Module
proc_lib
Module Summary
Functions for asynchronous and synchronous start of processes adhering to the OTP design principles.
Description
This module is used to start processes adhering to the OTP Design Principles
. Specifically, the functions in this module are used by the OTP standard behaviors (for example, gen_server
and gen_statem
) when starting new processes. The functions can also be used to start special processes, user-defined processes that comply to the OTP design principles. For an example, see section sys and proc_lib
in OTP Design Principles.
Some useful information is initialized when a process starts. The registered names, or the process identifiers, of the parent process, and the parent ancestors, are stored together with information about the function initially called in the process.
While in "plain Erlang", a process is said to terminate normally only for exit reason normal
, a process started using proc_lib
is also said to terminate normally if it exits with reason shutdown
or {shutdown,Term}
. shutdown
is the reason used when an application (supervision tree) is stopped.
When a process that is started using proc_lib
terminates abnormally (that is, with another exit reason than normal
, shutdown
, or {shutdown,Term}
), a crash report is generated, which is written to terminal by the default logger handler setup by Kernel. For more information about how crash reports were logged prior to Erlang/OTP 21.0, see SASL Error Logging
in the SASL User's Guide.
Unlike in "plain Erlang", proc_lib
processes will not generate error reports, which are written to the terminal by the emulator. All exceptions are converted to exits which are ignored by the default logger
handler.
The crash report contains the previously stored information, such as ancestors and initial function, the termination reason, and information about other processes that terminate as a result of this process terminating.
Data Types
spawn_option() = erlang:spawn_opt_option()
See erlang:spawn_opt/2,3,4,5
.
start_spawn_option() =
link |
{priority, erlang:priority_level()} |
{max_heap_size, erlang:max_heap_size()} |
{min_heap_size, integer() >= 0} |
{min_bin_vheap_size, integer() >= 0} |
{fullsweep_after, integer() >= 0} |
{message_queue_data, erlang:message_queue_data()}
A restricted set of spawn options
. Most notably monitor
is not part of these options.
dict_or_pid() =
pid() |
(ProcInfo :: [term()]) |
{X :: integer(), Y :: integer(), Z :: integer()}
Exports
format(CrashReport) -> string() |
Types
Equivalent to format(CrashReport, latin1)
.
format(CrashReport, Encoding) -> string() | OTP R16B |
Types
This function is deprecated in the sense that the error_logger
is no longer the preferred interface for logging in Erlang/OTP. A new logging API
was added in Erlang/OTP 21.0, but legacy error_logger
handlers can still be used. New Logger handlers do not need to use this function, since the formatting callback (report_cb
) is included as metadata in the log event.
This function can be used by a user-defined legacy error_logger
event handler to format a crash report. The crash report is sent using logger(3)
, and the event to be handled is of the format {error_report, GL, {Pid, crash_report, CrashReport}}
, where GL
is the group leader pid of process Pid
that sent the crash report.
format(CrashReport, Encoding, Depth) -> string() | OTP 18.1 |
Types
This function is deprecated in the sense that the error_logger
is no longer the preferred interface for logging in Erlang/OTP. A new logging API
was added in Erlang/OTP 21.0, but legacy error_logger
handlers can still be used. New Logger handlers do not need to used this function, since the formatting callback (report_cb
) is included as metadata in the log event.
This function can be used by a user-defined legacy error_logger
event handler to format a crash report. When Depth is specified as a positive integer, it is used in the format string to limit the output as follows: io_lib:format("~P", [Term,Depth])
.
hibernate(Module, Function, Args) -> no_return() |
Types
This function does the same as (and does call) the hibernate/3
BIF, but ensures that exception handling and logging continues to work as expected when the process wakes up.
Always use this function instead of the BIF for processes started using proc_lib
functions.
init_ack(Ret) -> ok |
init_ack(Parent, Ret) -> ok |
Types
This function must be used by a process that has been started by a start[_link]/3,4,5
function. It tells Parent
that the process has initialized itself, has started, or has failed to initialize itself.
Function init_ack/1
uses the parent value previously stored by the start function used.
If this function is not called, the start function returns an error tuple (if a link and/or a time-out is used) or hang otherwise.
The following example illustrates how this function and proc_lib:start_link/3
are used:
-module(my_proc). -export([start_link/0]). -export([init/1]). start_link() -> proc_lib:start_link(my_proc, init, [self()]). init(Parent) -> case do_initialization() of ok -> proc_lib:init_ack(Parent, {ok, self()}); {error, Reason} -> exit(Reason) end, loop(). ...
initial_call(Process) -> {Module, Function, Args} | false |
Types
Extracts the initial call of a process that was started using one of the spawn or start functions in this module. Process
can either be a pid, an integer tuple (from which a pid can be created), or the process information of a process Pid
fetched through an erlang:process_info(Pid)
function call.
The list Args
no longer contains the arguments, but the same number of atoms as the number of arguments; the first atom is 'Argument__1'
, the second 'Argument__2'
, and so on. The reason is that the argument list could waste a significant amount of memory, and if the argument list contained funs, it could be impossible to upgrade the code for the module.
If the process was spawned using a fun, initial_call/1
no longer returns the fun, but the module, function for the local function implementing the fun, and the arity, for example, {some_module,-work/3-fun-0-,0}
(meaning that the fun was created in function some_module:work/3
). The reason is that keeping the fun would prevent code upgrade for the module, and that a significant amount of memory could be wasted.
spawn(Fun) -> pid() |
spawn(Node, Fun) -> pid() |
spawn(Module, Function, Args) -> pid() |
spawn(Node, Module, Function, Args) -> pid() |
Types
Spawns a new process and initializes it as described in the beginning of this manual page. The process is spawned using the spawn
BIFs.
spawn_link(Fun) -> pid() |
spawn_link(Node, Fun) -> pid() |
spawn_link(Module, Function, Args) -> pid() |
spawn_link(Node, Module, Function, Args) -> pid() |
Types
Spawns a new process and initializes it as described in the beginning of this manual page. The process is spawned using the spawn_link
BIFs.
spawn_opt(Fun, SpawnOpts) -> pid() | {pid(), reference()} |
spawn_opt(Node, Function, SpawnOpts) -> pid() | {pid(), reference()} |
spawn_opt(Module, Function, Args, SpawnOpts) -> pid() | {pid(), reference()} |
spawn_opt(Node, Module, Function, Args, SpawnOpts) -> pid() | {pid(), reference()} |
Types
Spawns a new process and initializes it as described in the beginning of this manual page. The process is spawned using the erlang:spawn_opt
BIFs.
start(Module, Function, Args) -> Ret |
start(Module, Function, Args, Time) -> Ret |
start(Module, Function, Args, Time, SpawnOpts) -> Ret |
Types
Starts a new process synchronously. Spawns the process and waits for it to start. When the process has started, it must call init_ack(Parent, Ret)
or init_ack(Ret)
, where Parent
is the process that evaluates this function. At this time, Ret
is returned.
If Time
is specified as an integer, this function waits for Time
milliseconds for the new process to call init_ack
, or Ret = {error, timeout}
will be returned, and the process is killed.
Argument SpawnOpts
, if specified, is passed as the last argument to the spawn_opt/2,3,4,5
BIF.
Using spawn option monitor
is not allowed. It causes the function to fail with reason badarg
.
start_link(Module, Function, Args) -> Ret |
start_link(Module, Function, Args, Time) -> Ret |
start_link(Module, Function, Args, Time, SpawnOpts) -> Ret |
Types
Starts a new process synchronously. Spawns the process and waits for it to start. A link is atomically set on the newly spawned process. When the process has started, it must call init_ack(Parent, Ret)
or init_ack(Ret)
, where Parent
is the process that evaluates this function. At this time, Ret
is returned.
If Time
is specified as an integer, this function waits for Time
milliseconds for the new process to call init_ack
, or Ret = {error, timeout}
will be returned, and the process is killed.
If the process crashes before it has called init_ack/1,2
, Ret = {error, Reason}
will be returned if the calling process traps exits.
Argument SpawnOpts
, if specified, is passed as the last argument to the spawn_opt/2,3,4,5
BIF.
Using spawn option monitor
is not allowed. It causes the function to fail with reason badarg
.
start_monitor(Module, Function, Args) -> {Ret, Mon} | OTP 23.0 |
start_monitor(Module, Function, Args, Time) -> {Ret, Mon} | OTP 23.0 |
start_monitor(Module, Function, Args, Time, SpawnOpts) -> {Ret, Mon} | OTP 23.0 |
Types
Starts a new process synchronously. Spawns the process and waits for it to start. A monitor is atomically set on the newly spawned process. When the process has started, it must call init_ack(Parent, Ret)
or init_ack(Ret)
, where Parent
is the process that evaluates this function. At this time, Ret
is returned.
If Time
is specified as an integer, this function waits for Time
milliseconds for the new process to call init_ack
, or Ret = {error, timeout}
will be returned, and the process is killed.
The return value is {Ret, Mon}
where Ret
corresponds to the Ret
argument in the call to init_ack()
, and Mon
is the monitor reference of the monitor that has been set up.
A 'DOWN'
message will be delivered to the caller if this function returns, and the spawned process terminates. This is true also in the case when the operation times out.
Argument SpawnOpts
, if specified, is passed as the last argument to the spawn_opt/2,3,4,5
BIF.
Using spawn option monitor
is not allowed. It causes the function to fail with reason badarg
.
stop(Process) -> ok | OTP 18.0 |
Types
Equivalent to stop(Process, normal, infinity)
.
stop(Process, Reason, Timeout) -> ok | OTP 18.0 |
Types
Orders the process to exit with the specified Reason
and waits for it to terminate.
Returns ok
if the process exits with the specified Reason
within Timeout
milliseconds.
If the call times out, a timeout
exception is raised.
If the process does not exist, a noproc
exception is raised.
The implementation of this function is based on the terminate
system message, and requires that the process handles system messages correctly. For information about system messages, see sys(3)
and section sys and proc_lib
in OTP Design Principles.
translate_initial_call(Process) -> {Module, Function, Arity} |
Types
This function is used by functions c:i/0
and c:regs/0
to present process information.
This function extracts the initial call of a process that was started using one of the spawn or start functions in this module, and translates it to more useful information. Process
can either be a pid, an integer tuple (from which a pid can be created), or the process information of a process Pid
fetched through an erlang:process_info(Pid)
function call.
If the initial call is to one of the system-defined behaviors such as gen_server
or gen_event
, it is translated to more useful information. If a gen_server
is spawned, the returned Module
is the name of the callback module and Function
is init
(the function that initiates the new server).
A supervisor
and a supervisor_bridge
are also gen_server
processes. To return information that this process is a supervisor and the name of the callback module, Module
is supervisor
and Function
is the name of the supervisor callback module. Arity
is 1
, as the init/1
function is called initially in the callback module.
By default, {proc_lib,init_p,5}
is returned if no information about the initial call can be found. It is assumed that the caller knows that the process has been spawned with the proc_lib
module.
See Also
error_logger(3)
logger(3)
© 2010–2021 Ericsson AB
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.