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pyworker/workers/null/README.md
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Rob Ballantyne 3668d948be Simplify null pyworker README intro to serverless terminology
Drop the "autoscaler provisions a worker if none is free" phrasing in
favor of the simpler "request comes in and you get a worker; release and
it scales back down."

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-11 17:02:41 +01:00

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Null PyWorker

A PyWorker that does nothing — it does not forward requests to any model server. Each HTTP POST to /reserve simply marks the worker as busy and holds the request open until the user's queue consumer (running locally on the instance) calls /release on the internal control port — or a safety timeout elapses.

When to use it

Use this worker when you want to drive Vast Serverless autoscaling but you do not want inbound requests to reach a model on the instance. Typical setup:

  • You already have a job queue on your own infrastructure (Redis, SQS, NATS, etc.).
  • A separate worker process on the Vast instance pulls work from that queue directly. The Vast PyWorker is not involved in the request/response path.
  • You want one Vast worker per active queue consumer, and you want the Serverless autoscaler to spin instances up and down based on demand on your side.

A request comes in and you get a worker. Release and it scales back down.

POST to /reserve and serverless gives you a worker, held busy for the lifetime of the request. When your queue consumer is done, POST to /release on the internal port (127.0.0.1:18999 by default) and the held /reserve returns 200.

How it works

  • allow_parallel_requests=False, so one in-flight /reserve fully occupies the worker. Any second request that lands on the same worker queues (or is rejected with 429 after max_queue_time), pushing the autoscaler to provision more workers.
  • lifecycle is used instead of model_log_file, so there is no log to tail and no model server to start. The worker reports itself ready immediately after the (trivial) benchmark.
  • The /reserve handler is a remote_function rather than an HTTP proxy, so the framework never tries to forward the request anywhere — it just awaits an internal asyncio.Event.
  • An internal aiohttp control server, bound to 127.0.0.1, hosts /release (and, when no external healthcheck URL is provided, a stub /health).

Healthchecking

The framework periodically GETs a healthcheck URL after startup; if it ever fails after the first success, the worker is marked errored and the autoscaler can decommission it. Two modes:

  • Stub (default) — the internal control server also answers GET /health with 200. This is just enough to satisfy the framework while you wire up real consumers.
  • Point at your queue consumer (recommended) — set BACKEND_HEALTH_URL=http://127.0.0.1:9090/health (absolute URL) and the pyworker will healthcheck your consumer instead. If your consumer process crashes, the autoscaler will see the worker as broken.

Run your queue consumer on the instance alongside the PyWorker, expose a plain /health endpoint on it, then set BACKEND_HEALTH_URL accordingly in your template.

API

POST /reserve (external port, signed by the autoscaler)

Holds the worker busy until the reservation ends.

Request body (all fields optional):

{ "duration": 600 }
  • duration (seconds, optional): safety cap on how long to hold the reservation if no /release arrives. Capped by MAX_RESERVATION_SECONDS (env var, default 3600). If omitted, defaults to that cap.

Behavior:

  • Returns 200 with {"released": "explicit", ...} when the local consumer POSTs /release on the internal port. This is the intended happy path — the request is counted as a success in metrics.
  • Returns 200 with {"released": "duration_elapsed", "duration": <n>} if the duration cap fires (safety net for a stuck consumer).
  • Returns 499 if the external client disconnects (counted as cancelled in metrics — avoid this; use /release instead).
  • Returns 429 if the worker is already busy and queue wait would exceed max_queue_time (30s by default).

POST /release (internal port, localhost-only)

Marks the active reservation as done. No body required. Idempotent:

curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:18999/release

Responses:

  • 200 {"released": true} — active reservation was released; the held /reserve will return {"released": "explicit"}.
  • 200 {"released": false, "reason": "no active reservation"} — nothing was in flight, no-op.

Only processes on the Vast instance can reach this port. There is no authentication on it.

Environment variables

  • MAX_RESERVATION_SECONDS — upper bound on how long a single /reserve call can hold a worker if /release is never called. Defaults to 3600.
  • BACKEND_HEALTH_URL — absolute URL the framework should healthcheck (e.g. http://127.0.0.1:9090/health). When set, the stub /health route is not registered on the internal server. When unset, the built-in stub is used.
  • NULL_CONTROL_PORT — port for the internal control server (hosts /release and optionally /health). Defaults to 18999.

Deploying on Vast Serverless

  1. Create a Serverless endpoint and point PYWORKER_REPO at this repository (or your fork).
  2. Set BACKEND=null in the template so start_server.sh runs workers.null.worker.
  3. There is no model server to configure; you can omit model-related env vars entirely.
  4. Run your own queue-consumer process on the instance alongside the PyWorker. When the consumer finishes its work it should:
    curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:18999/release
    
    so the held /reserve returns success and the autoscaler can scale the worker down cleanly.

Client example

python -m workers.null.client --endpoint <ENDPOINT_NAME> --duration 600

This POSTs once to /reserve, which causes exactly one worker to be provisioned (if none is free) and held busy. To exercise the full flow, shell into the worker and run curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:18999/release — the client will return with {"released": "explicit", ...}.

Notes and caveats

  • The HTTP connection from the external caller must stay open for the full reservation. Make sure your client and any intermediate proxies allow long-lived requests (disable idle timeouts, retries, and connection reuse if necessary).
  • If your client retries on timeout, you may end up provisioning duplicate workers. Configure duration generously and rely on /release from the consumer to end reservations promptly.
  • Avoid disconnecting the external /reserve request as a way to release — that produces a 499 and is counted as a cancellation in Vast metrics. Always release via POST /release on the internal port.
  • There is no streaming / heartbeat in the response; the request returns exactly once, when the reservation ends.