.open_stream() as stream,
        ):

            assert sent == 11

            count = 0
            # receive msgs using async for style
            await stream.send('ping')

            async for msg in stream:
                assert msg == 'pong'
                await stream.send('ping')
                count += 1

                if count >= 9:
                    break


        # explicitly teardown the daemon-actor
        await portal.cancel_actor()


if __name__ == '__main__':
    trio.run(main)

See original proposal and discussion in #53 as well as follow up improvements in #223 that we'd love to hear your thoughts on!

Worker poolz are easy peasy

The initial ask from most new users is "how do I make a worker pool thing?".

tractor is built to handle any SC (structured concurrent) process tree you can imagine; a "worker pool" pattern is a trivial special case.

We have a full worker pool re-implementation of the std-lib's concurrent.futures.ProcessPoolExecutor example for reference.

You can run it like so (from this dir) to see the process tree in real time:

$TERM -e watch -n 0.1  "pstree -a $$" \
    & python examples/parallelism/concurrent_actors_primes.py \
    && kill $!

This uses no extra threads, fancy semaphores or futures; all we need is tractor's IPC!

"Infected asyncio" mode

Have a bunch of asyncio code you want to force to be SC at the process level?

Check out our experimental system for guest-mode controlled asyncio actors:

import asyncio
from statistics import mean
import time

import trio
import tractor


async def aio_echo_server(
    to_trio: trio.MemorySendChannel,
    from_trio: asyncio.Queue,
) -> None:

    # a first message must be sent **from** this ``asyncio``
    # task or the ``trio`` side will never unblock from
    # ``tractor.to_asyncio.open_channel_from():``
    to_trio.send_nowait('start')

    # XXX: this uses an ``from_trio: asyncio.Queue`` currently but we
    # should probably offer something better.
    while True:
        # echo the msg back
        to_trio.send_nowait(await from_trio.get())
        await asyncio.sleep(0)


@tractor.context
async def trio_to_aio_echo_server(
    ctx: tractor.Context,
):
    # this will block until the ``asyncio`` task sends a "first"
    # message.
    async with tractor.to_asyncio.open_channel_from(
        aio_echo_server,
    ) as (first, chan):

        assert first == 'start'
        await ctx.started(first)

        async with ctx.open_stream() as stream:

            async for msg in stream:
                await chan.send(msg)

                out = await chan.receive()
                # echo back to parent actor-task
                await stream.send(out)


async def main():

    async with tractor.open_nursery() as n:
        p = await n.start_actor(
            'aio_server',
            enable_modules=[__name__],
            infect_asyncio=True,
        )
        async with p.open_context(
            trio_to_aio_echo_server,
        ) as (ctx, first):

            assert first == 'start'

            count = 0
            async with ctx.open_stream() as stream:

                delays = []
                send = time.time()

                await stream.send(count)
                async for msg in stream:
                    recv = time.time()
                    delays.append(recv - send)
                    assert msg == count
                    count += 1
                    send = time.time()
                    await stream.send(count)

                    if count >= 1e3:
                        break

        print(f'mean round trip rate (Hz): {1/mean(delays)}')
        await p.cancel_actor()


if __name__ == '__main__':
    trio.run(main)

Yes, we spawn a python process, run asyncio, start trio on the asyncio loop, then send commands to the trio scheduled tasks to tell asyncio tasks what to do XD

We need help refining the asyncio-side channel API to be more trio-like. Feel free to sling your opinion in #273!

Higher level "cluster" APIs

To be extra terse the tractor devs have started hacking some "higher level" APIs for managing actor trees/clusters. These interfaces should generally be condsidered provisional for now but we encourage you to try them and provide feedback. Here's a new API that let's you quickly spawn a flat cluster:

import trio
import tractor


async def sleepy_jane():
    uid = tractor.current_actor().uid
    print(f'Yo i am actor {uid}')
    await trio.sleep_forever()


async def main():
    '''
    Spawn a flat actor cluster, with one process per
    detected core.

    '''
    portal_map: dict[str, tractor.Portal]
    results: dict[str, str]

    # look at this hip new syntax!
    async with (

        tractor.open_actor_cluster(
            modules=[__name__]
        ) as portal_map,

        trio.open_nursery() as n,
    ):

        for (name, portal) in portal_map.items():
            n.start_soon(portal.run, sleepy_jane)

        await trio.sleep(0.5)

        # kill the cluster with a cancel
        raise KeyboardInterrupt


if __name__ == '__main__':
    try:
        trio.run(main)
    except KeyboardInterrupt:
        pass

Install

From PyPi:

pip install tractor

From git:

pip install git+git://github.com/goodboy/tractor.git

Under the hood

tractor is an attempt to pair trionic structured concurrency with distributed Python. You can think of it as a trio -across-processes or simply as an opinionated replacement for the stdlib's multiprocessing but built on async programming primitives from the ground up.

Don't be scared off by this description. tractor is just trio but with nurseries for process management and cancel-able streaming IPC. If you understand how to work with trio, tractor will give you the parallelism you may have been needing.

Wait, huh?! I thought "actors" have messages, and mailboxes and stuff?!

Let's stop and ask how many canon actor model papers have you actually read ;)

From our experience many "actor systems" aren't really "actor models" since they don't adhere to the 3 axioms and pay even less attention to the problem of unbounded non-determinism (which was the whole point for creation of the model in the first place).

From the author's mouth, the only thing required is adherance to the 3 axioms, and that's it.

tractor adheres to said base requirements of an "actor model":

In response to a message, an actor may:

- send a finite number of new messages
- create a finite number of new actors
- designate a new behavior to process subsequent messages

and requires no further api changes to accomplish this.

If you want do debate this further please feel free to chime in on our chat or discuss on one of the following issues after you've read everything in them:

Let's clarify our parlance

Whether or not tractor has "actors" underneath should be mostly irrelevant to users other then for referring to the interactions of our primary runtime primitives: each Python process + trio.run() + surrounding IPC machinery. These are our high level, base runtime-units-of-abstraction which both are (as much as they can be in Python) and will be referred to as our "actors".

The main goal of tractor is is to allow for highly distributed software that, through the adherence to structured concurrency, results in systems which fail in predictable, recoverable and maybe even understandable ways; being an "actor model" is just one way to describe properties of the system.

What's on the TODO:

Help us push toward the future of distributed Python.

  • Erlang-style supervisors via composed context managers (see #22)
  • Typed messaging protocols (ex. via msgspec.Struct, see #36)
  • Typed capability-based (dialog) protocols ( see #196 with draft work started in #311)
  • We recently disabled CI-testing on windows and need help getting it running again! (see #327). We do have windows support (and have for quite a while) but since no active hacker exists in the user-base to help test on that OS, for now we're not actively maintaining testing due to the added hassle and general latency..

Feel like saying hi?

This project is very much coupled to the ongoing development of trio (i.e. tractor gets most of its ideas from that brilliant community). If you want to help, have suggestions or just want to say hi, please feel free to reach us in our matrix channel. If matrix seems too hip, we're also mostly all in the the trio gitter channel!