If checkLaunch triggers evictions, it must wait
for these eviction to complete before returning.
Premature returning from checkLaunch will cause
checkLaunch to be called again by hot launcher.
This causes checkLaunch to receive an out of
capacity error and causes a 503.
The evictor is also improved with this PR and it
provides a slice of channels to wait on if evictions
are taking place.
Eviction token deletion is performed *after*
resource token close to ensure that once an
eviction is done, resource token is also free.
* fn: agent eviction revisited
Previously, the hot-container eviction logic used
number of waiters of cpu/mem resources to decide to
evict a container. An ejection ticker used to wake up
its associated container every 1 sec to reasses system
load based on waiter count. However, this does not work
for non-blocking agent since there are no waiters for
non-blocking mode.
Background on blocking versus non-blocking agent:
*) Blocking agent holds a request until the
the request is serviced or client times out. It assumes
the request can be eventually serviced when idle
containers eject themselves or busy containers finish
their work.
*) Non-blocking mode tries to limit this wait time.
However non-blocking agent has never been truly
non-blocking. This simply means that we only
make a request wait if we take some action in
the system. Non-blocking agents are configured with
a much higher hot poll frequency to make the system
more responsive as well as to handle cases where an
too-busy event is missed by the request. This is because
the communication between hot-launcher and waiting
requests are not 1-1 and lossy if another request
arrives for the same slot queue and receives a
too-busy response before the original request.
Introducing an evictor where each hot container can
register itself, if it is idle for more than 1 seconds.
Upon registry, these idle containers become eligible
for eviction.
In hot container launcher, in non-blocking mode,
before we attempt to emit a too-busy response, now
we attempt an evict. If this is successful, then
we wait some more. This could result in requests
waiting for more than they used to only if a
container was evicted. For blocking-mode, the
hot launcher uses hot-poll period to assess if
a request has waited for too long, then eviction
is triggered.