The only requirement for a master and slave process to work together is that they both have a common /tmp directory. Within this a /blur directory is created and used by both processes. All communication and synchronisation is done through files in this directory. There can be many slave processes running concurrently in order to improve performance.
Within the todo/ directory, the master process creates a file for each block to be processed. Starting at block.0.a, the name of each file denotes the block number and the version id. The version id is used to indicate the current version of a block being worked on. This is to allow the master process to ask another slave process to work on a block if it believes the current one has crashed or is taking too long. Once a block has been processed, the master removes the file from todo/.
Each slave process reads the list of files in todo/ and for each block in turn, attempts to create a directory with the same name e.g. block.1.a/ in /tmp/blur. It is not possible to create a directory if it already exists and as the slave will only process blocks for which it has been able to create a directory, no two slave processes can be simultaneously working on the same block. Once a slave has managed to create a directory, it processes the relevant block of the image and writes the result to img.bit in the directory. Having completed a block, the slave creates a file called done in order to let the master process know that it can read the completed result.
The master process keeps track of all the blocks being processed and if any of them have not been completed after a certain time, it creates a new file for that block in todo/ with a new version id. This guarantees that all blocks will be processed as long as at least one working slave process remains. Once all the blocks have been processed, the master process removes all the files created in /tmp/blur. Each slave, upon seeing that the working file has gone, will then exit.
BLUR(1 ) | Rev: Thu Feb 15 14:42:47 GMT 2007 |