Merge pull request #5251 from miqrogroove/patch-1
Unify Worker Load Formulas
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1e00efdb99
2 changed files with 9 additions and 29 deletions
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@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ Example: To set the automatic database cleanup process add this line to your .ht
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* **throttle_limit_month** - Maximum number of posts that a user can send per month with the API.
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* **wall-to-wall_share** (Boolean) - Displays forwarded posts like "wall-to-wall" posts.
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* **worker_cooldown** - Cooldown time after each worker function call. Default value is 0 seconds.
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* **worker_linear_load** (Boolean) - Enables the linear calculation of maximum queues.
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* **worker_load_exponent** (Integer) - Default 3, which allows only 25% of the maximum worker queues when server load reaches around 37% of maximum load. For a linear response where 25% of worker queues are allowed at 75% of maximum load, set this to 1. Setting 0 would allow maximum worker queues at all times, which is not recommended.
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* **xrd_timeout** - Timeout for fetching the XRD links. Default value is 20 seconds.
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## experimental ##
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@ -625,34 +625,14 @@ class Worker
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if ($load) {
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$maxsysload = intval(Config::get("system", "maxloadavg", 50));
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if (Config::get('system', 'worker_linear_load', false)) {
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/* The linear load calculation works fine if there is a low
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* number of maximum queues and a high load base level.
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* This can be present at shared hosters.
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/* Default exponent 3 causes queues to rapidly decrease as load increases.
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* If you have 20 max queues at idle, then you get only 5 queues at 37.1% of $maxsysload.
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* For some environments, this rapid decrease is not needed.
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* With exponent 1, you could have 20 max queues at idle and 13 at 37% of $maxsysload.
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*/
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$tinyload = 1;
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if ($load > $maxsysload) {
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$queues = 0;
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} elseif ($load > $tinyload) {
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//Provide $queues number between 1 (below max load) and $maxqueues - 1 (above tiny load).
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$range = $maxsysload - $tinyload;
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$slope = 1.00 - (($load - $tinyload) / $range);
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$target = $slope * ($maxqueues - 1);
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$queues = intval(ceil($target));
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}
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} else {
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/* The exponentional load calculation respects the load behaviour
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* of Linux systems with regular hardware that normally idles
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* with load values near 0.
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*/
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$maxworkers = $queues;
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// Some magical mathemathics to reduce the workers
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$exponent = 3;
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$slope = $maxworkers / pow($maxsysload, $exponent);
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$queues = ceil($slope * pow(max(0, $maxsysload - $load), $exponent));
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}
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$exponent = intval(Config::get('system', 'worker_load_exponent', 3));
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$slope = pow(max(0, $maxsysload - $load) / $maxsysload, $exponent);
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$queues = intval(ceil($slope * $maxqueues));
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$processlist = '';
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