(PHP 5)
pcntl_wait — Wartet auf ein oder gibt den Status eines abgezweigten Kindes zurück
Die Funktion unterbricht die Ausführung des aktuellen Prozesses bis ein Kind sich beendet hat oder bis ein Signal ausgeliefert wurde dessen Aktion den aktuellen Prozess beendet oder eine Signalverabeitungsfunktion aufruft. Wenn ein Kind sich zum Zeitpunkt des Funktionsaufrufes bereits beendet hat (ein sog. "Zombie" Prozess) kehrt die Funktion umgehend zurück. Alle durch das Kind verwendeten Ressourcen werden freigegeben. Bitte schlagen Sie in der waitpid(2) man Seite Ihres Systems für spezifische Dateils nach, wie waitpid auf Ihrem System arbeitet.
pcntl_wait() gibt die Prozess ID des beendeten Kindes zurück, -1 im Fehlerfall oder Null wenn WNOHANG als Option angegeben war (auf wait3 Systemen) und kein kind verfügbar war.
Wenn wait3 auf Ihrem System verfügbar ist (meist BSD-artige Systeme) können Sie den optionalen options Parameter angeben. Wenn dieser Parameter nicht angegeben wurde, wird wait als Systemaufruf verwendet. Wenn wait3 nicht verfügbar ist, wird die Angabe eines Wertes für options keinerlei Auswirkungen haben. Der Wert von options ist der Wert von Null oder mehr der folgenden durch OR verknüpften beiden Konstanten:
WNOHANG | kehre umgehend zurück, wenn kein Kind beendet wurde. |
WUNTRACED | kehre für Kinder zurück die gestoppt sind und für solche, deren Status nicht gemeldet ist. |
pcntl_wait() speichert Statusinformationen im Parameter status, welcher durch die folgenden Funktionen ausgewertet werden kann: pcntl_wifexited(), pcntl_wifstopped(), pcntl_wifsignaled(), pcntl_wexitstatus(), pcntl_wtermsig() und pcntl_wstopsig().
Hinweis:
Diese Funktion ist gleichwertig zum Aufruf der Funktion pcntl_waitpid() mit -1 als pid und keinerlei options.
Siehe auch pcntl_fork(), pcntl_signal(), pcntl_wifexited(), pcntl_wifstopped(), pcntl_wifsignaled(), pcntl_wexitstatus(), pcntl_wtermsig(), pcntl_wstopsig() und pcntl_waitpid().
Oops, I stripped just a little much from the job daemon code in the previous comment. You'll want to add a little line before the ->launchJob() method is called:
<?php
while(count($this->currentJobs) >= $this->maxProcesses){
echo "Maximum children allowed, waiting...\n";
sleep(1);
}
Using pcntl_fork() can be a little tricky in some situations. For fast jobs, a child can finish processing before the parent process has executed some code related to the launching of the process. The parent can receive a signal before it's ready to handle the child process' status. To handle this scenario, I add an id to a "queue" of processes in the signal handler that need to be cleaned up if the parent process is not yet ready to handle them.
<?php
declare(ticks=1);
//A very basic job daemon that you can extend to your needs.
class JobDaemon{
public $maxProcesses = 25;
protected $jobsStarted = 0;
protected $currentJobs = array();
protected $signalQueue=array();
protected $parentPID;
public function __construct(){
echo "constructed \n";
$this->parentPID = getmypid();
pcntl_signal(SIGCHLD, array($this, "childSignalHandler"));
}
/**
* Run the Daemon
*/
public function run(){
echo "Running \n";
for($i=0; $i<10000; $i++){
$jobID = rand(0,10000000000000);
$launched = $this->launchJob($jobID);
}
//Wait for child processes to finish before exiting here
while(count($this->currentJobs)){
echo "Waiting for current jobs to finish... \n";
sleep(1);
}
}
/**
* Launch a job from the job queue
*/
protected function launchJob($jobID){
$pid = pcntl_fork();
if($pid == -1){
//Problem launching the job
error_log('Could not launch new job, exiting');
return false;
}
else if ($pid){
// Parent process
// Sometimes you can receive a signal to the childSignalHandler function before this code executes if
// the child script executes quickly enough!
//
$this->currentJobs[$pid] = $jobID;
// In the event that a signal for this pid was caught before we get here, it will be in our signalQueue array
// So let's go ahead and process it now as if we'd just received the signal
if(isset($this->signalQueue[$pid])){
echo "found $pid in the signal queue, processing it now \n";
$this->childSignalHandler(SIGCHLD, $pid, $this->signalQueue[$pid]);
unset($this->signalQueue[$pid]);
}
}
else{
//Forked child, do your deeds....
$exitStatus = 0; //Error code if you need to or whatever
echo "Doing something fun in pid ".getmypid()."\n";
exit($exitStatus);
}
return true;
}
public function childSignalHandler($signo, $pid=null, $status=null){
//If no pid is provided, that means we're getting the signal from the system. Let's figure out
//which child process ended
if(!$pid){
$pid = pcntl_waitpid(-1, $status, WNOHANG);
}
//Make sure we get all of the exited children
while($pid > 0){
if($pid && isset($this->currentJobs[$pid])){
$exitCode = pcntl_wexitstatus($status);
if($exitCode != 0){
echo "$pid exited with status ".$exitCode."\n";
}
unset($this->currentJobs[$pid]);
}
else if($pid){
//Oh no, our job has finished before this parent process could even note that it had been launched!
//Let's make note of it and handle it when the parent process is ready for it
echo "..... Adding $pid to the signal queue ..... \n";
$this->signalQueue[$pid] = $status;
}
$pid = pcntl_waitpid(-1, $status, WNOHANG);
}
return true;
}
}
I was unable to get pcntl_wait or pcntl_waitpid to terminate when I had an active signal handler. I then noticed the post below from gaylord at 100days dot de, however I'm a little confused by that post as I found the exact opposite to be true. The default value of the third parameter of pcntl_signal (the restart_syscalls parameter) is true and this seems to cause the wait to continue when the signal arrives. In order to prevent this I had to expressly set it to false. That is:
pcntl_signal(SIGTERM, 'my_handler_function', false);
pcntl_wait will not terminate on signals if you have a PHP signal handler activated (pcntl_signal).
This is unless the signal handler was activated with 3rd parameter=true.
Example:
<?php
declare(ticks=1);
pcntl_signal(SIGTERM, "myHandler");
$pid=pcntl_wait($status);
?>
This will not terminate on SIGTERM sent to the process, because "wait" will be restarted after php recieves the signal. The signal handler "myHandler" will not be called unless pcntl_wait terminates for some other reason.
Change to:
<?php
declare(ticks=1);
pcntl_signal(SIGTERM, "myHandler", true);
$pid=pcntl_wait($status);
?>
Now the pcntl_wait terminates when a signal comes in and "myHandler" will be called on SIGTERM. (Make sure to put the wait in a loop though, because it will now not only terminate when a child exits but also when a signal arrives. Test for $pid>0 to detect a exit message from a child)
(thanks to Andrey for helping me debugging this)
The code before isnt working for me cause the children are correctly started but not refreshed after they died. So keep in mind to use this instead and use the signal handler to know when a child exits to know when you have to start a new one. I added a few lines to the posting from {andy at cbeyond dot net} cause his post wasnt working for me as well (PHP5.1). Same effect like the one below.
<?php
declare(ticks = 1);
$max=5;
$child=0;
// function for signal handler
function sig_handler($signo) {
global $child;
switch ($signo) {
case SIGCHLD:
echo "SIGCHLD received\n";
$child--;
}
}
// install signal handler for dead kids
pcntl_signal(SIGCHLD, "sig_handler");
while (1){
$child++;
$pid=pcntl_fork();
if ($pid == -1) {
die("could not fork");
} else if ($pid) {
// we are the parent
if ( $child >= $max ){
pcntl_wait($status);
$child++;
}
} else {
// we are the child
echo "\t Starting new child | now we de have $child child processes\n";
// presumably doing something interesting
sleep(rand(3,5));
exit;
}
}
?>
This a simple multi process application where you can choose
the maximun process that can run at the same time.
This is useful when you need to limit the fork of process.
When the MAXPROCESS is reached the program wait on pcntl_wait()
<?php
DEFINE(MAXPROCESS,25);
for ($i=0;$i<100;$i++){
$pid = pcntl_fork();
if ($pid == -1) {
die("could not fork");
} elseif ($pid) {
echo "I'm the Parent $i\n";
$execute++;
if ($execute>=MAXPROCESS){
pcntl_wait($status);
$execute--;
}
} else {
echo "I am the child, $i pid = $pid \n";
sleep(rand(1,3));
echo "Bye Bye from $i\n";
exit;
}
}
?>
Below is a simple example of forking some children and timing the total duration (useful for stress tests).
<?php
$isParent = true;
$children = array();
$start = microtime( true);
/* Fork you!
* (Sorry, I had to)
*/
$ceiling = $CONCURRENCY - 1;
for ( $i = 0; (( $i < $ceiling) && ( $isParent)); $i++) {
$pid = pcntl_fork();
if ( $pid === 0) {
$isParent = false;
} elseif ( $pid != -1) {
$children[] = $pid;
}
}
/* Process body */
echo "Do stuff here\n";
/* Cleanup */
if ( $isParent) {
$status = null;
while ( count( $children)) {
pcntl_wait( $status);
array_pop( $children);
}
echo "Completed in " . ( microtime( true) - $start) . " seconds.\n";
}
?>