So, what is it? Well, if you don't want the overhead of running one JVM for each JRuby process, these two commands allow you to start a JVM that listens on a specific localhost port, and then you can send JRuby commands to that port. You need a key as password, otherwise the process will fail. Right now, this isn't as high security as it should be, since the key is passed as a command line parameter. This is still not that big of a problem, since the most common scenario is to start a bunch of things, and then not start anything more. Let me illustrate what you can do with a very simple example.
Say that you have a Rails application, and Mongrel for JRuby installed. Go the the base directory of your Rails app and do this:
jrubysrv -p 20202 -k secretkey &Now, if you are patient, in a while there will be three Mongrels running, listening on ports 4000, 4001 and 4002. And they will run inside the same JVM, but in different JRuby runtimes. Quite neat, and very simple. You may wonder about the last command, with the -n flag. That flag tells the JRuby server running at port 20202 to not start any more JRuby processes. In this way, you can start what you need, and then close it down. Due to problems with thread scheduling and safety, I haven't implemented a way to kill a single runtime. What you instead need to do is use jrubycli with the -t flag, which will kill the whole JRuby server.
jrubycli -p 20202 -k secretkey -S mongrel_rails -p 4000
jrubycli -p 20202 -k secretkey -S mongrel_rails -p 4001
jrubycli -p 20202 -k secretkey -S mongrel_rails -p 4002
jrubycli -p 20202 -k secretkey -n
Stay tuned for my next post, on what I've actually used this functionality to create. (If you have some slight amount of imagination, you should be able to guess from this blog post...)
But now, of to the races. Or CommunityOne in this case. See you there.
2 kommentarer:
It's an interesting system actually, as it might work well with the stuff like mongrel_cluster that's already out there since they'd just need to call things like they do now...
How/Could you also add in the ability to startup a solr server in that as well for people using rails and acts_as_solr? I think that would be a really nice way to launch everything at once...
Thread are dead!
Long live processes!
Funny that matz lived to this post because he wants to encourage processes as threads+IPC because of problems with reentrance on ruby's container classes.
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