1 The Paste HTTP Server Thread Pool 2 ================================= 3 4 This document describes how the thread pool in ``paste.httpserver`` 5 works, and how it can adapt to problems. 6 7 Note all of the configuration parameters listed here are prefixed with 8 ``threadpool_`` when running through a Paste Deploy configuration. 9 10 Error Cases 11 ----------- 12 13 When a WSGI application is called, it's possible that it will block 14 indefinitely. There's two basic ways you can manage threads: 15 16 * Start a thread on every request, close it down when the thread stops 17 18 * Start a pool of threads, and reuse those threads for subsequent 19 requests 20 21 In both cases things go wrong -- if you start a thread every request 22 you will have an explosion of threads, and with it memory and a loss 23 of performance. This can culminate in really high loads, swapping, 24 and the whole site grinds to a halt. 25 26 If you are using a pool of threads, all the threads can simply be used 27 up. New requests go into a queue to be processed, but since that 28 queue never moves forward everyone will just block. The site 29 basically freezes, though memory usage doesn't generally get worse. 30 31 Paste Thread Pool 32 ----------------- 33 34 The thread pool in Paste has some options to walk the razor's edge 35 between the two techniques, and to try to respond usefully in most 36 cases. 37 38 The pool tracks all workers threads. Threads can be in a few states: 39 40 * Idle, waiting for a request ("idle") 41 42 * Working on a request 43 44 * For a reasonable amount of time ("busy") 45 46 * For an unreasonably long amount of time ("hung") 47 48 * Thread that should die 49 50 * An exception has been injected that should kill the thread, but it 51 hasn't happened yet ("dying") 52 53 * An exception has been injected, but the thread has persisted for 54 an unreasonable amount of time ("zombie") 55 56 When a request comes in, if there are no idle worker threads waiting 57 then the server looks at the workers; all workers are busy or hung. 58 If too many are hung, another thread is opened up. The limit is if 59 there are less than ``spawn_if_under`` busy threads. So if you have 60 10 workers, ``spawn_if_under`` is 5, and there are 6 hung threads and 61 4 busy threads, another thread will be opened (bringing the number of 62 busy threads back to 5). Later those threads may be collected again 63 if some of the threads become un-hung. A thread is hung if it has 64 been working for longer than ``hung_thread_limit`` (default 30 65 seconds). 66 67 Every so often, the server will check all the threads for error 68 conditions. This happens every ``hung_check_period`` requests 69 (default 100). At this time if there are more than enough threads 70 (because of ``spawn_if_under``) some threads may be collected. If any 71 threads have been working for longer than ``kill_thread_limit`` 72 (default 1800 seconds, i.e., 30 minutes) then the thread will be 73 killed. 74 75 To kill a thread the ``ctypes`` module must be installed. This will 76 raise an exception (``SystemExit``) in the thread, which should cause 77 the thread to stop. It can take quite a while for this to actually 78 take effect, sometimes on the order of several minutes. This uses a 79 non-public API (hence the ``ctypes`` requirement), and so it might not 80 work in all cases. I've tried it in pure Python code and with a hung 81 socket, and in both cases it worked. As soon as the thread is killed 82 (before it is actually dead) another worker is added to the pool. 83 84 If the killed thread lives longer than ``dying_thread_limit`` (default 85 300 seconds, 5 minutes) then it is considered a zombie. 86 87 Zombie threads are not handled specially unless you set 88 ``max_zombies_before_die``. If you set this and there are more than 89 this many zombie threads, then the entire process will be killed. 90 This is useful if you are running the server under some process 91 monitor, such as ``start-stop-daemon``, ``daemontools``, ``runit``, or 92 with ``paster serve --monitor``. To make the process die, it may run 93 ``os._exit``, which is considered an impolite way to exit a process 94 (akin to ``kill -9``). It *will* try to run the functions registered 95 with ``atexit`` (except for the thread cleanup functions, which are 96 the ones which will block so long as there are living threads). 97 98 Notification 99 ------------ 100 101 If you set ``error_email`` (including setting it globally in a Paste 102 Deploy ``[DEFAULT]`` section) then you will be notified of two error 103 conditions: when hung threads are killed, and when the process is 104 killed due to too many zombie threads. 105 106 Missed Cases 107 ------------ 108 109 If you have a worker pool size of 10, and 11 slow or hung requests 110 come in, the first 10 will get handed off but the server won't know 111 yet that they will hang. The last request will stay stuck in a queue 112 until another request comes in. When a later request comes later 113 (after ``hung_thread_limit`` seconds) the server will notice the 114 problem and add more threads, and the 11th request will come through. 115 116 If a trickle of bad requests keeps coming in, the number of hung 117 threads will keep increasing. At 100 the ``hung_check_period`` may 118 not clean them up fast enough. 119 120 Killing threads is not something Python really supports. Corruption 121 of the process, memory leaks, or who knows what might occur. For the 122 most part the threads seem to be killed in a fairly simple manner -- 123 an exception is raised, and ``finally`` blocks do get executed. But 124 this hasn't been tried much in production, so there's not much 125 experience with it. 126 127 watch_threads 128 ------------- 129 130 If you want to see what's going on in your process, you can install 131 the application ``egg:Paste#watch_threads`` (in the 132 ``paste.debug.watchthreads`` module). This lets you see requests and 133 how long they have been running. In Python 2.5 you can see tracebacks 134 of the running requests; before that you can only see request data 135 (URLs, User-Agent, etc). If you set ``allow_kill = true`` then you 136 can also kill threads from the application. The thread pool is 137 intended to run reliably without intervention, but this can help debug 138 problems or give you some feeling of what causes problems in the site. 139 140 This does open up privacy problems, as it gives you access to all the 141 request data in the site, including cookies, IP addresses, etc. It 142 shouldn't be left on in a public setting. 143 144 socket_timeout 145 -------------- 146 147 The HTTP server (not the thread pool) also accepts an argument 148 ``socket_timeout``. It is turned off by default. You might find it 149 helpful to turn it on. 150 151