View Source Supervisor.Spec (Elixir v1.17.1)
Outdated functions for building child specifications.
The functions in this module are deprecated and they do not work
with the module-based child specs introduced in Elixir v1.5.
Please see the Supervisor documentation instead.
Convenience functions for defining supervisor specifications.
Example
By using the functions in this module one can specify the children
to be used under a supervisor, started with Supervisor.start_link/2:
import Supervisor.Spec
children = [
worker(MyWorker, [arg1, arg2, arg3]),
supervisor(MySupervisor, [arg1])
]
Supervisor.start_link(children, strategy: :one_for_one)Sometimes, it may be handy to define supervisors backed by a module:
defmodule MySupervisor do
use Supervisor
def start_link(arg) do
Supervisor.start_link(__MODULE__, arg)
end
def init(arg) do
children = [
worker(MyWorker, [arg], restart: :temporary)
]
supervise(children, strategy: :simple_one_for_one)
end
endNote that in this case we don't have to explicitly import
Supervisor.Spec since use Supervisor automatically does so.
Defining a module-based supervisor can be useful, for example,
to perform initialization tasks in the Supervisor.init/1 callback.
Supervisor and worker options
In the example above, we defined specs for workers and supervisors. These specs (both for workers as well as supervisors) accept the following options:
:id- a name used to identify the child specification internally by the supervisor; defaults to the given module name for the child worker/supervisor:function- the function to invoke on the child to start it:restart- an atom that defines when a terminated child process should be restarted (see the "Restart values" section below):shutdown- an atom that defines how a child process should be terminated (see the "Shutdown values" section below):modules- it should be a list with one element[module], where module is the name of the callback module only if the child process is aSupervisororGenServer; if the child process is aGenEvent,:modulesshould be:dynamic
Restart values (:restart)
The following restart values are supported in the :restart option:
:permanent- the child process is always restarted:temporary- the child process is never restarted (not even when the supervisor's strategy is:rest_for_oneor:one_for_all):transient- the child process is restarted only if it terminates abnormally, i.e., with an exit reason other than:normal,:shutdownor{:shutdown, term}
Note that supervisor that reached maximum restart intensity will exit with :shutdown reason.
In this case the supervisor will only restart if its child specification was defined with
the :restart option set to :permanent (the default).
Shutdown values (:shutdown)
The following shutdown values are supported in the :shutdown option:
:brutal_kill- the child process is unconditionally terminated usingProcess.exit(child, :kill):infinity- if the child process is a supervisor, this is a mechanism to give the subtree enough time to shut down; it can also be used with workers with carea non-negative integer - the amount of time in milliseconds that the supervisor tells the child process to terminate by calling
Process.exit(child, :shutdown)and then waits for an exit signal back. If no exit signal is received within the specified time, the child process is unconditionally terminated usingProcess.exit(child, :kill)
Summary
Types
Supported ID values
Supported module values
Supported restart values
Supported shutdown values
The supervisor specification
Supported strategies
Supported worker values
Functions
Receives a list of children (workers or supervisors) to
supervise and a set of options.
Defines the given module as a supervisor which will be started
with the given arguments.
Defines the given module as a worker which will be started
with the given arguments.
Types
@type child_id() :: term()
Supported ID values
@type modules() :: :dynamic | [module()]
Supported module values
@type restart() :: :permanent | :transient | :temporary
Supported restart values
@type shutdown() :: timeout() | :brutal_kill
Supported shutdown values
@type spec() :: {child_id(), start_fun :: {module(), atom(), [term()]}, restart(), shutdown(), worker(), modules()}
The supervisor specification
@type strategy() :: :simple_one_for_one | :one_for_one | :one_for_all | :rest_for_one
Supported strategies
@type worker() :: :worker | :supervisor
Supported worker values
Functions
@spec supervise([spec()], strategy: strategy(), max_restarts: non_neg_integer(), max_seconds: pos_integer() ) :: {:ok, tuple()}
Receives a list of children (workers or supervisors) to
supervise and a set of options.
Returns a tuple containing the supervisor specification. This tuple can be
used as the return value of the Supervisor.init/1 callback when implementing a
module-based supervisor.
Examples
supervise(children, strategy: :one_for_one)Options
:strategy- the restart strategy option. It can be either:one_for_one,:rest_for_one,:one_for_all, or:simple_one_for_one. You can learn more about strategies in theSupervisormodule docs.:max_restarts- the maximum number of restarts allowed in a time frame. Defaults to3.:max_seconds- the time frame in which:max_restartsapplies. Defaults to5.
The :strategy option is required and by default a maximum of 3 restarts is
allowed within 5 seconds. Check the Supervisor module for a detailed
description of the available strategies.
@spec supervisor( module(), [term()], restart: restart(), shutdown: shutdown(), id: term(), function: atom(), modules: modules() ) :: spec()
Defines the given module as a supervisor which will be started
with the given arguments.
supervisor(module, [], restart: :permanent)By default, the function start_link is invoked on the given
module. Overall, the default values for the options are:
[
id: module,
function: :start_link,
restart: :permanent,
shutdown: :infinity,
modules: [module]
]See the "Supervisor and worker options" section in the Supervisor.Spec module for more
information on the available options.
@spec worker( module(), [term()], restart: restart(), shutdown: shutdown(), id: term(), function: atom(), modules: modules() ) :: spec()
Defines the given module as a worker which will be started
with the given arguments.
worker(ExUnit.Runner, [], restart: :permanent)By default, the function start_link is invoked on the given
module. Overall, the default values for the options are:
[
id: module,
function: :start_link,
restart: :permanent,
shutdown: 5000,
modules: [module]
]See the "Supervisor and worker options" section in the Supervisor.Spec module for more
information on the available options.