PHP shared memory on windows server - php

I want to store small array (aprox 1Mb) for a massive access load.
I don't want to use database.
I don't need to secure that data.
I will change this array only one-time per minute, but I have thousands of access each minute for read that data.
Actually I'm using PHP shared memory segment shmop which works fine. But often causes a PHP exeption which results by Apache restart.
Do exist some way to do the same memory operations in windows by any other PHP module?
Do exist better way to handle this data for a fast access?
I don't care about security or reliability of that stored data.
how i work with shared memory variable ($shm):
visitor calls $shm.
if ($shm exists, and is not older than 1 minute): return $shm;
else: create new $shm, return $shm;
visitor2 calls $shm.
if ($shm exists, and is not older than 1 minute): return $shm;
else: create new $shm, return $shm;
etc ...
Apache 2.4.23 (Win64) PHP 5.5.3

Related

can PHP know details of ALL PHP environment just now?

using sys_getloadavg() we can get server load,
using memory_get_usage() we get MEM asigned to THIS_script.php
however:
is possible some similar to this program using PURE code PHP (not shell, not bash):
<?php
function get_ALL_process_PHP_running_just_now(){
...
...
... get memory of ALL process PHP
return array_process_number();
}
then obtain some similar to:
total scripts running: 35
users running process: 6
process with more of 5 minutes: 2
memory GLOBAL asigned to all process PHP: 8GB
etc...
is possible obtain that info with "admin.php" ?
As far as i know there is no build-in function that pieces together that data, however the functions you refer to (sys_getloadavg, memory_get_usage) are just wrappers around the /proc filesystem (on linux anyway, i don't think too many of them have windows counterparts).
The ordinary filesystem functions, which you use to read files, can be used to read the /proc filesystem, which in turn contains all the information you might want.

PHP / C++: shm_open() error when sharing memory

I've been all over the internet looking for an answer to my problem. Here is the setup, I am running embedded Linux (created with Yocto) which is running the Lighttpd web server with PHP5. In my C++ code I have the following:
shared = shm_open(SHARED_FILE_NAME, O_RDWR | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, 0666);
ftruncate(shared, FILE_SIZE);
map = mmap(...);
// shm_unlink() isn't called until my C++ thread ends.
Everything works well and I do not get any errors and other C++ processes and threads are also able to access the shared memory and map without any problems (I have one writer thread and all other threads and processes do a read only on the memory). The memory is used as a ring buffer where the writing thread is updating data very quickly. The problems start to occur when trying to access that same memory in PHP. In PHP I do (need read only):
<?php
$shm_key = ftok("/dev/shm/shared_file.shm", 'c');
$shm_id = shm_open($shm_key, "a", 0, 0);
...
?>
When looking at the value from ftok() it returns a non -1 number which means it did not fail. I do get a fail on the PHP's shm_open() call which reads:
Warning: shmop_open(): unable to attach or create shared memory segment in /www/pages/shared.php on line 9
I've changed the permission of the file with chmod 777 /dev/shm/shared.shm just to rule out any file permission issues. Also when I run ipcs -m I do not get any listings for shared memory segments, yet my C++ code is running just fine. I've also looked for SELinux and tried entering setenforce 0 but I get a response of -sh: setenforce: command not found so I figure this isn't an issue. I've also tried running wget <local ip address>/shared.php to see if running locally would return the correct data but when looking at the file which was returned it had the same error messages.
I am looking to be able to have a web page on my embedded system read this shared memory and stream back chunks of binary to feed a graph when a request comes in (not interested in web sockets at the time). I am able to get named pipes to work across PHP and C++ just fine but I need shared memory for this application and the shared memory access seems to be troublesome. Any help is appreciated.
I'm developing PHP functions that need to use C Shared Memory. As your code, my C functions use shm_open, mmap, etc.. and I guess to use PHP ftok(), shmop_open() to access the C's shared memory but this PHP functions don't work.
The two area are not compatible. I found different properties of the two areas in this documents http://menehune.opt.wfu.edu/Kokua/More_SGI/007-2478-008/sgi_html/ch03.html:
C (with shm_open, mmap, like the Straton source code) use “POSIX Shared Memory”
PHP (with shmop_* functions) use “System V Shared Memory”
I suggest you to try with Sync http://php.net/manual/en/book.sync.php: you need the PECL sync extension.

General error: 5 database is locked in PDO using sqlite [duplicate]

When I enter this query:
sqlite> DELETE FROM mails WHERE (id = 71);
SQLite returns this error:
SQL error: database is locked
How do I unlock the database so this query will work?
In windows you can try this program http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/opened_files_view.html to find out the process is handling db file. Try closed that program for unlock database
In Linux and macOS you can do something similar, for example, if your locked file is development.db:
$ fuser development.db
This command will show what process is locking the file:
> development.db: 5430
Just kill the process...
kill -9 5430
...And your database will be unlocked.
I caused my sqlite db to become locked by crashing an app during a write. Here is how i fixed it:
echo ".dump" | sqlite old.db | sqlite new.db
Taken from: http://random.kakaopor.hu/how-to-repair-an-sqlite-database
The SQLite wiki DatabaseIsLocked page offers an explanation of this error message. It states, in part, that the source of contention is internal (to the process emitting the error). What this page doesn't explain is how SQLite decides that something in your process holds a lock and what conditions could lead to a false positive.
This error code occurs when you try to do two incompatible things with a database at the same time from the same database connection.
Changes related to file locking introduced in v3 and may be useful for future readers and can be found here: File Locking And Concurrency In SQLite Version 3
If you want to remove a "database is locked" error then follow these steps:
Copy your database file to some other location.
Replace the database with the copied database. This will dereference all processes which were accessing your database file.
Deleting the -journal file sounds like a terrible idea. It's there to allow sqlite to roll back the database to a consistent state after a crash. If you delete it while the database is in an inconsistent state, then you're left with a corrupted database. Citing a page from the sqlite site:
If a crash or power loss does occur and a hot journal is left on the disk, it is essential that the original database file and the hot journal remain on disk with their original names until the database file is opened by another SQLite process and rolled back. [...]
We suspect that a common failure mode for SQLite recovery happens like this: A power failure occurs. After power is restored, a well-meaning user or system administrator begins looking around on the disk for damage. They see their database file named "important.data". This file is perhaps familiar to them. But after the crash, there is also a hot journal named "important.data-journal". The user then deletes the hot journal, thinking that they are helping to cleanup the system. We know of no way to prevent this other than user education.
The rollback is supposed to happen automatically the next time the database is opened, but it will fail if the process can't lock the database. As others have said, one possible reason for this is that another process currently has it open. Another possibility is a stale NFS lock, if the database is on an NFS volume. In that case, a workaround is to replace the database file with a fresh copy that isn't locked on the NFS server (mv database.db original.db; cp original.db database.db). Note that the sqlite FAQ recommends caution regarding concurrent access to databases on NFS volumes, because of buggy implementations of NFS file locking.
I can't explain why deleting a -journal file would let you lock a database that you couldn't before. Is that reproducible?
By the way, the presence of a -journal file doesn't necessarily mean that there was a crash or that there are changes to be rolled back. Sqlite has a few different journal modes, and in PERSIST or TRUNCATE modes it leaves the -journal file in place always, and changes the contents to indicate whether or not there are partial transactions to roll back.
the SQLite db files are just files, so the first step would be to make sure it isn't read-only. The other thing to do is to make sure that you don't have some sort of GUI SQLite DB viewer with the DB open. You could have the DB open in another shell, or your code may have the DB open. Typically you would see this if a different thread, or application such as SQLite Database Browser has the DB open for writing.
My lock was caused by the system crashing and not by a hanging process. To resolve this, I simply renamed the file then copied it back to its original name and location.
Using a Linux shell that would be:
mv mydata.db temp.db
cp temp.db mydata.db
If a process has a lock on an SQLite DB and crashes, the DB stays locked permanently. That's the problem. It's not that some other process has a lock.
I had this problem just now, using an SQLite database on a remote server, stored on an NFS mount. SQLite was unable to obtain a lock after the remote shell session I used had crashed while the database was open.
The recipes for recovery suggested above did not work for me (including the idea to first move and then copy the database back). But after copying it to a non-NFS system, the database became usable and not data appears to have been lost.
Some functions, like INDEX'ing, can take a very long time - and it locks the whole database while it runs. In instances like that, it might not even use the journal file!
So the best/only way to check if your database is locked because a process is ACTIVELY writing to it (and thus you should leave it the hell alone until its completed its operation) is to md5 (or md5sum on some systems) the file twice.
If you get a different checksum, the database is being written, and you really really REALLY don't want to kill -9 that process because you can easily end up with a corrupt table/database if you do.
I'll reiterate, because it's important - the solution is NOT to find the locking program and kill it - it's to find if the database has a write lock for a good reason, and go from there. Sometimes the correct solution is just a coffee break.
The only way to create this locked-but-not-being-written-to situation is if your program runs BEGIN EXCLUSIVE, because it wanted to do some table alterations or something, then for whatever reason never sends an END afterwards, and the process never terminates. All three conditions being met is highly unlikely in any properly-written code, and as such 99 times out of 100 when someone wants to kill -9 their locking process, the locking process is actually locking your database for a good reason. Programmers don't typically add the BEGIN EXCLUSIVE condition unless they really need to, because it prevents concurrency and increases user complaints. SQLite itself only adds it when it really needs to (like when indexing).
Finally, the 'locked' status does not exist INSIDE the file as several answers have stated - it resides in the Operating System's kernel. The process which ran BEGIN EXCLUSIVE has requested from the OS a lock be placed on the file. Even if your exclusive process has crashed, your OS will be able to figure out if it should maintain the file lock or not!! It is not possible to end up with a database which is locked but no process is actively locking it!!
When it comes to seeing which process is locking the file, it's typically better to use lsof rather than fuser (this is a good demonstration of why: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/94316/fuser-vs-lsof-to-check-files-in-use). Alternatively if you have DTrace (OSX) you can use iosnoop on the file.
I added "Pooling=true" to connection string and it worked.
This error can be thrown if the file is in a remote folder, like a shared folder. I changed the database to a local directory and it worked perfectly.
I found the documentation of the various states of locking in SQLite to be very helpful. Michael, if you can perform reads but can't perform writes to the database, that means that a process has gotten a RESERVED lock on your database but hasn't executed the write yet. If you're using SQLite3, there's a new lock called PENDING where no more processes are allowed to connect but existing connections can sill perform reads, so if this is the issue you should look at that instead.
I have such problem within the app, which access to SQLite from 2 connections - one was read-only and second for writing and reading. It looks like that read-only connection blocked writing from second connection. Finally, it is turns out that it is required to finalize or, at least, reset prepared statements IMMEDIATELY after use. Until prepared statement is opened, it caused to database was blocked for writing.
DON'T FORGET CALL:
sqlite_reset(xxx);
or
sqlite_finalize(xxx);
I just had something similar happen to me - my web application was able to read from the database, but could not perform any inserts or updates. A reboot of Apache solved the issue at least temporarily.
It'd be nice, however, to be able to track down the root cause.
lsof command on my Linux environment helped me to figure it out that a process was hanging keeping the file open.
Killed the process and problem was solved.
This link solve the problem. : When Sqlite gives : Database locked error
It solved my problem may be useful to you.
And you can use begin transaction and end transaction to not make database locked in future.
Should be a database's internal problem...
For me it has been manifested after trying to browse database with "SQLite manager"...
So, if you can't find another process connect to database and you just can't fix it,
just try this radical solution:
Provide to export your tables (You can use "SQLite manager" on Firefox)
If the migration alter your database scheme delete the last failed migration
Rename your "database.sqlite" file
Execute "rake db:migrate" to make a new working database
Provide to give the right permissions to database for table's importing
Import your backed up tables
Write the new migration
Execute it with "rake db:migrate"
In my experience, this error is caused by: You opened multiple connections.
e.g.:
1 or more sqlitebrowser (GUI)
1 or more electron thread
rails thread
I am nore sure about the details of SQLITE3 how to handle the multiple thread/request, but when I close the sqlitebrowser and electron thread, then rails is running well and won't block any more.
I ran into this same problem on Mac OS X 10.5.7 running Python scripts from a terminal session. Even though I had stopped the scripts and the terminal window was sitting at the command prompt, it would give this error the next time it ran. The solution was to close the terminal window and then open it up again. Doesn't make sense to me, but it worked.
I just had the same error.
After 5 minets google-ing I found that I didun't closed one shell witch were using the db.
Just close it and try again ;)
I had the same problem. Apparently the rollback function seems to overwrite the db file with the journal which is the same as the db file but without the most recent change. I've implemented this in my code below and it's been working fine since then, whereas before my code would just get stuck in the loop as the database stayed locked.
Hope this helps
my python code
##############
#### Defs ####
##############
def conn_exec( connection , cursor , cmd_str ):
done = False
try_count = 0.0
while not done:
try:
cursor.execute( cmd_str )
done = True
except sqlite.IntegrityError:
# Ignore this error because it means the item already exists in the database
done = True
except Exception, error:
if try_count%60.0 == 0.0: # print error every minute
print "\t" , "Error executing command" , cmd_str
print "Message:" , error
if try_count%120.0 == 0.0: # if waited for 2 miutes, roll back
print "Forcing Unlock"
connection.rollback()
time.sleep(0.05)
try_count += 0.05
def conn_comit( connection ):
done = False
try_count = 0.0
while not done:
try:
connection.commit()
done = True
except sqlite.IntegrityError:
# Ignore this error because it means the item already exists in the database
done = True
except Exception, error:
if try_count%60.0 == 0.0: # print error every minute
print "\t" , "Error executing command" , cmd_str
print "Message:" , error
if try_count%120.0 == 0.0: # if waited for 2 miutes, roll back
print "Forcing Unlock"
connection.rollback()
time.sleep(0.05)
try_count += 0.05
##################
#### Run Code ####
##################
connection = sqlite.connect( db_path )
cursor = connection.cursor()
# Create tables if database does not exist
conn_exec( connection , cursor , '''CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS fix (path TEXT PRIMARY KEY);''')
conn_exec( connection , cursor , '''CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS tx (path TEXT PRIMARY KEY);''')
conn_exec( connection , cursor , '''CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS completed (fix DATE, tx DATE);''')
conn_comit( connection )
One common reason for getting this exception is when you are trying to do a write operation while still holding resources for a read operation. For example, if you SELECT from a table, and then try to UPDATE something you've selected without closing your ResultSet first.
I was having "database is locked" errors in a multi-threaded application as well, which appears to be the SQLITE_BUSY result code, and I solved it with setting sqlite3_busy_timeout to something suitably long like 30000.
(On a side-note, how odd that on a 7 year old question nobody found this out already! SQLite really is a peculiar and amazing project...)
Before going down the reboot option, it is worthwhile to see if you can find the user of the sqlite database.
On Linux, one can employ fuser to this end:
$ fuser database.db
$ fuser database.db-journal
In my case I got the following response:
philip 3556 4700 0 10:24 pts/3 00:00:01 /usr/bin/python manage.py shell
Which showed that I had another Python program with pid 3556 (manage.py) using the database.
An old question, with a lot of answers, here's the steps I've recently followed reading the answers above, but in my case the problem was due to cifs resource sharing. This case is not reported previously, so hope it helps someone.
Check no connections are left open in your java code.
Check no other processes are using your SQLite db file with lsof.
Check the user owner of your running jvm process has r/w permissions over the file.
Try to force the lock mode on the connection opening with
final SQLiteConfig config = new SQLiteConfig();
config.setReadOnly(false);
config.setLockingMode(LockingMode.NORMAL);
connection = DriverManager.getConnection(url, config.toProperties());
If your using your SQLite db file over a NFS shared folder, check this point of the SQLite faq, and review your mounting configuration options to make sure your avoiding locks, as described here:
//myserver /mymount cifs username=*****,password=*****,iocharset=utf8,sec=ntlm,file,nolock,file_mode=0700,dir_mode=0700,uid=0500,gid=0500 0 0
I got this error in a scenario a little different from the ones describe here.
The SQLite database rested on a NFS filesystem shared by 3 servers. On 2 of the servers I was able do run queries on the database successfully, on the third one thought I was getting the "database is locked" message.
The thing with this 3rd machine was that it had no space left on /var. Everytime I tried to run a query in ANY SQLite database located in this filesystem I got the "database is locked" message and also this error over the logs:
Aug 8 10:33:38 server01 kernel: lockd: cannot monitor 172.22.84.87
And this one also:
Aug 8 10:33:38 server01 rpc.statd[7430]: Failed to insert: writing /var/lib/nfs/statd/sm/other.server.name.com: No space left on device
Aug 8 10:33:38 server01 rpc.statd[7430]: STAT_FAIL to server01 for SM_MON of 172.22.84.87
After the space situation was handled everything got back to normal.
If you're trying to unlock the Chrome database to view it with SQLite, then just shut down Chrome.
Windows
%userprofile%\Local Settings\Application Data\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Web Data
or
%userprofile%\Local Settings\Application Data\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Chrome Web Data
Mac
~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Web Data
From your previous comments you said a -journal file was present.
This could mean that you have opened and (EXCLUSIVE?) transaction and have not yet committed the data. Did your program or some other process leave the -journal behind??
Restarting the sqlite process will look at the journal file and clean up any uncommitted actions and remove the -journal file.
As Seun Osewa has said, sometimes a zombie process will sit in the terminal with a lock aquired, even if you don't think it possible. Your script runs, crashes, and you go back to the prompt, but there's a zombie process spawned somewhere by a library call, and that process has the lock.
Closing the terminal you were in (on OSX) might work. Rebooting will work. You could look for "python" processes (for example) that are not doing anything, and kill them.

How can I make my PHP extension programmed in C++ remember global variables?

I am using the PHP-CPP library to develop PHP extensions.
When I try the following in C++:
#include <phpcpp.h>
static int number=0;
Php::Value get_num()
{
number++;
return number;
}
And the following in PHP:
<?php
echo get_num();
?>
Everything works as expected for awhile, but then the "number" variable randomly resets back to zero. Also, pressing CTRL+F5 in Firefox, the "number" variable again resets back to zero.
How do I avoid "number" from resetting?
A global C++ variable in a PHP extension is not persistent.
It all depends on the setup of your webserver. If you use Apache for example (and most others have a similar setup), there are multiple instances of the webserver process running, all serving pageviews. Each of these instances has its own global 'number' variable. That's why you do not see the number incrementing as you had expected: not every pageview is served by the same Apache instance.
On top of that: when the load of your webserver goes up or goes down, new Apache processes are started and stopped, and new 'number' variables are created with an initial value of 0. Also, an Apache process normally restarts after a certain fixed number of pageviews (set in the apache configuration file), which also sets the counter back to zero.
In your own small testing environment, you do not run into this problem that fast, because the load is so low that it can all be handled by a single instance of the webserver, but on a live busy server you will certainly encounter this.
If you want to use a persistent counter, you will have to store it somewhere else, for example in a file or database.

How do you monitor a file on a web server and log every access, ideally by IP address, in a database (MySQL)?

For security reasons, there is a certain file on my web server I want to be able to monitor access to. Every time it is accessed, I want to have an entry added to a MySQL log table. This way, I can actively respond to security breaches from within the web application.
The Apache HTTP Server provides logging capabilities.
The server access log records all requests processed by the server. The location and content of the access log are controlled by the CustomLog directive. The LogFormat directive can be used to simplify the selection of the contents of the logs. This section describes how to configure the server to record information in the access log.
It can be used to write the log to a file. If you need to store in a MySQL table, run a cron job to import the file into the database.
Further information on logs is here:
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/1.3/logs.html#accesslog
Its been removed from PHP7 but for anyone else who finds this post there are a number of options within the FAM (now PECL) extension. This function http://php.net/manual/en/function.fam-monitor-file.php seems to describe what is needed here
Additionally you can access a lot of detail about the files status with http://php.net/manual/en/function.stat.php. Put this within a cron or sleep driven script and you can then see when its changed.
The file may be accessed from three points:
Direct filesystem access
Call to the url like www.example.com/importantfile.jpg (apache serves the file)
Call to some php script on your server www.example.com/readfile.php?name=important.jpg which reads the file.
If you are concerned only about case 2 then check the solution of Rishi Dua.
But if you want more than that then you should write a script with fileatime() call and then add it to cron to run every minute for example.
The pseudocode for it:
<?php
$previous_access_time = get_previous_access_time(); // get the previous last access time from you remembered in db or textfile or whatever
$current_access_time = fileatime('path/to/very_important_file.jpg');
if ($previous_access_time != $current_access_time) {
log_access_to_db();
save_new_access_time(); // update the new last access time
}
This solution however has some problems.
First is that you can get only the access time but not the user-id or ip of who accessed the file.
Second is that as the manual says, some Unix system do not update the access time and so the solution would fail.
If you are seriously concerned about the security, then I think you have to check for some audit util like this

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