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Learning Elixir

Learning Elixir

By : Kenny Ballou, Kenneth Ballou
5 (1)
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Learning Elixir

Learning Elixir

5 (1)
By: Kenny Ballou, Kenneth Ballou

Overview of this book

Elixir, based on Erlang’s virtual machine and ecosystem, makes it easier to achieve scalability, concurrency, fault tolerance, and high availability goals that are pursued by developers using any programming language or programming paradigm. Elixir is a modern programming language that utilizes the benefits offered by Erlang VM without really incorporating the complex syntaxes of Erlang. Learning to program using Elixir will teach many things that are very beneficial to programming as a craft, even if at the end of the day, the programmer isn't using Elixir. This book will teach you concepts and principles important to any complex, scalable, and resilient application. Mostly, applications are historically difficult to reason about, but using the concepts in this book, they will become easy and enjoyable. It will teach you the functional programing ropes, to enable them to create better and more scalable applications, and you will explore how Elixir can help you achieve new programming heights. You will also glean a firm understanding of basics of OTP and the available generic, provided functionality for creating resilient complex systems. Furthermore, you will learn the basics of metaprogramming: modifying and extending Elixir to suite your needs.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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10
Index

Supervisors


We've mentioned process trees several times already, and it's time we discuss them in-depth.

The GNU/Linux- and Unix-based OSes are a great example of an existing process tree that can be studied and inspected. It has a root process, typically init with process ID 1, and it is the ancestor process of all the child processes. Each child process can itself create more child processes. The structure of this chain is a tree rooted at PID 1.

Process trees in Elixir/Erlang are not too dissimilar. There is a root process for the runtime and application controller. The applications loaded and started upon the startup of the VM are children of the application controller or immediate parent process.

However, OTP takes process trees to a new level with supervision trees. Supervision trees are similar to process trees except that they describe slightly different concepts. Process trees only describe the parent-child relationship between processes, whereas supervisor trees describe the class...

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