# Architecture The purpose of this document is to provide an overview of the `Celluloid` project architecture. It is intended as a learning tool for GSoC (Google Summer of Code) and for anyone else interested in peeking under the hood to figure out how Celluloid works. This document will evolve since the people writing it are learning the project too. It will likely evolve in the following manner: 1. Document all major classes by describing the purpose of each one. 2. Document the dependencies between classes described in item 1. 3. Describe the flow of messages between the classes documented in items 1 and 2. 4. Generate a Big Picture overview of the overall Celluloid architecture. 5. Create a flew graphics to depict class dependencies and message flows (perhaps as a directed acyclic graph). ## Document Status The document is working on item 1. ## Required Libraries `logger` `thread` `timeout` `set` ## Require Lifecycle Document the steps taken from the moment `require "celluloid"` is executed by the runtime. The file `celluloid.rb` is read in by the runtime. This file requires some standard libraries like `Thread` and `Set` (see Required Libraries for full list) and initializes the `Celluloid` module namespace. It then sets up a Celluloid singleton class which will contain utility functions that need to be accessed from anywhere. Think of these singleton methods as global methods. These specific methods should be considered private to the library and should not be directly called by user code. From here it continues to `extend` and `include` other modules so that any Ruby object that executes `include Celluloid` as part of its class definition automatically gains all of the Celluloid magic. Next, it defines regular methods within the Celluloid namespace. These are also global methods but they are essentially the public API to the outside world. These methods (such as `current_actor` and `terminate`) can be called by user code. Next we have a list of `require`'d subfiles. This loads the remainder of the library in preparation to start running. Next, the code sets up two global default settings for the `task_class` and `group_class`. I don't know what these are yet but by exposing them this way it's clearly intended for these items to be defined in such a way that user code can override them with use-case-specific code. The code here can also read names from the environment variables to set the defaults. This is likely intended for use by the spec/test system. Lastly, the code registers some methods for shutdown to terminate all actors `at_exit` and then initializes the system. To boot the system, call `require 'celluloid'`. ## Supervision Lifecycle The final call to `Actor::System.new.start` kicks off the top level supervisor. The supervisor container is an actor and it will keep track of all defined actors as they are added for supervision. A user may create an actor that is not supervised, so the top-level supervisor does not necessarily have a reference to every actor in the system. The Registry is also created at this time and lives within the main container. Actors can be added to the registry even if they are not supervised. The two concepts are separate even though the code is somewhat comingled. ## Classes / Modules ### Celluloid Module * Sets up class accessors used throughout/globally such as `logger` * When using `include Celluloid` on a class, it performs the following work during `include`: * Extends `ClassMethods` and `Internals::Properties` * Includes `InstanceMethods` * Sets properties on the class object. * Removes `trap_exit` and `exclusive` if they exist on the singleton class so that Celluloid can redefine them for itself. * Defines class methods inside the `Celluloid` namespace such as `actor?` and `mailbox` and `cores`. These are utility functions. They are defined on the Celluloid singleton. * Provides the entry method `boot` to start up the whole system and its opposite `shutdown` to terminate everything. #### Depends On Classes * Internals::Logger * Internals::CallChain * Actor::System * Celluloid::Mailbox * Thread (primarily for Thread.current to access fiber locals like `:celluloid_actor`) * Future ### ClassMethods Module This class contains class-level methods which are added to every user class that contains `include Celluloid`. * Overrides `new` for the class object. #### Depends On Classes * Cell * Actor * Celluloid ### InstanceMethods Module This module contains instance-level methods which are added to every user class that contains `include Celluloid`. #### Depends on Classes * Actor * Celluloid ### Actor::System class Is created and `start`'ed as part of the entire boot sequence. This class provides essential services utilized by the rest of the library such as the Registry and the top-level Supervisor. #### Lifecycle Creates the `Registry` and initializes the `Celluloid.group_class`. Upon `start` it makes sure that it switches the `Thread.current[:celluloid_actor_system]` to itself, then defines and deploys the `Root` services. #### Depends On Classes * Supervision::Service::Root which is in gem `celluloid-supervision` * Celluloid::Notifications::Fanout * Celluloid::IncidentReporter * Celluloid::Supervision::Service::Public * Celluloid::Actor::Manager * Celluloid * Internals::Registry * Celluloid.group_class ## Gem - celluloid-supervision Necessary for the core system to boot. Really has only two classes/modules of note. One is Supervision::Container which is an actor that keeps track of all actors under supervision. It also handles restart. Two is Supervision::Configuration. This class manages the several different ways that an actor may be placed under supervision, arguments passed to it, and other data. Be careful when reading the code. Each file in the gem relies on open Ruby classes. These files reopen previously defined classes and add more behavior, so to get a complete picture for what the Configuration and Container classes can do you must look through all of the files. While this logical separation of business logic to its own file is neat, it adds to the cognitive load when reading the code since the entire class defintion is spread over multiple files. ### Supervision::Service::Root #### Depends On Classes * Supervision::Container ### Supervision::Container Stores references to Actors on behalf of a Supervisor. This is the only class under the `Supervision` namespace that is an Actor. Every other class is a regular Ruby class. #### Depends On Classes * Supervision::Configuration *