While catching every possible case where "open file limit exceeded" is
not possible, we can at least increase the soft limit to the available
hard limit without any user effort.
Do this in Ansible top-level process, even though we probably only need
it in the MuxProcess. It seems there is no reason this could hurt
Previously we exitted without calling waitpid(), which meant the
top-level process struct rusage did not reflect the resource usage
consumed by the multiplexer processes.
Existing benchmarks are made using perf so this never created a problem,
but it could be confusing to others using the "time" command, and also
allows logging the final exit status of the process.
Move all details of broker/router setup out of connection.py, instead
deferring it to a WorkerModel class exported by process.py via
get_worker_model(). The running strategy can override the configured
worker model via _get_worker_model().
ClassicWorkerModel is installed by default, which implements the
extension's existing process model.
Add optional support for the third party setproctitle module, so
children have pretty names in ps output.
Add optional support for per-CPU multiplexers to classic runs.
This relies on the previous commit resetting global variables.
Update clean_shutdown() to handle duplicate calls, due to tests
repeatedly installing it.
Not clear what the intention is here. Either need to ferret it out of
some other location, or just stop preloading the connection class in the
top-level process.
This is the most minimal change for what might be relatively minimal
edge case. Alternative is replacing reload(), but let's not do that yet.
Closes#555
The idea behind transport=smart is to select between paramiko and
OpenSSH given the availability of connection multiplexing and/or OSX
kernel bugs. We need to make no such choice.
Regardless of the version of simplejson loaded in the master, load up
the ModuleResponder cache with our 2.4-compatible version.
To cope with simplejson being loaded due to modules like ec2_group that
try to import it before importing 'json', also update target.py to
remove it from the whitelist if a local 'json' module import succeeds.