NAME
Mesos - perl bindings for Apache Mesos
DESCRIPTION
This is a collection of perl bindings for Apache Mesos. This requires having the mesos shared library installed, in order to link against(much like python's mesos library).
Protobuf Messages
Frameworks, masters, and slaves all communicate using google protocol buffers. The Mesos module handles protobuf messages using the Google::ProtocolBuffers library, which is what's used to generate the message classes in Mesos::Messages from resources/mesos.proto. It is encouraged to look over Google::ProtocolBuffers documentation before using Mesos.
The Mesos module ships with message classes generated from v0.20.0. Messages are still backwards compatible with previous versions, but please make sure to check the mesos.proto file from your Mesos installation, to see what fields are and are not allowed.
Internal POSIX Threads
The Apache Mesos library is multithreaded, which is problematic when dealing with perl. The solution Mesos currently goes with is to create C++ proxy classes, which registers callbacks that send notifications event handlers. The two event handlers currently implemented are AnyEvent watchers(the default) and a Async::Interrupt object(the *::Interrupt drivers). Mesos then handles these notifications, and executes the corresponding perl code, inside of an AnyEvent loop.
Launching internal POSIX threads also means that Mesos drivers are not fork safe, and only exec and POSIX::_exit can be guaranteed to work safely in the child process after forking. One should definitely not call any driver code in the child process after forking.
SYNOPSIS
package MyScheduler {
use Moo;
extends 'Mesos::Scheduler';
use Mesos::Messages; # load protobuf messages
sub resourceOffers {
my ($self, $driver, $offers) = @_;
for my $offer (@$offers) {
my $task = Mesos::TaskInfo->new({
# task_id is a Mesos::TaskID message
task_id => Mesos::TaskID->new({value => "a unique id"}),
slave_id => $offer->slave_id,
name => "does something cool",
# executor is a Mesos::ExecutorInfo message
# Google::ProtocolBuffers will let you pass the constructor args
# and will instantiate the message for you
executor => {
executor_id => {value => "does cool tasks"},
command => {value => "/path/to/executor"},
},
resources => [
{name => "cpus", type => Mesos::Value::Type::SCALAR, scalar => {value => 1}},
{name => "mem", type => Mesos::Value::Type::SCALAR, scalar => {value => 32}},
],
});
$driver->launchTasks([$offer->{id}], [$task]);
}
}
};
use Mesos::SchedulerDriver;
my $driver = Mesos::SchedulerDriver->new(
master => "mesoshost:5050",
framework => {user => "mesos user", name => "awesome framework"},
scheduler => MyScheduler->new,
);
$driver->run;
INSTALL
First make sure the apache mesos library is installed. This is easiest either with your native package manager, or with a package from mesosphere.
Make sure Google Protocol Buffers headers are installed, and the version is compatible with your Mesos installation.
Next just install like any other Module::Build distribution with perl Build.PL && ./Build install
Note that Mesos before v0.20 has issues with include headers not being very smart(MESOS-1504). Compiling against these earlier versions requires explicitly including the directory for mesos headers. By default Build.PL will check /usr/local/include/mesos, but you will be prompted to enter another path if that directory does not exist.
CAVEATS
Be aware that Mesos drivers are not able to talk to remote servers from behind a NAT. Drivers are required to start an http server that the mesos master will send post requests to.
TODO
SEE ALSO
More information about Apache Mesos, projects using Mesos, or the underlying Mesos drivers can be found at the Apache Mesos project's home page or mesosphere.
AUTHOR
Mark Flickinger <maf@cpan.org>