lua-resty-lock - Simple shm-based nonblocking lock API
- Name
- Status
- Synopsis
- Description
- Methods
- For Multiple Lua Light Threads
- For Cache Locks
- Limitations
- Prerequisites
- Installation
- TODO
- Community
- Bugs and Patches
- Author
- Copyright and License
- See Also
This library is production ready.
# nginx.conf
http {
    # you do not need the following line if you are using the
    # OpenResty bundle:
    lua_package_path "/path/to/lua-resty-core/lib/?.lua;/path/to/lua-resty-lock/lib/?.lua;;";
    lua_shared_dict my_locks 100k;
    server {
        ...
        location = /t {
            content_by_lua '
                local resty_lock = require "resty.lock"
                for i = 1, 2 do
                    local lock, err = resty_lock:new("my_locks")
                    if not lock then
                        ngx.say("failed to create lock: ", err)
                    end
                    local elapsed, err = lock:lock("my_key")
                    ngx.say("lock: ", elapsed, ", ", err)
                    local ok, err = lock:unlock()
                    if not ok then
                        ngx.say("failed to unlock: ", err)
                    end
                    ngx.say("unlock: ", ok)
                end
            ';
        }
    }
}This library implements a simple mutex lock in a similar way to ngx_proxy module's proxy_cache_lock directive.
Under the hood, this library uses ngx_lua module's shared memory dictionaries. The lock waiting is nonblocking because we use stepwise ngx.sleep to poll the lock periodically.
To load this library,
- you need to specify this library's path in ngx_lua's lua_package_path directive. For example, lua_package_path "/path/to/lua-resty-lock/lib/?.lua;;";.
- you use requireto load the library into a local Lua variable:
    local lock = require "resty.lock"syntax: obj, err = lock:new(dict_name)
syntax: obj, err = lock:new(dict_name, opts)
Creates a new lock object instance by specifying the shared dictionary name (created by lua_shared_dict) and an optional options table opts.
In case of failure, returns nil and a string describing the error.
The options table accepts the following options:
- exptimeSpecifies expiration time (in seconds) for the lock entry in the shared memory dictionary. You can specify up to- 0.001seconds. Default to 30 (seconds). Even if the invoker does not call- unlockor the object holding the lock is not GC'd, the lock will be released after this time. So deadlock won't happen even when the worker process holding the lock crashes.
- timeoutSpecifies the maximal waiting time (in seconds) for the lock method calls on the current object instance. You can specify up to- 0.001seconds. Default to 5 (seconds). This option value cannot be bigger than- exptime. This timeout is to prevent a lock method call from waiting forever. You can specify- 0to make the lock method return immediately without waiting if it cannot acquire the lock right away.
- stepSpecifies the initial step (in seconds) of sleeping when waiting for the lock. Default to- 0.001(seconds). When the lock method is waiting on a busy lock, it sleeps by steps. The step size is increased by a ratio (specified by the- ratiooption) until reaching the step size limit (specified by the- max_stepoption).
- ratioSpecifies the step increasing ratio. Default to 2, that is, the step size doubles at each waiting iteration.
- max_stepSpecifies the maximal step size (i.e., sleep interval, in seconds) allowed. See also the- stepand- ratiooptions). Default to 0.5 (seconds).
syntax: elapsed, err = obj:lock(key)
Tries to lock a key across all the Nginx worker processes in the current Nginx server instance. Different keys are different locks.
The length of the key string must not be larger than 65535 bytes.
Returns the waiting time (in seconds) if the lock is successfully acquired. Otherwise returns nil and a string describing the error.
The waiting time is not from the wallclock, but rather is from simply adding up all the waiting "steps". A nonzero elapsed return value indicates that someone else has just hold this lock. But a zero return value cannot gurantee that no one else has just acquired and released the lock.
When this method is waiting on fetching the lock, no operating system threads will be blocked and the current Lua "light thread" will be automatically yielded behind the scene.
It is strongly recommended to always call the unlock() method to actively release the lock as soon as possible.
If the unlock() method is never called after this method call, the lock will get released when
- the current resty.lockobject instance is collected automatically by the Lua GC.
- the exptimefor the lock entry is reached.
Common errors for this method call is
- "timeout"
: The timeout threshold specified by the timeoutoption of the new method is exceeded.
- "locked"
: The current resty.lockobject instance is already holding a lock (not necessarily of the same key).
Other possible errors are from ngx_lua's shared dictionary API.
It is required to create different resty.lock instances for multiple simultaneous locks (i.e., those around different keys).
syntax: ok, err = obj:unlock()
Releases the lock held by the current resty.lock object instance.
Returns 1 on success. Returns nil and a string describing the error otherwise.
If you call unlock when no lock is currently held, the error "unlocked" will be returned.
syntax: ok, err = obj:expire(timeout)
Sets the TTL of the lock held by the current resty.lock object instance. This will reset the
timeout of the lock to timeout seconds if it is given, otherwise the timeout provided while
calling new will be used.
Note that the timeout supplied inside this function is independent from the timeout provided while
calling new. Calling expire() will not change the timeout value specified inside new
and subsequent expire(nil) call will still use the timeout number from new.
Returns true on success. Returns nil and a string describing the error otherwise.
If you call expire when no lock is currently held, the error "unlocked" will be returned.
It is always a bad idea to share a single resty.lock object instance across multiple ngx_lua "light threads" because the object itself is stateful and is vulnerable to race conditions. It is highly recommended to always allocate a separate resty.lock object instance for each "light thread" that needs one.
One common use case for this library is avoid the so-called "dog-pile effect", that is, to limit concurrent backend queries for the same key when a cache miss happens. This usage is similar to the standard ngx_proxy module's proxy_cache_lock directive.
The basic workflow for a cache lock is as follows:
- Check the cache for a hit with the key. If a cache miss happens, proceed to step 2.
- Instantiate a resty.lockobject, call the lock method on the key, and check the 1st return value, i.e., the lock waiting time. If it isnil, handle the error; otherwise proceed to step 3.
- Check the cache again for a hit. If it is still a miss, proceed to step 4; otherwise release the lock by calling unlock and then return the cached value.
- Query the backend (the data source) for the value, put the result into the cache, and then release the lock currently held by calling unlock.
Below is a kinda complete code example that demonstrates the idea.
    local resty_lock = require "resty.lock"
    local cache = ngx.shared.my_cache
    -- step 1:
    local val, err = cache:get(key)
    if val then
        ngx.say("result: ", val)
        return
    end
    if err then
        return fail("failed to get key from shm: ", err)
    end
    -- cache miss!
    -- step 2:
    local lock, err = resty_lock:new("my_locks")
    if not lock then
        return fail("failed to create lock: ", err)
    end
    local elapsed, err = lock:lock(key)
    if not elapsed then
        return fail("failed to acquire the lock: ", err)
    end
    -- lock successfully acquired!
    -- step 3:
    -- someone might have already put the value into the cache
    -- so we check it here again:
    val, err = cache:get(key)
    if val then
        local ok, err = lock:unlock()
        if not ok then
            return fail("failed to unlock: ", err)
        end
        ngx.say("result: ", val)
        return
    end
    --- step 4:
    local val = fetch_redis(key)
    if not val then
        local ok, err = lock:unlock()
        if not ok then
            return fail("failed to unlock: ", err)
        end
        -- FIXME: we should handle the backend miss more carefully
        -- here, like inserting a stub value into the cache.
        ngx.say("no value found")
        return
    end
    -- update the shm cache with the newly fetched value
    local ok, err = cache:set(key, val, 1)
    if not ok then
        local ok, err = lock:unlock()
        if not ok then
            return fail("failed to unlock: ", err)
        end
        return fail("failed to update shm cache: ", err)
    end
    local ok, err = lock:unlock()
    if not ok then
        return fail("failed to unlock: ", err)
    end
    ngx.say("result: ", val)Here we assume that we use the ngx_lua shared memory dictionary to cache the Redis query results and we have the following configurations in nginx.conf:
    # you may want to change the dictionary size for your cases.
    lua_shared_dict my_cache 10m;
    lua_shared_dict my_locks 1m;The my_cache dictionary is for the data cache while the my_locks dictionary is for resty.lock itself.
Several important things to note in the example above:
- You need to release the lock as soon as possible, even when some other unrelated errors happen.
- You need to update the cache with the result got from the backend before releasing the lock so other threads already waiting on the lock can get cached value when they get the lock afterwards.
- When the backend returns no value at all, we should handle the case carefully by inserting some stub value into the cache.
Some of this library's API functions may yield. So do not call those functions in ngx_lua module contexts where yielding is not supported (yet), like init_by_lua*,
init_worker_by_lua*, header_filter_by_lua*, body_filter_by_lua*, balancer_by_lua*, and log_by_lua*.
It is recommended to use the latest OpenResty bundle directly where this library
is bundled and enabled by default. At least OpenResty 1.4.2.9 is required. And you need to enable LuaJIT when building your OpenResty
bundle by passing the --with-luajit option to its ./configure script. No extra Nginx configuration is required.
If you want to use this library with your own Nginx build (with ngx_lua), then you need to ensure you are using at least ngx_lua 0.8.10. Also, You need to configure the lua_package_path directive to add the path of your lua-resty-lock and lua-resty-core source directories to ngx_lua's Lua module search path, as in
    # nginx.conf
    http {
        lua_package_path "/path/to/lua-resty-lock/lib/?.lua;/path/to/lua-resty-core/lib/?.lua;;";
        ...
    }and then load the library in Lua:
    local resty_lock = require "resty.lock"Note that this library depends on the lua-resty-core library which is also enabled by default in the OpenResty bundle.
- We should simplify the current implementation when LuaJIT 2.1 gets support for __gcmetamethod on normal Lua tables. Right now we are using an FFI cdata and a ref/unref memo table to work around this, which is rather ugly and a bit inefficient.
The openresty-en mailing list is for English speakers.
The openresty mailing list is for Chinese speakers.
Please report bugs or submit patches by
- creating a ticket on the GitHub Issue Tracker,
- or posting to the OpenResty community.
Yichun "agentzh" Zhang (章亦春) [email protected], OpenResty Inc.
This module is licensed under the BSD license.
Copyright (C) 2013-2019, by Yichun "agentzh" Zhang, OpenResty Inc.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
- 
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 
- 
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
- the ngx_lua module: https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module
- OpenResty: http://openresty.org