View Source DynamicSupervisor behaviour (Elixir v1.14.0-rc.0)
A supervisor optimized to only start children dynamically.
The Supervisor
module was designed to handle mostly static children
that are started in the given order when the supervisor starts. A
DynamicSupervisor
starts with no children. Instead, children are
started on demand via start_child/2
and there is no ordering between
children. This allows the DynamicSupervisor
to hold millions of
children by using efficient data structures and to execute certain
operations, such as shutting down, concurrently.
Examples
A dynamic supervisor is started with no children and often a name:
children = [
{DynamicSupervisor, name: MyApp.DynamicSupervisor}
]
Supervisor.start_link(children, strategy: :one_for_one)
The options given in the child specification are documented in start_link/1
.
Once the dynamic supervisor is running, we can start children
with start_child/2
, which receives a child specification:
{:ok, agent1} = DynamicSupervisor.start_child(MyApp.DynamicSupervisor, {Agent, fn -> %{} end})
Agent.update(agent1, &Map.put(&1, :key, "value"))
Agent.get(agent1, & &1)
#=> %{key: "value"}
{:ok, agent2} = DynamicSupervisor.start_child(MyApp.DynamicSupervisor, {Agent, fn -> %{} end})
Agent.get(agent2, & &1)
#=> %{}
DynamicSupervisor.count_children(MyApp.DynamicSupervisor)
#=> %{active: 2, specs: 2, supervisors: 0, workers: 2}
Scalability and partitioning
The DynamicSupervisor
is a single process responsible for starting
other processes. In some applications, the DynamicSupervisor
may
become a bottleneck. To address this, you can start multiple instances
of the DynamicSupervisor
and then pick a "random" instance to start
the child on.
Instead of:
children = [
{DynamicSupervisor, name: MyApp.DynamicSupervisor}
]
and:
DynamicSupervisor.start_child(MyApp.DynamicSupervisor, {Agent, fn -> %{} end})
You can do this:
children = [
{PartitionSupervisor,
child_spec: DynamicSupervisor,
name: MyApp.DynamicSupervisors}
]
and then:
DynamicSupervisor.start_child(
{:via, PartitionSupervisor, {MyApp.DynamicSupervisors, self()}},
{Agent, fn -> %{} end}
)
In the code above, we start a partition supervisor that will by default
start a dynamic supervisor for each core in your machine. Then, instead
of calling the DynamicSupervisor
by name, you call it through the
partition supervisor, using self()
as the routing key. This means each
process will be assigned one of the existing dynamic supervisors.
Read the PartitionSupervisor
docs for more information.
Module-based supervisors
Similar to Supervisor
, dynamic supervisors also support module-based
supervisors.
defmodule MyApp.DynamicSupervisor do
# Automatically defines child_spec/1
use DynamicSupervisor
def start_link(init_arg) do
DynamicSupervisor.start_link(__MODULE__, init_arg, name: __MODULE__)
end
@impl true
def init(_init_arg) do
DynamicSupervisor.init(strategy: :one_for_one)
end
end
See the Supervisor
docs for a discussion of when you may want to use
module-based supervisors. A @doc
annotation immediately preceding
use DynamicSupervisor
will be attached to the generated child_spec/1
function.
Name registration
A supervisor is bound to the same name registration rules as a GenServer
.
Read more about these rules in the documentation for GenServer
.
Migrating from Supervisor's :simple_one_for_one
In case you were using the deprecated :simple_one_for_one
strategy from
the Supervisor
module, you can migrate to the DynamicSupervisor
in
few steps.
Imagine the given "old" code:
defmodule MySupervisor do
use Supervisor
def start_link(init_arg) do
Supervisor.start_link(__MODULE__, init_arg, name: __MODULE__)
end
def start_child(foo, bar, baz) do
# This will start child by calling MyWorker.start_link(init_arg, foo, bar, baz)
Supervisor.start_child(__MODULE__, [foo, bar, baz])
end
@impl true
def init(init_arg) do
children = [
# Or the deprecated: worker(MyWorker, [init_arg])
%{id: MyWorker, start: {MyWorker, :start_link, [init_arg]}}
]
Supervisor.init(children, strategy: :simple_one_for_one)
end
end
It can be upgraded to the DynamicSupervisor like this:
defmodule MySupervisor do
use DynamicSupervisor
def start_link(init_arg) do
DynamicSupervisor.start_link(__MODULE__, init_arg, name: __MODULE__)
end
def start_child(foo, bar, baz) do
# If MyWorker is not using the new child specs, we need to pass a map:
# spec = %{id: MyWorker, start: {MyWorker, :start_link, [foo, bar, baz]}}
spec = {MyWorker, foo: foo, bar: bar, baz: baz}
DynamicSupervisor.start_child(__MODULE__, spec)
end
@impl true
def init(init_arg) do
DynamicSupervisor.init(
strategy: :one_for_one,
extra_arguments: [init_arg]
)
end
end
The difference is that the DynamicSupervisor
expects the child specification
at the moment start_child/2
is called, and no longer on the init callback.
If there are any initial arguments given on initialization, such as [initial_arg]
,
it can be given in the :extra_arguments
flag on DynamicSupervisor.init/1
.
Link to this section Summary
Types
Options given to start_link
and init/1
functions
Return values of start_child
functions
Options given to start_link
functions
Supported strategies
The supervisor flags returned on init
Callbacks
Callback invoked to start the supervisor and during hot code upgrades.
Functions
Returns a specification to start a dynamic supervisor under a supervisor.
Returns a map containing count values for the supervisor.
Receives a set of options
that initializes a dynamic supervisor.
Dynamically adds a child specification to supervisor
and starts that child.
Starts a supervisor with the given options.
Starts a module-based supervisor process with the given module
and init_arg
.
Synchronously stops the given supervisor with the given reason
.
Terminates the given child identified by pid
.
Returns a list with information about all children.
Link to this section Types
@type init_option() :: {:strategy, strategy()} | {:max_restarts, non_neg_integer()} | {:max_seconds, pos_integer()} | {:max_children, non_neg_integer() | :infinity} | {:extra_arguments, [term()]}
Options given to start_link
and init/1
functions
@type on_start_child() :: {:ok, pid()} | {:ok, pid(), info :: term()} | :ignore | {:error, {:already_started, pid()} | :max_children | term()}
Return values of start_child
functions
@type option() :: GenServer.option()
Options given to start_link
functions
@type strategy() :: :one_for_one
Supported strategies
@type sup_flags() :: %{ strategy: strategy(), intensity: non_neg_integer(), period: pos_integer(), max_children: non_neg_integer() | :infinity, extra_arguments: [term()] }
The supervisor flags returned on init
Link to this section Callbacks
Callback invoked to start the supervisor and during hot code upgrades.
Developers typically invoke DynamicSupervisor.init/1
at the end of
their init callback to return the proper supervision flags.
Link to this section Functions
Returns a specification to start a dynamic supervisor under a supervisor.
See Supervisor
.
@spec count_children(Supervisor.supervisor()) :: %{ specs: non_neg_integer(), active: non_neg_integer(), supervisors: non_neg_integer(), workers: non_neg_integer() }
Returns a map containing count values for the supervisor.
The map contains the following keys:
:specs
- the number of children processes:active
- the count of all actively running child processes managed by this supervisor:supervisors
- the count of all supervisors whether or not the child process is still alive:workers
- the count of all workers, whether or not the child process is still alive
@spec init([init_option()]) :: {:ok, sup_flags()}
Receives a set of options
that initializes a dynamic supervisor.
This is typically invoked at the end of the init/1
callback of
module-based supervisors. See the "Module-based supervisors" section
in the module documentation for more information.
It accepts the same options
as start_link/1
(except for :name
)
and it returns a tuple containing the supervisor options.
Examples
def init(_arg) do
DynamicSupervisor.init(max_children: 1000)
end
@spec start_child( Supervisor.supervisor(), Supervisor.child_spec() | {module(), term()} | module() | (old_erlang_child_spec :: :supervisor.child_spec()) ) :: on_start_child()
Dynamically adds a child specification to supervisor
and starts that child.
child_spec
should be a valid child specification as detailed in the
"Child specification" section of the documentation for Supervisor
. The child
process will be started as defined in the child specification. Note that while
the :id
field is still required in the spec, the value is ignored and
therefore does not need to be unique.
If the child process start function returns {:ok, child}
or {:ok, child, info}
, then child specification and PID are added to the supervisor and
this function returns the same value.
If the child process start function returns :ignore
, then no child is added
to the supervision tree and this function returns :ignore
too.
If the child process start function returns an error tuple or an erroneous
value, or if it fails, the child specification is discarded and this function
returns {:error, error}
where error
is the error or erroneous value
returned from child process start function, or failure reason if it fails.
If the supervisor already has N children in a way that N exceeds the amount
of :max_children
set on the supervisor initialization (see init/1
), then
this function returns {:error, :max_children}
.
@spec start_link([option() | init_option()]) :: Supervisor.on_start()
Starts a supervisor with the given options.
This function is typically not invoked directly, instead it is invoked
when using a DynamicSupervisor
as a child of another supervisor:
children = [
{DynamicSupervisor, name: MySupervisor}
]
If the supervisor is successfully spawned, this function returns
{:ok, pid}
, where pid
is the PID of the supervisor. If the supervisor
is given a name and a process with the specified name already exists,
the function returns {:error, {:already_started, pid}}
, where pid
is the PID of that process.
Note that a supervisor started with this function is linked to the parent
process and exits not only on crashes but also if the parent process exits
with :normal
reason.
Options
:name
- registers the supervisor under the given name. The supported values are described under the "Name registration" section in theGenServer
module docs.:strategy
- the restart strategy option. The only supported value is:one_for_one
which means that no other child is terminated if a child process terminates. You can learn more about strategies in theSupervisor
module docs.:max_restarts
- the maximum number of restarts allowed in a time frame. Defaults to3
.:max_seconds
- the time frame in which:max_restarts
applies. Defaults to5
.:max_children
- the maximum amount of children to be running under this supervisor at the same time. When:max_children
is exceeded,start_child/2
returns{:error, :max_children}
. Defaults to:infinity
.:extra_arguments
- arguments that are prepended to the arguments specified in the child spec given tostart_child/2
. Defaults to an empty list.
@spec start_link(module(), term(), [option()]) :: Supervisor.on_start()
Starts a module-based supervisor process with the given module
and init_arg
.
To start the supervisor, the init/1
callback will be invoked in the given
module
, with init_arg
as its argument. The init/1
callback must return a
supervisor specification which can be created with the help of the init/1
function.
If the init/1
callback returns :ignore
, this function returns
:ignore
as well and the supervisor terminates with reason :normal
.
If it fails or returns an incorrect value, this function returns
{:error, term}
where term
is a term with information about the
error, and the supervisor terminates with reason term
.
The :name
option can also be given in order to register a supervisor
name, the supported values are described in the "Name registration"
section in the GenServer
module docs.
If the supervisor is successfully spawned, this function returns
{:ok, pid}
, where pid
is the PID of the supervisor. If the supervisor
is given a name and a process with the specified name already exists,
the function returns {:error, {:already_started, pid}}
, where pid
is the PID of that process.
Note that a supervisor started with this function is linked to the parent
process and exits not only on crashes but also if the parent process exits
with :normal
reason.
stop(supervisor, reason \\ :normal, timeout \\ :infinity)
View Source (since 1.7.0)@spec stop(Supervisor.supervisor(), reason :: term(), timeout()) :: :ok
Synchronously stops the given supervisor with the given reason
.
It returns :ok
if the supervisor terminates with the given
reason. If it terminates with another reason, the call exits.
This function keeps OTP semantics regarding error reporting.
If the reason is any other than :normal
, :shutdown
or
{:shutdown, _}
, an error report is logged.
@spec terminate_child(Supervisor.supervisor(), pid()) :: :ok | {:error, :not_found}
Terminates the given child identified by pid
.
If successful, this function returns :ok
. If there is no process with
the given PID, this function returns {:error, :not_found}
.
@spec which_children(Supervisor.supervisor()) :: [ {:undefined, pid() | :restarting, :worker | :supervisor, [module()] | :dynamic} ]
Returns a list with information about all children.
Note that calling this function when supervising a large number of children under low memory conditions can cause an out of memory exception.
This function returns a list of tuples containing:
id
- it is always:undefined
for dynamic supervisorschild
- the PID of the corresponding child process or the atom:restarting
if the process is about to be restartedtype
-:worker
or:supervisor
as defined in the child specificationmodules
- as defined in the child specification