[Rd] SUGGESTION: Settings to disable forked processing in R, e.g. parallel::mclapply()

Simon Urbanek @|mon@urb@nek @end|ng |rom R-project@org
Fri Jan 10 20:23:00 CET 2020


Henrik,

the example from the post works just fine in CRAN R for me - the post was about homebrew build so it's conceivably a bug in their libraries. That's exactly why I was proposing a more general solution where you can simply define a function in user-space that will issue a warning or stop on fork, it doesn't have to be part of core R, there are other packages that use fork() as well, so what I proposed is much safer than hacking the parallel package.

Cheers,
Simon
 


> On Jan 10, 2020, at 10:58 AM, Henrik Bengtsson <henrik.bengtsson using gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> The RStudio GUI was just one example.  AFAIK, and please correct me if
> I'm wrong, another example is where multi-threaded code is used in
> forked processing and that's sometimes unstable.  Yes another, which
> might be multi-thread related or not, is
> https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2018-September/076845.html:
> 
> res <- parallel::mclapply(urls, function(url) {
>  download.file(url, basename(url))
> })
> 
> That was reported to fail on macOS with the default method="libcurl"
> but not for method="curl" or method="wget".
> 
> Further documentation is needed and would help but I don't believe
> it's sufficient to solve everyday problems.  The argument for
> introducing an option/env var to disable forking is to give the end
> user a quick workaround for newly introduced bugs.  Neither the
> develop nor the end user have full control of the R package stack,
> which is always in flux.  For instance, above mclapply() code might
> have been in a package on CRAN and then all of a sudden
> method="libcurl" became the new default in base R.  The above
> mclapply() code is now buggy on macOS, and not necessarily caught by
> CRAN checks.  The package developer might not notice this because they
> are on Linux or Windows.  It can take a very long time before this
> problem is even noticed and even further before it is tracked down and
> fixed.   Similarly, as more and more code turn to native code and it
> becomes easier and easier to implement multi-threading, more and more
> of these bugs across package dependencies risk sneaking in the
> backdoor wherever forked processing is in place.
> 
> For the end user, but also higher-up upstream package developers, the
> quickest workaround would be disable forking.  If you're conservative,
> you could even disable it all of your R processing.  Being able to
> quickly disable forking will also provide a mechanism for quickly
> testing the hypothesis that forking is the underlying problem, i.e.
> "Please retry with options(fork.allowed = FALSE)" will become handy
> for troubleshooting.
> 
> /Henrik
> 
> On Fri, Jan 10, 2020 at 5:31 AM Simon Urbanek
> <simon.urbanek using r-project.org> wrote:
>> 
>> If I understand the thread correctly this is an RStudio issue and I would suggest that the developers consider using pthread_atfork() so RStudio can handle forking as they deem fit (bail out with an error or make RStudio work).  Note that in principle the functionality requested here can be easily implemented in a package so R doesn’t need to be modified.
>> 
>> Cheers,
>> Simon
>> 
>> Sent from my iPhone
>> 
>>>> On Jan 10, 2020, at 04:34, Tomas Kalibera <tomas.kalibera using gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> On 1/10/20 7:33 AM, Henrik Bengtsson wrote:
>>>> I'd like to pick up this thread started on 2019-04-11
>>>> (https://hypatia.math.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2019-April/077632.html).
>>>> Modulo all the other suggestions in this thread, would my proposal of
>>>> being able to disable forked processing via an option or an
>>>> environment variable make sense?
>>> 
>>> I don't think R should be doing that. There are caveats with using fork, and they are mentioned in the documentation of the parallel package, so people can easily avoid functions that use it, and this all has been discussed here recently.
>>> 
>>> If it is the case, we can expand the documentation in parallel package, add a warning against the use of forking with RStudio, but for that I it would be good to know at least why it is not working. From the github issue I have the impression that it is not really known why, whether it could be fixed, and if so, where. The same github issue reflects also that some people want to use forking for performance reasons, and even with RStudio, at least on Linux. Perhaps it could be fixed? Perhaps it is just some race condition somewhere?
>>> 
>>> Tomas
>>> 
>>>> I've prototyped a working patch that
>>>> works like:
>>>>> options(fork.allowed = FALSE)
>>>>> unlist(parallel::mclapply(1:2, FUN = function(x) Sys.getpid()))
>>>> [1] 14058 14058
>>>>> parallel::mcmapply(1:2, FUN = function(x) Sys.getpid())
>>>> [1] 14058 14058
>>>>> parallel::pvec(1:2, FUN = function(x) Sys.getpid() + x/10)
>>>> [1] 14058.1 14058.2
>>>>> f <- parallel::mcparallel(Sys.getpid())
>>>> Error in allowFork(assert = TRUE) :
>>>> Forked processing is not allowed per option ‘fork.allowed’ or
>>>> environment variable ‘R_FORK_ALLOWED’
>>>>> cl <- parallel::makeForkCluster(1L)
>>>> Error in allowFork(assert = TRUE) :
>>>> Forked processing is not allowed per option ‘fork.allowed’ or
>>>> environment variable ‘R_FORK_ALLOWED’
>>>> The patch is:
>>>> Index: src/library/parallel/R/unix/forkCluster.R
>>>> ===================================================================
>>>> --- src/library/parallel/R/unix/forkCluster.R (revision 77648)
>>>> +++ src/library/parallel/R/unix/forkCluster.R (working copy)
>>>> @@ -30,6 +30,7 @@
>>>> newForkNode <- function(..., options = defaultClusterOptions, rank)
>>>> {
>>>> +    allowFork(assert = TRUE)
>>>>    options <- addClusterOptions(options, list(...))
>>>>    outfile <- getClusterOption("outfile", options)
>>>>    port <- getClusterOption("port", options)
>>>> Index: src/library/parallel/R/unix/mclapply.R
>>>> ===================================================================
>>>> --- src/library/parallel/R/unix/mclapply.R (revision 77648)
>>>> +++ src/library/parallel/R/unix/mclapply.R (working copy)
>>>> @@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
>>>>        stop("'mc.cores' must be >= 1")
>>>>    .check_ncores(cores)
>>>> -    if (isChild() && !isTRUE(mc.allow.recursive))
>>>> +    if (!allowFork() || (isChild() && !isTRUE(mc.allow.recursive)))
>>>>        return(lapply(X = X, FUN = FUN, ...))
>>>>    ## Follow lapply
>>>> Index: src/library/parallel/R/unix/mcparallel.R
>>>> ===================================================================
>>>> --- src/library/parallel/R/unix/mcparallel.R (revision 77648)
>>>> +++ src/library/parallel/R/unix/mcparallel.R (working copy)
>>>> @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@
>>>> mcparallel <- function(expr, name, mc.set.seed = TRUE, silent =
>>>> FALSE, mc.affinity = NULL, mc.interactive = FALSE, detached = FALSE)
>>>> {
>>>> +    allowFork(assert = TRUE)
>>>>    f <- mcfork(detached)
>>>>    env <- parent.frame()
>>>>    if (isTRUE(mc.set.seed)) mc.advance.stream()
>>>> Index: src/library/parallel/R/unix/pvec.R
>>>> ===================================================================
>>>> --- src/library/parallel/R/unix/pvec.R (revision 77648)
>>>> +++ src/library/parallel/R/unix/pvec.R (working copy)
>>>> @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
>>>>    cores <- as.integer(mc.cores)
>>>>    if(cores < 1L) stop("'mc.cores' must be >= 1")
>>>> -    if(cores == 1L) return(FUN(v, ...))
>>>> +    if(cores == 1L || !allowFork()) return(FUN(v, ...))
>>>>    .check_ncores(cores)
>>>>    if(mc.set.seed) mc.reset.stream()
>>>> with a new file src/library/parallel/R/unix/allowFork.R:
>>>> allowFork <- function(assert = FALSE) {
>>>>   value <- Sys.getenv("R_FORK_ALLOWED")
>>>>   if (nzchar(value)) {
>>>>       value <- switch(value,
>>>>          "1"=, "TRUE"=, "true"=, "True"=, "yes"=, "Yes"= TRUE,
>>>>          "0"=, "FALSE"=,"false"=,"False"=, "no"=, "No" = FALSE,
>>>>           stop(gettextf("invalid environment variable value: %s==%s",
>>>>          "R_FORK_ALLOWED", value)))
>>>> value <- as.logical(value)
>>>>   } else {
>>>>       value <- TRUE
>>>>   }
>>>>   value <- getOption("fork.allowed", value)
>>>>   if (is.na(value)) {
>>>>       stop(gettextf("invalid option value: %s==%s", "fork.allowed", value))
>>>>   }
>>>>   if (assert && !value) {
>>>>     stop(gettextf("Forked processing is not allowed per option %s or
>>>> environment variable %s", sQuote("fork.allowed"),
>>>> sQuote("R_FORK_ALLOWED")))
>>>>   }
>>>>   value
>>>> }
>>>> /Henrik
>>>>> On Mon, Apr 15, 2019 at 3:12 AM Tomas Kalibera <tomas.kalibera using gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>> On 4/15/19 11:02 AM, Iñaki Ucar wrote:
>>>>>> On Mon, 15 Apr 2019 at 08:44, Tomas Kalibera <tomas.kalibera using gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>> On 4/13/19 12:05 PM, Iñaki Ucar wrote:
>>>>>>>> On Sat, 13 Apr 2019 at 03:51, Kevin Ushey <kevinushey using gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>>> I think it's worth saying that mclapply() works as documented
>>>>>>>> Mostly, yes. But it says nothing about fork's copy-on-write and memory
>>>>>>>> overcommitment, and that this means that it may work nicely or fail
>>>>>>>> spectacularly depending on whether, e.g., you operate on a long
>>>>>>>> vector.
>>>>>>> R cannot possibly replicate documentation of the underlying operating
>>>>>>> systems. It clearly says that fork() is used and readers who may not
>>>>>>> know what fork() is need to learn it from external sources.
>>>>>>> Copy-on-write is an elementary property of fork().
>>>>>> Just to be precise, copy-on-write is an optimization widely deployed
>>>>>> in most modern *nixes, particularly for the architectures in which R
>>>>>> usually runs. But it is not an elementary property; it is not even
>>>>>> possible without an MMU.
>>>>> Yes, old Unix systems without virtual memory had fork eagerly copying.
>>>>> Not relevant today, and certainly not for systems that run R, but indeed
>>>>> people interested in OS internals can look elsewhere for more precise
>>>>> information.
>>>>> Tomas
>>> 
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>> 
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