All Projects → tchap → go-dwarves

tchap / go-dwarves

Licence: MIT license
Dispatch a regiment of dwarves to do your bidding. Concurrently! In Golang!

Programming Languages

go
31211 projects - #10 most used programming language

go-dwarves

Build Status Coverage Status

Little dwarves that can be asked politely to perform various tasks. With maximum concurrency!

Motivation

I started writing a CLI utility that needed to perform multiple independent tasks, and I wanted to speed up the utility by running the tasks concurrently where possible.

After writing some code and synchronizing the tasks manually by using channels where necessary, I thought that it would be handy to come up with a general-purpose library that would do the synchronization for me, according to the conditions I specify. And this is the result.

Status

I am still working on this, the API may still change.

Also some code comments need to be added so that GoDoc is not so empty.

Usage

import "github.com/tchap/go-dwarves/dwarves"

go-dwarves is a tiny task scheduler that is to be used in the following way:

  1. Initialise desired Task objects.
  2. Optionally specify certain (partial) ordering using Task.After. Calling taskB.After(taskA) means that taskB will run only after taskA has finished executing.
  3. Optionally specify what tasks use what resources by calling Task.Uses. No two tasks using the same resource will be run at the same time.
  4. Initialise a Supervisor with the list of tasks to be run. The downstream tasks will be triggered automatically, i.e. when taskB.After(taskA) is called, it is enough to list taskA since taskB will be added automatically.
  5. Start the whole thing by calling Supervisor.DispatchDwarves.

Once the supervisor is started, it can be interrupted by calling Supervisor.WithdrawDwarves. This means that the supervisor will wait until the currently running tasks are finished, but it will not start any new tasks. A channel is passed to the task functions that is closed when WithdrawDwarves is called. The tasks can try to exit as soon as possible.

There is also one extra feature that is orthogonal to the rest. The supervisor can be asked to perform a rollback, which is supposed to revert all the changes that happened during the task execution. The rollback function can be specified for every task by using Task.RevertChangesWith. The supervisor then simply calls these function in the inverted order compared to the order the tasks were started.

Error Handling

The errors from the task functions and the task rollback functions are returned over a channel that can be passed to Supervisor.DispatchDwarves and Supervisor.RevertChanges. For this reason these methods are a bit against the good practices since they do not block until the tasks are finished. Use Supervisor.DwarvesFinished, Supervisor.WaitFinished, Supervisor.ChangesReverted or Supervisor.WaitReverted.

Documentation

GoDoc

Examples

This section shows how multiple tasks can be connected with After. There are also a few container task wrappers - TaskChain and TaskBag - that can be used to group tasks together and make them act as a single logical task.

See the documentation for more complete examples.

Task

After

Task.After can be used to enforce certain task order of execution.

taskA := dwarves.NewTask(...)
taskB := dwarves.NewTask(...).After(taskA)

Uses

Task.Uses can be used to tell the supervisor that the task requires certain resource as created with NewResource. The supervisor will ensure that no two tasks requiring the same resource will run at the same time.

store := dwarves.NewResource("store")
taskA := dwarves.NewTask(...).Uses(store)

TaskBag

TaskBag can be used to group tasks together so that they look like a single logical task, even though no ordering is specified.

The tasks specified to run after the bag will be started once all the tasks in the bag are finished executing.

taskA := dwarves.NewTask(...)
taskB, _ := dwarves.NewTaskBag(
    subtaskB1,
	subtaskB2,
	subtaskB3,
)
taskB.After(taskA)
taskC.After(taskB)

TaskChain

TaskChain can be used to group tasks together so that they look like a single logical task, and it also ensures that the tasks forming the chain are executed one by one. TaskChain.Append can be used to extend the chain, although it has its caveats.

taskA := dwarves.NewTask(...)
taskB, _ := dwarves.NewTaskChain(
    subtaskA,
    subtaskB,
    subtaskC,
)
taskB.After(taskA)
taskC.After(taskB)

Supervisor

RevertChanges

Supervisor.RevertChanges can be used to revert changes implied by the tasks that has already run. The revert function can be specified for every task with Task.RevertChangesWith.

task := dwarves.NewTask(func(interruptCh <-chan struct{}) error {
    fmt.Println("task A")
}).RevertChangesWith(func() error {
    fmt.Println("task A reverted")
})

supervisor := dwarves.NewSupervisor(task)
supervisor.DispatchDwarves(nil)
supervisor.RevertChanges(nil)
supervusor.WaitChangesReverted()
// Output:
// task A
// task A reverted

License

MIT, see the LICENSE file.

The Original Author

tchap

Note that the project description data, including the texts, logos, images, and/or trademarks, for each open source project belongs to its rightful owner. If you wish to add or remove any projects, please contact us at [email protected].