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Richard van der Hoff authored
It annoys me that we create temporary function objects when there's really no need for it. Let's factor the gubbins out of preserve_fn and start using it.
Richard van der Hoff authoredIt annoys me that we create temporary function objects when there's really no need for it. Let's factor the gubbins out of preserve_fn and start using it.
Log contexts
Contents
To help track the processing of individual requests, synapse uses a
'log context' to track which request it is handling at any given moment. This
is done via a thread-local variable; a logging.Filter
is then used to fish
the information back out of the thread-local variable and add it to each log
record.
Logcontexts are also used for CPU and database accounting, so that we can track which requests were responsible for high CPU use or database activity.
The synapse.util.logcontext
module provides a facilities for managing the
current log context (as well as providing the LoggingContextFilter
class).
Deferreds make the whole thing complicated, so this document describes how it all works, and how to write code which follows the rules.
Logcontexts without Deferreds
In the absence of any Deferred voodoo, things are simple enough. As with any code of this nature, the rule is that our function should leave things as it found them:
from synapse.util import logcontext # omitted from future snippets
def handle_request(request_id):
request_context = logcontext.LoggingContext()
calling_context = logcontext.LoggingContext.current_context()
logcontext.LoggingContext.set_current_context(request_context)
try:
request_context.request = request_id
do_request_handling()
logger.debug("finished")
finally:
logcontext.LoggingContext.set_current_context(calling_context)
def do_request_handling():
logger.debug("phew") # this will be logged against request_id
LoggingContext implements the context management methods, so the above can be written much more succinctly as:
def handle_request(request_id):
with logcontext.LoggingContext() as request_context:
request_context.request = request_id
do_request_handling()
logger.debug("finished")
def do_request_handling():
logger.debug("phew")
Using logcontexts with Deferreds
Deferreds — and in particular, defer.inlineCallbacks
— break
the linear flow of code so that there is no longer a single entry point where
we should set the logcontext and a single exit point where we should remove it.
Consider the example above, where do_request_handling
needs to do some
blocking operation, and returns a deferred:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def handle_request(request_id):
with logcontext.LoggingContext() as request_context:
request_context.request = request_id
yield do_request_handling()
logger.debug("finished")
In the above flow:
- The logcontext is set
-
do_request_handling
is called, and returns a deferred -
handle_request
yields the deferred - The
inlineCallbacks
wrapper ofhandle_request
returns a deferred
So we have stopped processing the request (and will probably go on to start processing the next), without clearing the logcontext.
To circumvent this problem, synapse code assumes that, wherever you have a deferred, you will want to yield on it. To that end, whereever functions return a deferred, we adopt the following conventions:
Rules for functions returning deferreds:
- If the deferred is already complete, the function returns with the same logcontext it started with.
- If the deferred is incomplete, the function clears the logcontext before returning; when the deferred completes, it restores the logcontext before running any callbacks.
That sounds complicated, but actually it means a lot of code (including the example above) "just works". There are two cases:
-
If
do_request_handling
returns a completed deferred, then the logcontext will still be in place. In this case, execution will continue immediately after theyield
; the "finished" line will be logged against the right context, and thewith
block restores the original context before we return to the caller. -
If the returned deferred is incomplete,
do_request_handling
clears the logcontext before returning. The logcontext is therefore clear whenhandle_request
yields the deferred. At that point, theinlineCallbacks
wrapper adds a callback to the deferred, and returns another (incomplete) deferred to the caller, and it is safe to begin processing the next request.Once
do_request_handling
's deferred completes, it will reinstate the logcontext, before running the callback added by theinlineCallbacks
wrapper. That callback runs the second half ofhandle_request
, so again the "finished" line will be logged against the right context, and thewith
block restores the original context.
As an aside, it's worth noting that handle_request
follows our rules -
though that only matters if the caller has its own logcontext which it cares
about.
The following sections describe pitfalls and helpful patterns when implementing these rules.
Always yield your deferreds
Whenever you get a deferred back from a function, you should yield
on it
as soon as possible. (Returning it directly to your caller is ok too, if you're
not doing inlineCallbacks
.) Do not pass go; do not do any logging; do not
call any other functions.
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def fun():
logger.debug("starting")
yield do_some_stuff() # just like this
d = more_stuff()
result = yield d # also fine, of course
defer.returnValue(result)
def nonInlineCallbacksFun():
logger.debug("just a wrapper really")
return do_some_stuff() # this is ok too - the caller will yield on
# it anyway.
Provided this pattern is followed all the way back up to the callchain to where
the logcontext was set, this will make things work out ok: provided
do_some_stuff
and more_stuff
follow the rules above, then so will
fun
(as wrapped by inlineCallbacks
) and nonInlineCallbacksFun
.
It's all too easy to forget to yield
: for instance if we forgot that
do_some_stuff
returned a deferred, we might plough on regardless. This
leads to a mess; it will probably work itself out eventually, but not before
a load of stuff has been logged against the wrong content. (Normally, other
things will break, more obviously, if you forget to yield
, so this tends
not to be a major problem in practice.)
Of course sometimes you need to do something a bit fancier with your Deferreds - not all code follows the linear A-then-B-then-C pattern. Notes on implementing more complex patterns are in later sections.
Where you create a new Deferred, make it follow the rules
Most of the time, a Deferred comes from another synapse function. Sometimes, though, we need to make up a new Deferred, or we get a Deferred back from external code. We need to make it follow our rules.
The easy way to do it is with a combination of defer.inlineCallbacks
, and
logcontext.PreserveLoggingContext
. Suppose we want to implement sleep
,
which returns a deferred which will run its callbacks after a given number of
seconds. That might look like:
# not a logcontext-rules-compliant function
def get_sleep_deferred(seconds):
d = defer.Deferred()
reactor.callLater(seconds, d.callback, None)
return d
That doesn't follow the rules, but we can fix it by wrapping it with
PreserveLoggingContext
and yield
ing on it:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def sleep(seconds):
with PreserveLoggingContext():
yield get_sleep_deferred(seconds)
This technique works equally for external functions which return deferreds, or deferreds we have made ourselves.
You can also use logcontext.make_deferred_yieldable
, which just does the
boilerplate for you, so the above could be written:
def sleep(seconds):
return logcontext.make_deferred_yieldable(get_sleep_deferred(seconds))
Fire-and-forget
Sometimes you want to fire off a chain of execution, but not wait for its result. That might look a bit like this:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def do_request_handling():
yield foreground_operation()
# *don't* do this
background_operation()
logger.debug("Request handling complete")
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def background_operation():
yield first_background_step()
logger.debug("Completed first step")
yield second_background_step()
logger.debug("Completed second step")
The above code does a couple of steps in the background after
do_request_handling
has finished. The log lines are still logged against
the request_context
logcontext, which may or may not be desirable. There
are two big problems with the above, however. The first problem is that, if
background_operation
returns an incomplete Deferred, it will expect its
caller to yield
immediately, so will have cleared the logcontext. In this
example, that means that 'Request handling complete' will be logged without any
context.
The second problem, which is potentially even worse, is that when the Deferred
returned by background_operation
completes, it will restore the original
logcontext. There is nothing waiting on that Deferred, so the logcontext will
leak into the reactor and possibly get attached to some arbitrary future
operation.
There are two potential solutions to this.
One option is to surround the call to background_operation
with a
PreserveLoggingContext
call. That will reset the logcontext before
starting background_operation
(so the context restored when the deferred
completes will be the empty logcontext), and will restore the current
logcontext before continuing the foreground process:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def do_request_handling():
yield foreground_operation()
# start background_operation off in the empty logcontext, to
# avoid leaking the current context into the reactor.
with PreserveLoggingContext():
background_operation()
# this will now be logged against the request context
logger.debug("Request handling complete")
Obviously that option means that the operations done in
background_operation
would be not be logged against a logcontext (though
that might be fixed by setting a different logcontext via a with
LoggingContext(...)
in background_operation
).
The second option is to use logcontext.run_in_background
, which wraps a
function so that it doesn't reset the logcontext even when it returns an
incomplete deferred, and adds a callback to the returned deferred to reset the
logcontext. In other words, it turns a function that follows the Synapse rules
about logcontexts and Deferreds into one which behaves more like an external
function — the opposite operation to that described in the previous section.
It can be used like this:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def do_request_handling():
yield foreground_operation()
logcontext.run_in_background(background_operation)
# this will now be logged against the request context
logger.debug("Request handling complete")
Passing synapse deferreds into third-party functions
A typical example of this is where we want to collect together two or more
deferred via defer.gatherResults
:
d1 = operation1()
d2 = operation2()
d3 = defer.gatherResults([d1, d2])
This is really a variation of the fire-and-forget problem above, in that we are
firing off d1
and d2
without yielding on them. The difference
is that we now have third-party code attached to their callbacks. Anyway either
technique given in the Fire-and-forget section will work.
Of course, the new Deferred returned by gatherResults
needs to be wrapped
in order to make it follow the logcontext rules before we can yield it, as
described in Where you create a new Deferred, make it follow the rules.
So, option one: reset the logcontext before starting the operations to be gathered:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def do_request_handling():
with PreserveLoggingContext():
d1 = operation1()
d2 = operation2()
result = yield defer.gatherResults([d1, d2])
In this case particularly, though, option two, of using
logcontext.preserve_fn
almost certainly makes more sense, so that
operation1
and operation2
are both logged against the original
logcontext. This looks like:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def do_request_handling():
d1 = logcontext.preserve_fn(operation1)()
d2 = logcontext.preserve_fn(operation2)()
with PreserveLoggingContext():
result = yield defer.gatherResults([d1, d2])
Was all this really necessary?
The conventions used work fine for a linear flow where everything happens in
series via defer.inlineCallbacks
and yield
, but are certainly tricky to
follow for any more exotic flows. It's hard not to wonder if we could have done
something else.
We're not going to rewrite Synapse now, so the following is entirely of academic interest, but I'd like to record some thoughts on an alternative approach.
I briefly prototyped some code following an alternative set of rules. I think it would work, but I certainly didn't get as far as thinking how it would interact with concepts as complicated as the cache descriptors.
My alternative rules were:
- functions always preserve the logcontext of their caller, whether or not they are returning a Deferred.
- Deferreds returned by synapse functions run their callbacks in the same context as the function was orignally called in.
The main point of this scheme is that everywhere that sets the logcontext is responsible for clearing it before returning control to the reactor.
So, for example, if you were the function which started a with
LoggingContext
block, you wouldn't yield
within it — instead you'd start
off the background process, and then leave the with
block to wait for it:
def handle_request(request_id):
with logcontext.LoggingContext() as request_context:
request_context.request = request_id
d = do_request_handling()
def cb(r):
logger.debug("finished")
d.addCallback(cb)
return d
(in general, mixing with LoggingContext
blocks and
defer.inlineCallbacks
in the same function leads to slighly
counter-intuitive code, under this scheme).
Because we leave the original with
block as soon as the Deferred is
returned (as opposed to waiting for it to be resolved, as we do today), the
logcontext is cleared before control passes back to the reactor; so if there is
some code within do_request_handling
which needs to wait for a Deferred to
complete, there is no need for it to worry about clearing the logcontext before
doing so:
def handle_request():
r = do_some_stuff()
r.addCallback(do_some_more_stuff)
return r
— and provided do_some_stuff
follows the rules of returning a Deferred which
runs its callbacks in the original logcontext, all is happy.
The business of a Deferred which runs its callbacks in the original logcontext
isn't hard to achieve — we have it today, in the shape of
logcontext._PreservingContextDeferred
:
def do_some_stuff():
deferred = do_some_io()
pcd = _PreservingContextDeferred(LoggingContext.current_context())
deferred.chainDeferred(pcd)
return pcd
It turns out that, thanks to the way that Deferreds chain together, we
automatically get the property of a context-preserving deferred with
defer.inlineCallbacks
, provided the final Defered the function yields
on has that property. So we can just write:
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def handle_request():
yield do_some_stuff()
yield do_some_more_stuff()
To conclude: I think this scheme would have worked equally well, with less danger of messing it up, and probably made some more esoteric code easier to write. But again — changing the conventions of the entire Synapse codebase is not a sensible option for the marginal improvement offered.