erlang-otp-behaviors

v0.1.0

Use when oTP behaviors including gen_server for stateful processes, gen_statem for state machines, supervisors for fault tolerance, gen_event for event handl...

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Purpose & Capability
The name and description (Erlang OTP behaviors: gen_server, gen_statem, supervisors, gen_event, etc.) align with the SKILL.md content, which is educational and contains sample Erlang modules and explanations. There are no unrelated requirements (no env vars, binaries, or config paths).
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SKILL.md is a documentation/instruction file with code examples and guidance about OTP patterns. It does not instruct the agent to read unrelated files, access environment variables, transmit data externally, or perform actions outside the topic. The instructions appear scoped to teaching and example code.
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This skill is a documentation-only resource containing Erlang OTP examples and patterns and does not ask for credentials or install anything — it's internally coherent. If you plan to rely on the code, review and test the Erlang modules in a safe environment (they're examples, not vetted production packages). Also note the skill source/homepage are unknown; if provenance matters to you, prefer content from a known maintainer or official docs.

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v0.1.0
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Erlang OTP Behaviors

Introduction

OTP (Open Telecom Platform) behaviors provide reusable patterns for common process types in Erlang systems. These abstractions handle complex details like message passing, error handling, and state management, allowing developers to focus on business logic while maintaining system reliability.

Behaviors define interfaces that processes must implement, with OTP handling the infrastructure. Gen_server provides client-server processes, gen_statem implements state machines, supervisors manage process lifecycles, and gen_event coordinates event distribution. Understanding these patterns is essential for production Erlang.

This skill covers gen_server for stateful processes, gen_statem for complex state machines, supervisor trees for fault tolerance, gen_event for event handling, application behavior for packaging, and patterns for building robust OTP systems.

Gen_Server Basics

Gen_server implements client-server processes with synchronous and asynchronous communication.

-module(counter_server).
-behaviour(gen_server).

%% API
-export([start_link/0, increment/0, decrement/0, get_value/0, reset/0]).

%% gen_server callbacks
-export([init/1, handle_call/3, handle_cast/2, handle_info/2, terminate/2, code_change/3]).

-define(SERVER, ?MODULE).

%% State record
-record(state, {count = 0}).

%%%===================================================================
%%% API
%%%===================================================================

start_link() ->
    gen_server:start_link({local, ?SERVER}, ?MODULE, [], []).

increment() ->
    gen_server:cast(?SERVER, increment).

decrement() ->
    gen_server:cast(?SERVER, decrement).

get_value() ->
    gen_server:call(?SERVER, get_value).

reset() ->
    gen_server:call(?SERVER, reset).

%%%===================================================================
%%% gen_server callbacks
%%%===================================================================

init([]) ->
    {ok, #state{}}.

%% Synchronous calls (with response)
handle_call(get_value, _From, State) ->
    {reply, State#state.count, State};

handle_call(reset, _From, State) ->
    {reply, ok, State#state{count = 0}};

handle_call(_Request, _From, State) ->
    {reply, ignored, State}.

%% Asynchronous casts (no response)
handle_cast(increment, State) ->
    NewCount = State#state.count + 1,
    {noreply, State#state{count = NewCount}};

handle_cast(decrement, State) ->
    NewCount = State#state.count - 1,
    {noreply, State#state{count = NewCount}};

handle_cast(_Msg, State) ->
    {noreply, State}.

%% Handle other messages
handle_info(_Info, State) ->
    {noreply, State}.

terminate(_Reason, _State) ->
    ok.

code_change(_OldVsn, State, _Extra) ->
    {ok, State}.

%%%===================================================================
%%% Complex gen_server example: Cache
%%%===================================================================

-module(cache_server).
-behaviour(gen_server).

-export([start_link/1, put/2, get/1, delete/1, clear/0, size/0]).
-export([init/1, handle_call/3, handle_cast/2, handle_info/2, terminate/2, code_change/3]).

-record(state, {
    cache = #{},
    max_size = 1000,
    hits = 0,
    misses = 0
}).

start_link(MaxSize) ->
    gen_server:start_link({local, ?MODULE}, ?MODULE, [MaxSize], []).

put(Key, Value) ->
    gen_server:call(?MODULE, {put, Key, Value}).

get(Key) ->
    gen_server:call(?MODULE, {get, Key}).

delete(Key) ->
    gen_server:cast(?MODULE, {delete, Key}).

clear() ->
    gen_server:cast(?MODULE, clear).

size() ->
    gen_server:call(?MODULE, size).

init([MaxSize]) ->
    process_flag(trap_exit, true),
    {ok, #state{max_size = MaxSize}}.

handle_call({put, Key, Value}, _From, State) ->
    Cache = State#state.cache,
    case maps:size(Cache) >= State#state.max_size of
        true ->
            {reply, {error, cache_full}, State};
        false ->
            NewCache = maps:put(Key, Value, Cache),
            {reply, ok, State#state{cache = NewCache}}
    end;

handle_call({get, Key}, _From, State) ->
    Cache = State#state.cache,
    case maps:find(Key, Cache) of
        {ok, Value} ->
            NewState = State#state{hits = State#state.hits + 1},
            {reply, {ok, Value}, NewState};
        error ->
            NewState = State#state{misses = State#state.misses + 1},
            {reply, not_found, NewState}
    end;

handle_call(size, _From, State) ->
    Size = maps:size(State#state.cache),
    {reply, Size, State};

handle_call(_Request, _From, State) ->
    {reply, {error, unknown_request}, State}.

handle_cast({delete, Key}, State) ->
    NewCache = maps:remove(Key, State#state.cache),
    {noreply, State#state{cache = NewCache}};

handle_cast(clear, State) ->
    {noreply, State#state{cache = #{}}};

handle_cast(_Msg, State) ->
    {noreply, State}.

handle_info(_Info, State) ->
    {noreply, State}.

terminate(Reason, State) ->
    io:format("Cache terminating: ~p~n", [Reason]),
    io:format("Stats - Hits: ~p, Misses: ~p~n", [State#state.hits, State#state.misses]),
    ok.

code_change(_OldVsn, State, _Extra) ->
    {ok, State}.

%%%===================================================================
%%% gen_server with timeouts
%%%===================================================================

-module(session_server).
-behaviour(gen_server).

-export([start_link/0, touch/0]).
-export([init/1, handle_call/3, handle_cast/2, handle_info/2, terminate/2, code_change/3]).

-define(TIMEOUT, 30000). % 30 seconds

-record(state, {
    last_activity,
    data = #{}
}).

start_link() ->
    gen_server:start_link({local, ?MODULE}, ?MODULE, [], []).

touch() ->
    gen_server:cast(?MODULE, touch).

init([]) ->
    {ok, #state{last_activity = erlang:system_time(millisecond)}, ?TIMEOUT}.

handle_call(_Request, _From, State) ->
    {reply, ok, State, ?TIMEOUT}.

handle_cast(touch, State) ->
    NewState = State#state{last_activity = erlang:system_time(millisecond)},
    {noreply, NewState, ?TIMEOUT};

handle_cast(_Msg, State) ->
    {noreply, State, ?TIMEOUT}.

handle_info(timeout, State) ->
    io:format("Session timed out~n"),
    {stop, normal, State};

handle_info(_Info, State) ->
    {noreply, State, ?TIMEOUT}.

terminate(_Reason, _State) ->
    ok.

code_change(_OldVsn, State, _Extra) ->
    {ok, State}.

Gen_server provides structure for stateful processes with client-server patterns.

Gen_Statem for State Machines

Gen_statem implements finite state machines with explicit state transitions.

-module(door_fsm).
-behaviour(gen_statem).

-export([start_link/0, open/0, close/0, lock/0, unlock/1]).
-export([init/1, callback_mode/0, terminate/3, code_change/4]).
-export([locked/3, unlocked/3, open/3]).

-define(CODE, "1234").

start_link() ->
    gen_statem:start_link({local, ?MODULE}, ?MODULE, [], []).

open() ->
    gen_statem:call(?MODULE, open).

close() ->
    gen_statem:call(?MODULE, close).

lock() ->
    gen_statem:call(?MODULE, lock).

unlock(Code) ->
    gen_statem:call(?MODULE, {unlock, Code}).

init([]) ->
    {ok, locked, #{}}.

callback_mode() ->
    state_functions.

%% Locked state
locked(call, {unlock, Code}, Data) when Code =:= ?CODE ->
    {next_state, unlocked, Data, [{reply, ok}]};

locked(call, {unlock, _WrongCode}, Data) ->
    {keep_state, Data, [{reply, {error, wrong_code}}]};

locked(call, _Event, Data) ->
    {keep_state, Data, [{reply, {error, door_locked}}]}.

%% Unlocked state
unlocked(call, lock, Data) ->
    {next_state, locked, Data, [{reply, ok}]};

unlocked(call, open, Data) ->
    {next_state, open, Data, [{reply, ok}]};

unlocked(call, _Event, Data) ->
    {keep_state, Data, [{reply, ok}]}.

%% Open state
open(call, close, Data) ->
    {next_state, unlocked, Data, [{reply, ok}]};

open(call, _Event, Data) ->
    {keep_state, Data, [{reply, {error, door_open}}]}.

terminate(_Reason, _State, _Data) ->
    ok.

code_change(_OldVsn, State, Data, _Extra) ->
    {ok, State, Data}.

%%%===================================================================
%%% Connection state machine
%%%===================================================================

-module(connection_fsm).
-behaviour(gen_statem).

-export([start_link/0, connect/0, disconnect/0, send/1]).
-export([init/1, callback_mode/0, terminate/3, code_change/4]).
-export([disconnected/3, connecting/3, connected/3]).

-record(data, {
    socket = undefined,
    buffer = <<>>,
    retry_count = 0
}).

start_link() ->
    gen_statem:start_link({local, ?MODULE}, ?MODULE, [], []).

connect() ->
    gen_statem:call(?MODULE, connect).

disconnect() ->
    gen_statem:call(?MODULE, disconnect).

send(Data) ->
    gen_statem:call(?MODULE, {send, Data}).

init([]) ->
    {ok, disconnected, #data{}}.

callback_mode() ->
    [state_functions, state_enter].

%% Disconnected state
disconnected(enter, _OldState, _Data) ->
    io:format("Entered disconnected state~n"),
    keep_state_and_data;

disconnected(call, connect, Data) ->
    case connect_to_server() of
        {ok, Socket} ->
            {next_state, connected, Data#data{socket = Socket, retry_count = 0},
             [{reply, ok}]};
        error ->
            NewData = Data#data{retry_count = Data#data.retry_count + 1},
            case NewData#data.retry_count < 3 of
                true ->
                    {next_state, connecting, NewData, [{reply, {error, retrying}}]};
                false ->
                    {keep_state, NewData, [{reply, {error, max_retries}}]}
            end
    end.

%% Connecting state
connecting(enter, _OldState, _Data) ->
    erlang:send_after(1000, self(), retry_connect),
    keep_state_and_data;

connecting(info, retry_connect, Data) ->
    case connect_to_server() of
        {ok, Socket} ->
            {next_state, connected, Data#data{socket = Socket, retry_count = 0}};
        error ->
            NewData = Data#data{retry_count = Data#data.retry_count + 1},
            case NewData#data.retry_count < 3 of
                true ->
                    {keep_state, NewData};
                false ->
                    {next_state, disconnected, NewData}
            end
    end.

%% Connected state
connected(enter, _OldState, _Data) ->
    io:format("Connection established~n"),
    keep_state_and_data;

connected(call, {send, Data}, StateData) ->
    case send_data(StateData#data.socket, Data) of
        ok ->
            {keep_state_and_data, [{reply, ok}]};
        error ->
            {next_state, disconnected, StateData, [{reply, {error, send_failed}}]}
    end;

connected(call, disconnect, StateData) ->
    close_connection(StateData#data.socket),
    {next_state, disconnected, StateData#data{socket = undefined}, [{reply, ok}]}.

terminate(_Reason, _State, Data) ->
    case Data#data.socket of
        undefined -> ok;
        Socket -> close_connection(Socket)
    end.

code_change(_OldVsn, State, Data, _Extra) ->
    {ok, State, Data}.

%% Helper functions
connect_to_server() ->
    {ok, socket}.

send_data(_Socket, _Data) ->
    ok.

close_connection(_Socket) ->
    ok.

Gen_statem provides structured state machine implementation with explicit transitions.

Supervisor Trees

Supervisors monitor child processes and restart them on failure for fault tolerance.

-module(my_supervisor).
-behaviour(supervisor).

-export([start_link/0]).
-export([init/1]).

start_link() ->
    supervisor:start_link({local, ?MODULE}, ?MODULE, []).

init([]) ->
    SupFlags = #{
        strategy => one_for_one,
        intensity => 5,
        period => 60
    },

    ChildSpecs = [
        #{
            id => counter_server,
            start => {counter_server, start_link, []},
            restart => permanent,
            shutdown => 5000,
            type => worker,
            modules => [counter_server]
        },
        #{
            id => cache_server,
            start => {cache_server, start_link, [1000]},
            restart => permanent,
            shutdown => 5000,
            type => worker,
            modules => [cache_server]
        }
    ],

    {ok, {SupFlags, ChildSpecs}}.

%%%===================================================================
%%% Supervisor strategies
%%%===================================================================

%% one_for_one: Restart only failed child
init_one_for_one([]) ->
    SupFlags = #{strategy => one_for_one},
    Children = [worker_spec(worker1), worker_spec(worker2)],
    {ok, {SupFlags, Children}}.

%% one_for_all: Restart all children if any fails
init_one_for_all([]) ->
    SupFlags = #{strategy => one_for_all},
    Children = [worker_spec(worker1), worker_spec(worker2)],
    {ok, {SupFlags, Children}}.

%% rest_for_one: Restart failed child and all started after it
init_rest_for_one([]) ->
    SupFlags = #{strategy => rest_for_one},
    Children = [
        worker_spec(database),
        worker_spec(cache),  % Depends on database
        worker_spec(api)     % Depends on cache
    ],
    {ok, {SupFlags, Children}}.

worker_spec(Name) ->
    #{
        id => Name,
        start => {Name, start_link, []},
        restart => permanent,
        shutdown => 5000,
        type => worker
    }.

%%%===================================================================
%%% Nested supervisors (supervision tree)
%%%===================================================================

-module(app_supervisor).
-behaviour(supervisor).

-export([start_link/0, init/1]).

start_link() ->
    supervisor:start_link({local, ?MODULE}, ?MODULE, []).

init([]) ->
    SupFlags = #{strategy => one_for_one},

    ChildSpecs = [
        #{
            id => database_sup,
            start => {database_supervisor, start_link, []},
            restart => permanent,
            type => supervisor
        },
        #{
            id => api_sup,
            start => {api_supervisor, start_link, []},
            restart => permanent,
            type => supervisor
        },
        #{
            id => worker_sup,
            start => {worker_supervisor, start_link, []},
            restart => permanent,
            type => supervisor
        }
    ],

    {ok, {SupFlags, ChildSpecs}}.

%%%===================================================================
%%% Dynamic supervision
%%%===================================================================

-module(dynamic_sup).
-behaviour(supervisor).

-export([start_link/0, start_child/1, stop_child/1]).
-export([init/1]).

start_link() ->
    supervisor:start_link({local, ?MODULE}, ?MODULE, []).

start_child(Args) ->
    supervisor:start_child(?MODULE, [Args]).

stop_child(Pid) ->
    supervisor:terminate_child(?MODULE, Pid).

init([]) ->
    SupFlags = #{
        strategy => simple_one_for_one,
        intensity => 5,
        period => 60
    },

    ChildSpec = #{
        id => worker,
        start => {worker, start_link, []},
        restart => temporary,
        shutdown => 5000,
        type => worker
    },

    {ok, {SupFlags, [ChildSpec]}}.

Supervisor trees provide automatic fault recovery and system resilience.

Best Practices

  1. Use gen_server for stateful processes to leverage OTP infrastructure and error handling

  2. Implement all callback functions even if they return default values for completeness

  3. Keep state records simple to reduce complexity and improve maintainability

  4. Use handle_cast for fire-and-forget operations without response requirements

  5. Implement proper termination in terminate/2 for resource cleanup

  6. Set appropriate timeout values to prevent indefinite blocking in calls

  7. Use gen_statem for complex state machines with many states and transitions

  8. Design supervisor hierarchies that match application component dependencies

  9. Use appropriate restart strategies based on child process relationships

  10. Test supervisor behavior by intentionally crashing children to verify recovery

Common Pitfalls

  1. Blocking in handle_call prevents processing other messages causing deadlock

  2. Not matching all message patterns causes unhandled message accumulation

  3. Forgetting to reply in handle_call leaves callers waiting indefinitely

  4. Using wrong supervision strategy causes unnecessary process restarts

  5. Not setting process_flag trap_exit prevents graceful termination handling

  6. Creating circular dependencies in supervisor trees causes startup failures

  7. Using temporary restart for critical processes allows permanent failures

  8. Not implementing code_change prevents hot code upgrades

  9. Storing large state in gen_server causes memory issues

  10. Not handling timeout in state machines allows infinite blocking

When to Use This Skill

Apply gen_server for any stateful process requiring client-server interaction.

Use gen_statem when implementing protocols or systems with explicit state transitions.

Leverage supervisors for all applications requiring fault tolerance and automatic recovery.

Build supervisor trees to structure complex applications with multiple components.

Use OTP behaviors for production systems requiring reliability and maintainability.

Resources

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