Common utilities for the S3 project components
Within this repository, you will be able to find the shared libraries for the multiple components making up the whole Project.
- Guidelines
- Shuffle to shuffle an array.
- Errors load an object of errors instances.
Please read our coding and workflow guidelines at scality/Guidelines.
In order to contribute, please follow the Contributing Guidelines.
import { shuffle } from 'arsenal';
let array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
shuffle(array);
console.log(array);
//[5, 3, 1, 2, 4]
import { errors } from 'arsenal';
console.log(errors.AccessDenied);
//{ [Error: AccessDenied]
// code: 403,
// description: 'Access Denied',
// AccessDenied: true }
The clustering class can be used to set up a cluster of workers. The class will create at least 1 worker, will log any worker event (started, exited). The class also provides a watchdog which restarts the workers in case of failure until the stop() method is called.
import { Clustering } from 'arsenal';
const cluster = new Clustering(clusterSize, logger);
cluster.start(current => {
// Put here the logic of every worker.
// 'current' is the Clustering instance, worker id is accessible by
// current.getIndex()
});
The callback will be called every time a worker is started/restarted.
import { Clustering } from 'arsenal';
const cluster = new Clustering(clusterSize, logger);
cluster.start(current => {
// Put here the logic of every worker.
// 'current' is the Clustering instance, worker id is accessible by
// current.getIndex()
}).onExit(current => {
if (current.isMaster()) {
// Master process exiting
} else {
const id = current.getIndex();
// Worker (id) exiting
}
});
You can handle exit event on both master and workers by calling the 'onExit' method and setting the callback. This allows release of resources or save state before exiting the process.
import { Clustering } from 'arsenal';
const cluster = new Clustering(clusterSize, logger);
cluster.start(current => {
// Put here the logic of every worker.
// 'current' is the Clustering instance, worker id is accessible by
// current.getIndex()
}).onExit((current, signal) => {
if (signal !== 'SIGTERM') {
process.exit(current.getStatus());
}
});
You can silence stop signals, by simply not exiting on the exit callback
import { Clustering } from 'arsenal';
const cluster = new Clustering(clusterSize, logger, 1000);
cluster.start(current => {
// Put here the logic of every worker.
// 'current' is the Clustering instance, worker id is accessible by
// current.getIndex()
}).onExit((current, signal) => {
if (signal === 'SIGTERM') {
// releasing resources
}
});
By default, the shutdown timeout is set to 5000 milliseconds. This timeout is used only when you explicitly call the stop() method. This window is used to let the application release its resources, but if timeout occurs before the application has finished it's cleanup, a 'SIGKILL' signal is send to the process (which results in an immediate termination, and this signal can't be caught).