Thursday, May 21, 2015

Handling Control-C in Haskell

Summary: The development version of ghcid seemed to have some problems with terminating when Control-C was hit, so I investigated and learnt some things.

Given a long-running/interactive console program (e.g. ghcid), when the user hits Control-C/Ctrl-C the program should abort. In this post I'll describe how that works in Haskell, how it can fail, and what asynchronous exceptions have to do with it.

What happens when the user hits Ctrl-C?

When the user hits Ctrl-C, GHC raises an async exception of type UserInterrupt on the main thread. This happens because GHC installs an interrupt handler which raises that exception, sending it to the main thread with throwTo. If you install your own interrupt handler you won't see this behaviour and will have to handle Ctrl-C yourself.

There are reports that if the user hits Ctrl-C twice the runtime will abort the program. In my tests, that seems to be a feature of the shell rather than GHC itself - in the Windows Command Prompt no amount of Ctrl-C stops an errant program, in Cygwin a single Ctrl-C works.

What happens when the main thread receives UserInterrupt?

There are a few options:

  • If you are not masked and there is no exception handler, the thread will abort, which causes the whole program to finish. This behaviour is the desirable outcome if the user hits Ctrl-C.
  • If you are running inside an exception handler (e.g. catch or try) which is capable of catching UserInterrupt then the UserInterrupt exception will be returned. The program can then take whatever action it wishes, including rethrowing UserInterrupt or exiting the program.
  • If you are running with exceptions masked, then the exception will be delayed until you stop being masked. The most common way of running while masked is if the code is the second argument to finally or one of the first two arguments to bracket. Since Ctrl-C will be delayed while the program is masked, you should only do quick things while masked.

How might I lose UserInterrupt?

The easiest way to "lose" a UserInterrupt is to catch it and not rethrow it. Taking a real example from ghcid, I sometimes want to check if two paths refer to the same file, and to make that check more robust I call canonicalizePath first. This function raises errors in some circumstances (e.g. the directory containing the file does not exist), but is inconsistent about error conditions between OS's, and doesn't document its exceptions, so the safest thing is to write:

canonicalizePathSafe :: FilePath -> IO FilePath
canonicalizePathSafe x = canonicalizePath x `catch`
    \(_ :: SomeException) -> return x

If there is any exception, just return the original path. Unfortunately, the catch will also catch and discard UserInterrupt. If the user hits Ctrl-C while canonicalizePath is running the program won't abort. The problem is that UserInterrupt is not thrown in response to the code inside the catch, so ignoring UserInterrupt is the wrong thing to do.

What is an async exception?

In Haskell there are two distinct ways to throw exceptions, synchronously and asynchronously.

  • Synchronous exceptions are raised on the calling thread, using functions such as throw and error. The point at which a synchronous exception is raised is explicit and can be relied upon.
  • Asynchronous exceptions are raised by a different thread, using throwTo and a different thread id. The exact point at which the exception occurs can vary.

How is the type AsyncException related?

In Haskell, there is a type called AsyncException, containing four exceptions - each special in their own way:

  • StackOverflow - the current thread has exceeded its stack limit.
  • HeapOverflow - never actually raised.
  • ThreadKilled - raised by calling killThread on this thread. Used when a programmer wants to kill a thread.
  • UserInterrupt - the one we've been talking about so far, raised on the main thread by the user hitting Ctrl-C.

While these have a type AsyncException, that's only a hint as to their intended purpose. You can throw any exception either synchronously or asynchronously. In our particular case of caonicalizePathSafe, if canonicalizePath causes a StackOverflow, we probably are happy to take the fallback case, but likely the stack was already close to the limit and will occur again soon. If the programmer calls killThread that thread should terminate, but in ghcid we know this thread won't be killed.

How can I catch avoid catching async exceptions?

There are several ways to avoid catching async exceptions. Firstly, since we expect canonicalizePath to complete quickly, we can just mask all async exceptions:

canonicalizePathSafe x = mask_ $
    canonicalizePath x `catch` \(_ :: SomeException) -> return x

We are now guaranteed that catch will not receive an async exception. Unfortunately, if canonicalizePath takes a long time, we might delay Ctrl-C unnecessarily.

Alternatively, we can catch only non-async exceptions:

canonicalizePathSafe x = catchJust
    (\e -> if async e then Nothing else Just e)
    (canonicalizePath x)
    (\_ -> return x)

async e = isJust (fromException e :: Maybe AsyncException)

We use catchJust to only catch exceptions which aren't of type AsyncException, so UserInterrupt will not be caught. Of course, this actually avoids catching exceptions of type AsyncException, which is only related to async exceptions by a partial convention not enforced by the type system.

Finally, we can catch only the relevant exceptions:

canonicalizePathSafe x = canonicalizePath x `catch`
    \(_ :: IOException) -> return x

Unfortunately, I don't know what the relevant exceptions are - on Windows canonicalizePath never seems to throw an exception. However, IOException seems like a reasonable guess.

How to robustly deal with UserInterrupt?

I've showed how to make canonicalizePathSafe not interfere with UserInterrupt, but now I need to audit every piece of code (including library functions I use) that runs on the main thread to ensure it doesn't catch UserInterrupt. That is fragile. A simpler alternative is to push all computation off the main thread:

import Control.Concurrent.Extra
import Control.Exception.Extra

ctrlC :: IO () -> IO ()
ctrlC act = do
    bar <- newBarrier
    forkFinally act $ signalBarrier bar
    either throwIO return =<< waitBarrier bar

main :: IO ()
main = ctrlC $ ... as before ...

We are using the Barrier type from my previous blog post, which is available from the extra package. We create a Barrier, run the main action on a forked thread, then marshal completion/exceptions back to the main thread. Since the main thread has no catch operations and only a few (audited) functions on it, we can be sure that Ctrl-C will quickly abort the program.

Using version 1.1.1 of the extra package we can simplify the code to ctrlC = join . onceFork.

What about cleanup?

Now we've pushed most actions off the main thread, any finally sections are on other threads, and will be skipped if the user hits Ctrl-C. Typically this isn't a problem, as program shutdown automatically cleans all non-persistent resources. As an example, ghcid spawns a copy of ghci, but on shutdown the pipes are closed and the ghci process exits on its own. If we do want robust cleanup of resources such as temporary files we would need to run the cleanup from the main thread, likely using finally.

Should async exceptions be treated differently?

At the moment, Haskell defines many exceptions, any of which can be thrown either synchronously or asynchronously, but then hints that some are probably async exceptions. That's not a very Haskell-like thing to do. Perhaps there should be a catch which ignores exceptions thrown asynchronously? Perhaps the sync and async exceptions should be of different types? It seems unfortunate that functions have to care about async exceptions as much as they do.

Combining mask and StackOverflow

As a curiosity, I tried to combine a function that stack overflows (using -O0) and mask. Specifically:

main = mask_ $ print $ foldl (+) 0 [1..1000000]

I then ran that with +RTS -K1k. That prints out the value computed by the foldl three times (seemingly just a buffering issue), then fails with a StackOverflow exception. If I remove the mask, it just fails with StackOverflow. It seems that by disabling StackOverflow I'm allowed to increase my stack size arbitrarily. Changing print to appendFile causes the file to be created but not written to, so it seems there are oddities about combining these features.

Disclaimer

I'm certainly not an expert on async exceptions, so corrections welcome. All the above assumes compiling with -threaded, but most applies without -threaded.

Wednesday, May 06, 2015

Announcing js-jquery Haskell Library

Summary: The library js-jquery makes it easy to get at the jQuery Javascript code from Haskell. I've just released a new version.

I've just released the Haskell library js-jquery 1.11.3, following the announcement of jQuery 1.11.3. This package bundles the minified jQuery code into a Haskell package, so it can be depended upon by Cabal packages. The version number matches the upstream jQuery version. It's easy to grab the jQuery code from Haskell using this library, as an example:

import qualified Language.Javascript.JQuery as JQuery

main = do
    putStrLn $ "jQuery version " ++ show JQuery.version ++ " source:"
    putStrLn =<< readFile =<< JQuery.file

There are two goals behind this library:

  • Make it easier for jQuery users to use and upgrade jQuery in Haskell packages. You can upgrade jQuery without huge diffs and use it without messing around with extra-source-files.
  • Make it easier for upstream packagers like Debian. The addition of a jQuery file into a Haskell package means you are mixing licenses, authors, and distributions like Debian also require the source (unminified) version of jQuery to be distributed alongside. By having one package provide jQuery they only have to do that work once, and the package has been designed to meet their needs.

It's pretty easy to convert something that has bundled jQuery to use the library, as some examples:

The library only depends on the base library so it shouldn't cause any version hassles, although (as per all Cabal packages) you can't mix and match libraries with incompatible js-jquery version constraints in one project.

As a companion, there's also js-flot, which follows the same ideas for the Flot library.