You want to share variables across forks or between unrelated processes.
Use SysV IPC, if your operating system supports it.
While SysV IPC (shared memory, semaphores, etc.) isn't as widely used as pipes, named pipes, and sockets for interprocess communication, it still has some interesting properties. Normally, however, you can't expect to use shared memory via
shmget
or the
mmap
(2) system call to share a variable among several processes. That's because Perl would reallocate your string when you weren't wanting it to.
The CPAN module
IPC::Shareable takes care of that. Using a clever
tie
module, SysV shared memory, and the Storable module from CPAN allows data structures of arbitrary complexity to be shared among cooperating processes on the same machine. These processes don't even have to be related to each other.
Example 16.11 is a simple demonstration of the module.
#!/usr/bin/perl # sharetest - test shared variables across forks use IPC::Shareable; $handle = tie $buffer, 'IPC::Shareable', undef, { destroy => 1 }; $SIG{INT} = sub { die "$$ dying\n" }; for (1 .. 10) { unless ($child = fork) { # i'm the child die "cannot fork: $!" unless defined $child; squabble(); exit; } push @kids, $child; # in case we care about their pids } while (1) { print "Buffer is $buffer\n"; sleep 1; } die "Not reached"; sub squabble { my $i = 0; while (1) { next if $buffer =~ /^$$\b/o; $handle->shlock(); $i++; $buffer = "$$ $i"; $handle->shunlock(); } }
The starting process creates the shared variable, forks off 10 children, and then sits back and prints out the value of the buffer every second or so, forever, or until you hit Ctrl-C.
Because the SIGINT handler was set before any forking, it got inherited by the squabbling children as well, so they'll also bite the dust when the process group is interrupted. Keyboard interrupts send signals to the whole process group, not just one process.
What do the kids squabble over? They're bickering over who gets to update that shared variable. Each one looks to see whether someone else was here or not. So long as the buffer starts with their own signature (their PID), they leave it alone. As soon as someone else has changed it, they lock the shared variable using a special method call on the handle returned from the
tie
, update it, and release the lock.
The program runs much faster by commenting out the line that starts with
next
where each process is checking that they were the last one to touch the buffer.
The
/^$$\b/o
may look suspicious, since
/o
tells Perl to compile the pattern once only, but then went and changed the variable's value by forking. Fortunately, the value isn't locked at program compile time, but only the first time the pattern is itself compiled in each process, during whose own lifetime
$$
does not alter.
The IPC::Sharable module also supports sharing variables among unrelated processes on the same machine. See its documentation for details.
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