Beyond Mere Actors

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Boston Area Scala Enthusiasts fourth meeting held on Feb 2, 2010.Talk delivered by Rúnar Bjarnason.

Transcript of Beyond Mere Actors

Beyond Mere Actors

Concurrent Functional Programming with Scalaz

Rúnar Bjarnason

Traditional Java Concurrency

Manual creation of threadsManual synchronisationOne thread per processProcesses communicate by shared mutable state

Traditional Java Concurrency

Manual creation of threadsManual synchronisationOne thread per processProcesses communicate by shared mutable stateProblem: Threads do not compose

java.util.concurrent

Since JDK 5 Includes useful building blocks for making higher-level abstractions.Atomic referencesCountdown latchesExecutorServiceCallableFuture

Futures

Provided by java.util.concurrent.Future

Future[A] represents a computation of type A, executing concurrently.

Future.get: A

Futures

ExecutorService is a means of turning Callable[A] into Future[A]implicit def toCallable[A](a: => A) = new Callable[A] { def call = a }implicit val s = Executors.newCachedThreadPool

e1 and e2 are evaluated concurrentlyval x = s submit { e1 }val y = e2 Futures can participate in expressions:val z = f(x.get, y)

No mention of threads in this code. No shared state.

Futures

There's a serious problem. How would we implement this function?

def fmap[A,B](fu: Future[A], f: A => B) (implicit s: ExecutorService):Future[B] =

Futures

We have to call Future.get, blocking the thread.

def fmap[A,B](fu: Future[A], f: A => B) (implicit s: ExecutorService):Future[B] = s submit f(fu.get) This is a barrier to composition. Futures cannot be composed without blocking a thread.

scalaz.concurrent

Strategy - Abstracts over ways of evaluating expressions concurrently. Actor - Light-weight thread-like process, communicates by asynchronous messaging. Promise - Compose concurrent functions.

Parallel Strategies

ExecutorService: Callable[A] => Future[A]

Callable[A] ~= Function0[A]Future[A] ~= Function0[A]Also written: () => A

Strategy[A] ~= Function0[A] => Function0[A]Also written: (() => A) => () => A

Turns a lazy expression of type A into an expression of the same type.

scalaz.concurrent.Strategy

Separates the concerns of parallelism and algorithm.Captures some threading pattern and isolates the rest of your code from threading. Executor - wraps the expression in a Callable, turns it into a Future via an implicit ExecutorService.

Naive - Starts a new thread for each expression. Sequential - Evaluates each expression in the current thread (no concurrency). Identity - Performs no evaluation at all.

Parallel Strategies

You can write your own Strategies. Some (crazy) ideas:

Delegate to the fork/join scheduler.Run in the Swing thread.Call a remote machine.Ask a human, or produce a random result.

Actors

Provide asynchronous communication among processes.

Processes receive messages on a queue.

Messages can be enqueued with no waiting.

An actor is always either suspended (waiting for messages) or working (acting on a message).

An actor processes messages in some (but any) order.

scalaz.concurrent.Actor

These are not scala.actors. Differences:Simpler. Scalaz Actors are distilled to the essentials.Messages are typed.

Actor is sealed, and instantiated by supplying: type Aeffect: A => Unit (implicit) strategy: Strategy[Unit](Optional) Error Handler: Throwable => Unit

Strategy + Effect = Actor

Actor Example

Actor: Contravariant Cofunctor

An actor can be composed with a function: x.comap(f) Comap has this type: comap: (B => A) => Actor[A] => Actor[B] Returns a new actor that applies f to its messages and sends the result to actor x. x comap f is equivalent to x compose f, but results in an Actor, as opposed to a function.

Problems with Actors

Problems with Actors

You have to think about state and process communication.An actor can (must?) expose its state.It's all about side-effects!

Side-effects absolutely do not compose.You cannot compose Actors with each other.

Actor[A] ~= (A => Unit)

There's not a lot you can do with Unit.

scalaz.concurrent.Promise

Similar to Future, but non-blocking.

Implements map and flatMap without calling get.

scalaz.concurrent.Promise

Constructed by giving an expression to promise: lazy val e:String = {Thread sleep 5000; "Hi."} val p: Promise[String] = promise(e) Takes an implicit Strategy[Unit]. The expression is evaluated concurrently by the Strategy.Think of this as forking a process. The result is available later by calling p.get. This blocks the current thread. But we never have to call it!

On Time-Travel

Promised values are available in the future.

What does it mean to get a value out of the future?Time-travel into the future is easy. Just wait.But we don't have to go into the future.We can give our future-selves instructions.

Instead of getting values out of the future, we send computations into the future.

Lifting a function into the future

Consider: promise(e).map(f)

map has the following type:(A => B) => Promise[A] => Promise[B] We take an ordinary function and turn it into a function that operates on Promises. It's saying: Evaluate e concurrently, applying f to the result when it's ready. Returns a Promise of the final result.

Composing concurrent functions

A concurrent function is of the type A => Promise[B] Syntax sugar to make any function a concurrent function:val g = f.promisepromise(f: A => B) = (a:A) => promise(f(a)) We can bind the arguments of concurrent functions to promised values, using flatMap:promise(e).flatMap(g) flatMap has this type:(A => Promise[B]) => Promise[A] => Promise[B]

Composing concurrent functions

We can compose concurrent functions with each other too. If f: A => Promise[B] and g: B => Promise[C] then (f >=> g): A => Promise[C]

(f >=> g)(x) is equivalent to f(x) flatMap g

Joining Promises

join[A]: Promise[Promise[A]] => Promise[A]

(promise { promise { expression } }).join Join removes the "inner brackets". A process that forks other processes can join with them later, without synchronizing or blocking.A process whose result depends on child processes is still just a single Promise, and thus can run in a single thread. Therefore, pure promises cannot deadlock or starve.

Promises - Example

But wait, there's more!

Parallel counterparts of map, flatMap, and zipWith:parMap, parFlatMap, and parZipWith x.parMap(f) Where x can be a List, Stream, Function, Option, Promise, etc.Scalaz provides parMap on any Functor. parZipWith for parallel zipping of any Applicative Functor. parFlatMap is provided for any Monad.

Advanced Topics

If you understand Promise, then you understand monads.

Advanced Topics

Functor is simply this interface:

trait Functor[F[_]] { def fmap[A, B](r: F[A], f: A => B): F[B]}

Functors are "mappable". Any implementation of this interface is a functor. Here's the Promise functor:new Functor[Promise] { def fmap[A, B](t: Promise[A], f: A => B) = t.flatMap(a => promise(f(a)))}

Advanced Topics

Monad is simply this interface:trait Monad[M[_]] extends Functor[M] { fork[A](a: A): M[A] join[A](a: M[M[A]]): M[A]}

Monads are fork/map/joinable. Any implementation of this interface is a monad. Here's the Promise monad:new Monad[Promise] { def fork[A](a: A) = promise(a) def join[A](a: Promise[Promise[A]]) = a.flatMap(Functions.identity)}

Welcome to Scalaz

Scalaz is a general-purpose library for higher-order programming. There's a lot here. Go play around, and ask questions on the Scalaz Google Group. For more information:http://code.google.com/p/scalaz

Documentation is lacking, but we're working on that. A release of Scalaz 5.0 will coincide with a release of Scala 2.8.

Questions?