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#
# Copyright (c) 1995-2008 Jarkko Hietaniemi. All rights reserved.
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
#
# Resource.pm
#

require 5.002;

package BSD::Resource;

use strict;
use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK $AUTOLOAD $VERSION);

$VERSION = '1.2902';

use Carp;
use AutoLoader;

require Exporter;
require DynaLoader;

@ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader);

@EXPORT = qw(
	     PRIO_MAX
	     PRIO_MIN
	     PRIO_PGRP
	     PRIO_PROCESS
	     PRIO_USER
	     RLIMIT_AIO_MEM
	     RLIMIT_AIO_OPS
	     RLIMIT_AS
	     RLIMIT_CORE
	     RLIMIT_CPU
	     RLIMIT_DATA
	     RLIMIT_FSIZE
	     RLIMIT_LOCKS
	     RLIMIT_MEMLOCK
	     RLIMIT_NOFILE
	     RLIMIT_NPROC
	     RLIMIT_OFILE
	     RLIMIT_OPEN_MAX
	     RLIMIT_RSS
	     RLIMIT_STACK
	     RLIMIT_TCACHE
	     RLIMIT_VMEM
	     RLIM_INFINITY
	     RLIM_NLIMITS
	     RLIM_SAVED_CUR
	     RLIM_SAVED_MAX
	     RUSAGE_BOTH
	     RUSAGE_CHILDREN
	     RUSAGE_SELF
	     RUSAGE_THREAD
	     get_rlimits
	     getpriority
	     getrlimit
	     getrusage	
	     setpriority
	     setrlimit
);

Exporter::export_tags();

@EXPORT_OK = qw(times);

# Grandfather old foo_h form to new :foo_h form
sub import {
    my $this = shift;
    my @list = map { m/^\w+_h$/ ? ":$_" : $_ } @_;
    local $Exporter::ExportLevel = 1;
    Exporter::import($this,@list);
}

bootstrap BSD::Resource;

my $EINVAL = constant("EINVAL", 0);
my $EAGAIN = constant("EAGAIN", 0);

sub AUTOLOAD {
    if ($AUTOLOAD =~ /::(_?[a-z])/) {
        $AutoLoader::AUTOLOAD = $AUTOLOAD;
        goto &AutoLoader::AUTOLOAD;
    }
    local $! = 0;
    my $constname = $AUTOLOAD;
    $constname =~ s/.*:://;
    return if $constname eq 'DESTROY';
    my $val = constant($constname, @_ ? $_[0] : 0);
    no strict 'refs';
    if ($! == 0) {
        *$AUTOLOAD = sub { $val };
    }
    elsif ($! == $EAGAIN) {     # Not really a constant, so always call.
        *$AUTOLOAD = sub { constant($constname, $_[0]) };
    }
    elsif ($! == $EINVAL) {
        croak "$constname is not a valid BSD::Resource macro";
    }
    else {
        croak "Your vendor has not defined BSD::Resource macro $constname, used";
    }
    use strict 'refs';

    goto &$AUTOLOAD;
}
use strict;

=pod

=head1 NAME

BSD::Resource - BSD process resource limit and priority functions

=head1 SYNOPSIS

	use BSD::Resource;

	#
	# the process resource consumption so far
	#

	($usertime, $systemtime,
	 $maxrss, $ixrss, $idrss, $isrss, $minflt, $majflt, $nswap,
	 $inblock, $oublock, $msgsnd, $msgrcv,
	 $nsignals, $nvcsw, $nivcsw) = getrusage($ru_who);

	$rusage = getrusage($ru_who);

	#
	# the process resource limits
	#

	($nowsoft, $nowhard) = getrlimit($resource);

	$rlimit = getrlimit($resource);

	$success = setrlimit($resource, $newsoft, $newhard);

	#
	# the process scheduling priority
	#

	$nowpriority = getpriority($pr_which, $pr_who);

	$success = setpriority($pr_which, $pr_who, $priority);

	# The following is not a BSD function.
	# It is a Perlish utility for the users of BSD::Resource.

	$rlimits = get_rlimits();

=head1 DESCRIPTION

=head2 getrusage

	($usertime, $systemtime,
	 $maxrss, $ixrss, $idrss, $isrss, $minflt, $majflt, $nswap,
	 $inblock, $oublock, $msgsnd, $msgrcv,
	 $nsignals, $nvcsw, $nivcsw) = getrusage($ru_who);

	$rusage = getrusage($ru_who);

	# $ru_who argument is optional; it defaults to RUSAGE_SELF

	$rusage = getrusage();

The $ru_who argument is either C<RUSAGE_SELF> (the current process) or
C<RUSAGE_CHILDREN> (all the child processes of the current process)
or it maybe left away in which case C<RUSAGE_SELF> is used.

The C<RUSAGE_CHILDREN> is the total sum of all the so far
I<terminated> (either successfully or unsuccessfully) child processes:
there is no way to find out information about child processes still
running.

On some systems (those supporting both getrusage() with the POSIX
threads) there can also be C<RUSAGE_THREAD>. The BSD::Resource supports
the C<RUSAGE_THREAD> if it is present but understands nothing more about
the POSIX threads themselves.  Similarly for C<RUSAGE_BOTH>: some systems
support retrieving the sums of the self and child resource consumptions
simultaneously.

In list context getrusage() returns the current resource usages as a
list. On failure it returns an empty list.

The elements of the list are, in order:
	index	name		meaning usually (quite system dependent)

	 0	utime		user time
	 1	stime		system time
    	 2	maxrss		maximum shared memory or current resident set
	 3	ixrss		integral shared memory
	 4	idrss		integral or current unshared data
	 5	isrss		integral or current unshared stack
	 6	minflt		page reclaims
	 7	majflt		page faults
    	 8	nswap		swaps
	 9	inblock		block input operations
	10	oublock		block output operations
	11	msgsnd		messages sent
	12	msgrcv		messaged received
	13	nsignals	signals received
	14	nvcsw		voluntary context switches
	15	nivcsw		involuntary context switches

In scalar context getrusage() returns the current resource usages as a
an object. The object can be queried via methods named exactly like
the middle column, I<name>, in the above table.

	$ru = getrusage();
	print $ru->stime, "\n";

	$total_context_switches = $ru->nvcsw + $ru->nivcsw;

For a detailed description about the values returned by getrusage()
please consult your usual C programming documentation about
getrusage() and also the header file C<E<lt>sys/resource.hE<gt>>.
(In B<Solaris>, this might be C<E<lt>sys/rusage.hE<gt>>).

See also L</"KNOWN ISSUES">.

=head2 getrlimit

	($nowsoft, $nowhard) = getrlimit($resource);

	$rlimit = getrlimit($resource);

The $resource argument can be one of

        $resource               usual meaning           usual unit

        RLIMIT_CPU              CPU time                seconds

        RLIMIT_FSIZE            file size               bytes

        RLIMIT_DATA             data size               bytes
        RLIMIT_STACK            stack size              bytes
        RLIMIT_CORE             coredump size           bytes
        RLIMIT_RSS              resident set size       bytes
        RLIMIT_MEMLOCK          memory locked data size bytes

        RLIMIT_NPROC            number of processes     1

        RLIMIT_NOFILE           number of open files    1
        RLIMIT_OFILE            number of open files    1
        RLIMIT_OPEN_MAX         number of open files    1

        RLIMIT_LOCKS            number of file locks    1

        RLIMIT_AS               (virtual) address space bytes
        RLIMIT_VMEM             virtual memory (space)  bytes

        RLIMIT_TCACHE           maximum number of       1
                                cached threads

        RLIMIT_AIO_MEM          maximum memory locked   bytes
                                for POSIX AIO
        RLIMIT_AIO_OPS          maximum number          1
                                for POSIX AIO ops

B<What limits are available depends on the operating system>.
See below for C<get_rlimits()> on how to find out which limits are
available, for the exact documentation consult the documentation of
your operatgiing system.  The two groups (C<NOFILE>, CC<OFILE>,
<OPEN_MAX>) and (C<AS>, C<VMEM>) are aliases within themselves.

Two meta-resource-symbols might exist

	RLIM_NLIMITS
	RLIM_INFINITY

C<RLIM_NLIMITS> being the number of possible (but not necessarily fully
supported) resource limits, see also the get_rlimits() call below.
C<RLIM_INFINITY> is useful in setrlimit(), the C<RLIM_INFINITY> is
often represented as minus one (-1).

In list context C<getrlimit()> returns the current soft and hard
resource limits as a list.  On failure it returns an empty list.

Processes have soft and hard resource limits.  On crossing the soft
limit they receive a signal (for example the C<SIGXCPU> or C<SIGXFSZ>,
corresponding to the C<RLIMIT_CPU> and C<RLIMIT_FSIZE>, respectively).
The processes can trap and handle some of these signals, please see
L<perlipc/Signals>.  After the hard limit the processes will be
ruthlessly killed by the C<KILL> signal which cannot be caught.

B<NOTE>: the level of 'support' for a resource varies. Not all the systems

	a) even recognise all those limits
	b) really track the consumption of a resource
	c) care (send those signals) if a resource limit is exceeded

Again, please consult your usual C programming documentation.

One notable exception for the better: officially B<HP-UX> does not
support getrlimit() at all but for the time being, it does seem to.

In scalar context C<getrlimit()> returns the current soft limit.
On failure it returns C<undef>.

=head2 getpriority

	$nowpriority = getpriority($pr_which, $pr_who);

	# the default $pr_who is 0 (the current $pr_which)

	$nowpriority = getpriority($pr_which);

	# the default $pr_which is PRIO_PROCESS (the process priority)

	$nowpriority = getpriority();

getpriority() returns the current priority. B<NOTE>: getpriority()
can return zero or negative values completely legally. On failure
getpriority() returns C<undef> (and C<$!> is set as usual).

The priorities returned by getpriority() are in the (inclusive) range
C<PRIO_MIN>...C<PRIO_MAX>.  The $pr_which argument can be any of
PRIO_PROCESS (a process) C<PRIO_USER> (a user), or C<PRIO_PGRP> (a
process group). The $pr_who argument tells which process/user/process
group, 0 signifying the current one.

Usual values for C<PRIO_MIN>, C<PRIO_MAX>, are -20, 20.  A negative
value means better priority (more impolite process), a positive value
means worse priority (more polite process).

=head2 setrlimit

	$success = setrlimit($resource, $newsoft, $newhard);

setrlimit() returns true on success and C<undef> on failure.

B<NOTE>: A normal user process can only lower its resource limits.
Soft or hard limit C<RLIM_INFINITY> means as much as possible, the
real hard limits are normally buried inside the kernel and are B<very>
system-dependent.

B<NOTE>: Even the soft limit that is actually set might be lower than
what requested for various reasons.  One possibility is that the
actual limit on a resource might be controlled by some system variable
(e.g. in BSD systems the RLIMIT_NPROC can be capped by the system
variable C<maxprocperuid>, try C<sysctl -a kern.maxprocperuid>),
or in many environments core dumping has been disabled from normal
user processes.  Another possibility is that a limit is rounded down
to some alignment or granularity, for example the memory limits might
be rounded down to the closest 4 kilobyte boundary.  In other words,
do not expect to be able to setrlimit() a limit to a value and then be
able to read back the same value with getrlimit().

=head2 setpriority

	$success = setpriority($pr_which, $pr_who, $priority);

	# NOTE! If there are two arguments the second one is
	# the new $priority (not $pr_who) and the $pr_who is
	# defaulted to 0 (the current $pr_which)

	$success = setpriority($pr_which, $priority);

	# The $pr_who defaults to 0 (the current $pr_which) and
	# the $priority defaults to half of the PRIO_MAX, usually
	# that amounts to 10 (being a nice $pr_which).

	$success = setpriority($pr_which);

	# The $pr_which defaults to PRIO_PROCESS.

	$success = setpriority();

setpriority() is used to change the scheduling priority.  A positive
priority means a more polite process/process group/user; a negative
priority means a more impoite process/process group/user.
The priorities handled by setpriority() are [C<PRIO_MIN>,C<PRIO_MAX>].
A normal user process can only lower its priority (make it more positive).

B<NOTE>: A successful call returns C<1>, a failed one C<0>.

See also L</"KNOWN ISSUES">.

=head2 times

	use BSD::Resource qw(times);

	($user, $system, $child_user, $child_system) = times();

The BSD::Resource module offers a times() implementation that has
usually slightly better time granularity than the times() by Perl
core.  The time granularity of the latter is usually 1/60 seconds
while the former may achieve submilliseconds.

B<NOTE>: The current implementation uses two getrusage() system calls:
one with RUSAGE_SELF and one with RUSAGE_CHILDREN.  Therefore the
operation is not `atomic': the times for the children are recorded
a little bit later.

B<NOTE>: times() is not imported by default by BSD::Resource.
You need to tell that you want to use it.

B<NOTE: times() is not a "real BSD" function.  It is older UNIX.>

=head2 get_rlimits

	$rlimits = get_rlimits();

B<NOTE: This is not a real BSD function. It is a convenience function.>

get_rlimits() returns a reference to hash which has the names of the
available resource limits as keys and their indices (those which
are needed as the first argument to getrlimit() and setrlimit())
as values. For example:

	$r = get_rlimits();
	print "ok.\n" if ($r->{'RLIM_STACK'} == RLIM_STACK);

=head1 ERRORS

=over 4

=item *

	Your vendor has not defined BSD::Resource macro ...

The code tried to call getrlimit/setrlimit for a resource limit that
your operating system vendor/supplier does not support.  Portable code
should use get_rlimits() to check which resource limits are defined.

=back

=head1 EXAMPLES

	# the user and system times so far by the process itself

	($usertime, $systemtime) = getrusage();

	# ditto in OO way

	$ru = getrusage();

	$usertime   = $ru->utime;
	$systemtime = $ru->stime;

	# get the current priority level of this process

	$currprio = getpriority();

=head1 KNOWN ISSUES

In B<AIX> (at least version 3, maybe later also releases) if the BSD
compatibility library is not installed or not found by the BSD::Resource
installation procedure and when using the getpriority() or setpriority(),
the C<PRIO_MIN> is 0 (corresponding to -20) and C<PRIO_MAX> is 39
(corresponding to 19, the BSD priority 20 is unreachable).

In B<HP-UX> the getrusage() is not Officially Supported at all but for
the time being, it does seem to be.

In Mac OS X a normal user cannot raise the RLIM_NPROC over the
maxprocperuid limit (the default value is 266, try the command
C<sysctl -a kern.maxprocperuid>).

In NetBSD RLIMIT_STACK calls fail.

Because not all UNIX kernels are BSD and also because of the sloppy
support of getrusage() by many vendors many of the getrusage() values
may not be correctly updated.  For example B<Solaris 1> claims in
C<E<lt>sys/rusage.hE<gt>> that the C<ixrss> and the C<isrss> fields
are always zero.  In B<SunOS 5.5 and 5.6> the getrusage() leaves most
of the fiels zero and therefore getrusage() is not even used, instead
of that the B</proc> interface is used.  The mapping is not perfect:
the C<maxrss> field is really the B<current> resident size instead of the
maximum, the C<idrss> is really the B<current> heap size instead of the
integral data, and the C<isrss> is really the B<current> stack size
instead of the integral stack.  The ixrss has no sensible counterpart
at all so it stays zero.

=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 1995-2008 Jarkko Hietaniemi All Rights Reserved

This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself.

=head1 AUTHOR

Jarkko Hietaniemi, C<jhi@iki.fi>

=cut

1;
__END__

sub getrusage (;$) {
    my @rusage = _getrusage(@_);

    if (wantarray) {
	@rusage;
    } else {
	my $rusage = {};
	my $key;

	for $key (qw(utime stime maxrss ixrss idrss isrss minflt majflt nswap
		     inblock oublock msgsnd msgrcv nsignals nvcsw nivcsw)) {
	    $rusage->{$key} = shift(@rusage);
	}
	
	bless $rusage;
    }
}

sub _g {
    exists $_[0]->{$_[1]} ?
	$_[0]->{$_[1]} : die "BSD::Resource: no method '$_[1]',";
}

sub utime    { _g($_[0], 'utime'   ) }
sub stime    { _g($_[0], 'stime'   ) }
sub maxrss   { _g($_[0], 'maxrss'  ) }
sub ixrss    { _g($_[0], 'ixrss'   ) }
sub idrss    { _g($_[0], 'idrss'   ) }
sub isrss    { _g($_[0], 'isrss'   ) }
sub minflt   { _g($_[0], 'minflt'  ) }
sub majflt   { _g($_[0], 'majflt'  ) }
sub nswap    { _g($_[0], 'nswap'   ) }
sub inblock  { _g($_[0], 'inblock' ) }
sub oublock  { _g($_[0], 'oublock' ) }
sub msgsnd   { _g($_[0], 'msgsnd'  ) }
sub msgrcv   { _g($_[0], 'msgrcv'  ) }
sub nsignals { _g($_[0], 'nsignals') }
sub nvcsw    { _g($_[0], 'nvcsw'   ) }
sub nivcsw   { _g($_[0], 'nivcsw'  ) }

sub _find_rlimit ($$) {
    my ($func, $lim) = @_;
    if ($lim =~ /^RLIMIT_/) {
	my $rlimits = get_rlimits();
	if (exists $rlimits->{$lim}) {
	    $lim = $rlimits->{$lim};
	}
    }
    if ($lim =~ /^\d+$/) {
	# Looks fine.
    } else {
	croak "$func: Unknown limit '$lim'";
    }
    return $lim;
}

sub _find_prio ($$) {
    my ($func, $lim) = @_;
    if ($lim =~ /^PRIO_/) {
	my $prios = get_prios();
	if (exists $prios->{$lim}) {
	    $lim = $prios->{$lim};
	}
    }
    if ($lim =~ /^\d+$/) {
	# Looks fine.
    } else {
	croak "$func: Unknown limit '$lim'";
    }
    return $lim;
}

sub getrlimit ($) {
    my $lim = _find_rlimit('getrlimit', $_[0]);
    my @rlimit = _getrlimit($lim);

    if (wantarray) {
	return @rlimit;
    } else {
	return $rlimit[0];
    }
}

sub soft   { _g($_[0], 'soft') }
sub hard   { _g($_[0], 'hard') }

sub get_rlimits () {
    _get_rlimits();
}

sub get_prios () {
    _get_prios();
}

sub getpriority (;$$) {
    my ($which, $who) = @_;
    if (@_) {
	$which = _find_prio('getpriority', $which);
    }
    if (@_ == 2) {
	_getpriority($which, $who);
    } elsif (@_ == 1) {
	_getpriority($which);
    } else {
	_getpriority();
    }
}

sub setrlimit ($$$) {
    my ($lim, $soft, $hard) = @_;
    $lim = _find_rlimit('setrlimit', $lim);
    _setrlimit($lim, $soft, $hard);
}

sub setpriority (;$$$) {
    my ($which, $who, $prio) = @_;
    if (@_) {
	$which = _find_prio('setpriority', $which);
    }
    if (@_ == 3) {
	_setpriority($which, $who, $prio);
    } elsif (@_ == 2) {
	_setpriority($which, $who);
    } elsif (@_ == 1) {
	_setpriority($which);
    } else {
	_setpriority();
    }
}

sub times {
    use BSD::Resource qw(RUSAGE_SELF RUSAGE_CHILDREN);

    my ($u,  $s ) = _getrusage(RUSAGE_SELF);
    my ($cu, $cs) = _getrusage(RUSAGE_CHILDREN);

    return ($u, $s, $cu, $cs);
}

1;

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