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Neocities' Rainbows! config file - https://neocities.org
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# This is Neocities' Rainbows! config file. We are using this in production to run all our web apps. | |
# It works really well for us and has been heavily load tested, so I wanted to share it with the community. | |
# | |
# In my opinion, this is the best way to deploy a ruby web application. Unlike EventMachine based solutions, | |
# it uses real ruby threads, which allows it to take advantage of the internal non-blocking IO pattern | |
# in MRI. | |
# | |
# Contrary to popular belief, MRI doesn't block execution to wait on IO when you are using threads, even | |
# with the GIL. The requests are done concurrently for anything that is based on the IO class. This | |
# includes things like Net::HTTP and even `system commands`. Grep the MRI Ruby source code for | |
# "rb_thread_blocking_region" if you'd like to explore how this works. | |
# | |
# This approach will likely be a little slower than EventMachine-based servers (like Thin), but I think this | |
# will provide better throughput for modern web applications (which almost always deal with a lot of slower IO). | |
# You can use existing ruby software and don't have to use special EventMachine code to make IO not | |
# block. | |
# | |
# The one potential caveat to this approach is that your code must be thread safe. But this problem is rare | |
# in practice, and when in doubt, you can always wrap the action in a Mutex lock. | |
# If you see a thread safety problem/bug, make sure to let the author know about it so it can get fixed! | |
# | |
# There are other benefits to using Rainbows! that aren't just related to concurrency: | |
# | |
# * It listens to unix signals, and can add/remove/restart workers with zero downtime! Neocities.org | |
# has never gone offline since we launched the site several months ago. | |
# | |
# * It provides mechanisms for logging and pid files, which we use to feed our process monitor. | |
# | |
# * When we restart, the master process starts one copy of the worker application, and then forks it to | |
# create the rest of the workers. This is -much- faster than the Mongrel/Thin approach, which has to start | |
# one worker at a time (the dreaded "rolling restart"). | |
# | |
# If you haven't looked at Rainbows! yet, and you're using MRI, I strongly recommend taking a look: | |
# http://rainbows.rubyforge.org | |
# | |
# ALTERNATIVES | |
# | |
# If you're using Heroku, check out Zbatery. Same as Rainbows!, but without the fork: http://zbatery.bogomip.org | |
# | |
# If you're using JRuby, check out: http://www.engineyard.com/blog/2011/taking-stock-jruby-web-servers | |
# | |
# If you're using Rubinius, check out Puma: https://github.com/evanphx/puma | |
# | |
# If you have a completely insane amount of traffic (hint: you probably don't), want to use | |
# EventMachine and are okay with using custom EM libraries for IO, check out Sinatra::Synchrony: | |
# http://kyledrake.net/sinatra-synchrony | |
# | |
# If this is too much and/or you don't care, check out Puma. Puma is basically Zbatery with ThreadPool, and it | |
# works on MRI, JRuby, and Rubinius. Ultimately I'd like to see Puma be the default web server of choice, | |
# and perhaps even have it replace Webrick as the ruby web server in the standard library. | |
Rainbows! do | |
# Set the app name so we can re-use this file easily. | |
name = 'website' | |
# This enables the Rainbows! Thread Pool, which is best for YARV (1.9.x) | |
use :ThreadPool | |
# This is set in nginx for us, so we don't set it here. | |
client_max_body_size nil | |
# This is the number of worker processes there will be. You can remove/add using signals during runtime. | |
# One per core isn't a bad rule of thumb, but there is still the GIL so I usually add a few more. | |
worker_processes 6 | |
# This variable is different based on what concurrency strategy you use, but for ThreadPool it sets the | |
# number of threads in the pool. Don't set this too high or else you'll starve your app. 32 works well for us. | |
worker_connections 32 | |
# How long to hold the request open until timing out. | |
timeout 30 | |
# Listen on a socket, and set a high backlog to avoid "resource unavailable" errors under heavy load. | |
# It has been suggested that you should lower the backlog if you are using an HTTP load balancer. | |
# Sockets are a little more efficient than TCP/IP, generally 5-10% faster. You may need to tweak sysctl, | |
# the default settings on many unix machines don't allow the app to have enough open files to queue a lot | |
# of traffic up. | |
listen "unix:/var/run/#{name}.sock", :backlog => 2048 | |
pid "/var/run/#{name}.pid" | |
stderr_path "/var/log/#{name}.log" | |
stdout_path "/var/log/#{name}.log" | |
### | |
# Hardcore performance tweaks, described here: https://github.com/blog/517-unicorn | |
### | |
# This loads the app in master, and then forks workers. Kill with USR2 and it will do a graceful restart | |
# using the block proceeding. | |
preload_app true | |
before_fork do |server, worker| | |
## | |
# When sent a USR2, Rainbows! will suffix its pidfile with .oldbin and | |
# immediately start loading up a new version of itself (loaded with a new | |
# version of our app). When this new Rainbows! is completely loaded | |
# it will begin spawning workers. The first worker spawned will check to | |
# see if an .oldbin pidfile exists. If so, this means we've just booted up | |
# a new Rainbows! and need to tell the old one that it can now die. To do so | |
# we send it a QUIT. | |
# | |
# Using this method we get 0 downtime deploys. | |
old_pid = "/var/run/neocities/#{name}.pid.oldbin" | |
if File.exists?(old_pid) && server.pid != old_pid | |
begin | |
Process.kill("QUIT", File.read(old_pid).to_i) | |
rescue Errno::ENOENT, Errno::ESRCH | |
# someone else did our job for us | |
end | |
end | |
end | |
end |
Great, thank you :-)
Important addendum:
kill -USR2 to restart, not -HUP. With this config, kill -HUP will not reload a fresh copy of the application code!
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We're using syslog to rotate the logs, and I highly recommend that.
Here is what we use basically: https://gist.github.com/2119737
Note that it uses the right signal to restart the logs, as per the signals documentation: http://rainbows.rubyforge.org/SIGNALS.html
Seriously, how many other servers can do this? Rainbows is the shit.