I am developing a website using Ruby on Rails and I am doing a bit of rough planning. I can and have deployed rails websites before, just adding to the database and retrieving from database based on my use case, but this time around, its a bit different. I am adding to database but i will need the data to be processed on the server before the data is being sent back to the user or when he decides to retrieve it. What i do not get is how i am going to process the data on the server. I know this doesnt follow the normal pattern for asking questions, i would search for it with google except I dont know what I am looking for. A nudge in the right direction will do.
What I want to do exactly is have users register and click a button (request) which puts the users id in an array , what I need to do on the server is to randomly or not randomly connect two users based on some qualities, this program keeps running infinitely, such that the user can come back later to check if he has been connected with someone already.
This kind of logic typically belongs in the controller, or perhaps on the models. You should read the Rails docs, particularly on controllers: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/action_controller_overview.html
I think you may find a lot of benefit from running a background job for this that is constantly looking for matches. You could have an infinitely running Sidekiq process that is queued up with users. Then once one finishes, just fire it up again.
Or you could create a rake task that does a User.find_each and have it run again when the task finishes. But this would make things blocking if you end up having a lot of users. I'd recommend one job per user and just bloat the system with them. This way you can scale out both horizontally and vertically.
You'll want to learn about ActiveJob and Sidekiq to help achieve what you're looking for :). Sidekiq requires Redis which you'll also have to setup as well. I'd recommend the redis-rails gem to help with the integration.
To go off BenMorganIO's answer, I think this is a job for a background worker. This is a job that is processed in the background, so it doesn't slow up your app. A good example of this is firing off an email in the background.
There are primarily 3 gems I've seen for this:
delayed_job
Resque
Sidekiq (just celebrated 5 years!)
Those should point you in the right direction.
Related
I'm writing a Rails web service that interacts with various pieces of hardware scattered throughout the country.
When a call is made to the web service, the Rails app then attempts to contact the appropriate piece of hardware, get the needed information, and reply to the web client. The time between the client's call and the reply may be up to 10 seconds, depending upon lots of factors.
I do not want to split the web service call in two (ask for information, answer immediately with a pending reply, then force another api call to get the actual results).
I basically see two options. Either run JRuby and use multithreading or else run several regular Ruby instances and hope that not many people try to use the service at a time. JRuby seems like the much better solution, but it still doesn't seem to be mainstream and have out of the box support at Heroku and EngineYard. The multiple instance solution seems like a total kludge.
1) Am I right about my two options? Is there a better one I'm missing?
2) Is there an easy deployment option for JRuby?
I do not want to split the web service call in two (ask for information, answer immediately with a pending reply, then force another api call to get the actual results).
From an engineering perspective, this seems like it would be the best alternative.
Why don't you want to do it?
There's a third option: If you host your Rails app with Passenger and enable global queueing, you can do this transparently. I have some actions that take several minutes, with no issues (caveat: some browsers may time out, but that may not be a concern for you).
If you're worried about browser timeout, or you cannot control the deployment environment, you may want to process it in the background:
User requests data
You enter request into a queue
Your web service returns a "ticket" identifier to check the progress
A background process processes the jobs in the queue
The user polls back, referencing the "ticket" id
As far as hosting in JRuby, I've deployed a couple of small internal applications using the glassfish gem, but I'm not sure how much I would trust it for customer-facing apps. Just make sure you run config.threadsafe! in production.rb. I've heard good things about Trinidad, too.
You can also run the web service call in a delayed background job so that it's not hogging up a web-server and can even be run on a separate physical box. This is also a much more scaleable approach. If you make the web call using AJAX then you can ping the server every second or two to see if your results are ready, that way your client is not held in limbo while the results are being calculated and the request does not time out.
I'm looking to create a custom daemon that will run various database tasks such as delaying mailings and user notifications (each notice is a separate row in the notifications table). I don't want to use script/runner or rake to do these tasks because it is possible that some of the tasks only require the create of one or two database rows or thousands of rows depending on the task. I don't want the overhead of launching a ruby process or loading the entire rails framework for each operation. I plan to keep this daemon in memory full time.
To create this daemon I would like to use my models from my ruby on rails application. I have a number of rails plugins such as acts_as_tree and AASM that I will need loaded if I where to use the models. Some of the plugins I need to load are custom hacks on ActiveRecord::Base that I've created. (I am willing to accept removing or recoding some of the plugins if they need components from other parts of rails.)
My questions are
Is this a good idea?
And - Is this possible to do in a way that doesn't have me manually including each file in my models and plugins?
If not a good idea
What is a good alternative?
(I am not apposed to doing writing my own SQL queries but I would have to add database constraints and a separate user for the daemon to prevent any stupid accidents. Given my lack of familiarity with configuring a database, I would like to use active record as a crutch.)
It sounds like your concern is that you don't want to pay the time- or memory- cost to spin up the rails stack every time your task needs to be run? If you plan on keeping the daemon running full-time, as you say, you can just daemonize a process that has loaded your rails stack and will only have to pay that memory- or time-related penalty for loading the stack one time, when the daemon starts up.
Async_worker is a good example of this sort of pattern: It uses beanstalk to pass messages to one or more worker processes that are each just daemons that have loaded the full rails stack.
One thing you have to pay attention to when doing this is that you'll need to restart your daemonized processes upon a deploy so they can reload your updated rails stack. I'm using this for a url-shortener app (the single async worker process I have running sits around waiting to save referral data after the visitor gets redirected), and it works well, I just have an after:deploy capistrano task that restarts any async worker(s).
You can load up one aspect of Rails such as ActiveRecord but when you get right down to it the cost of loading the entire environment is not much more than just loading ActiveRecord itself. You could certainly just not include aspects like ActionMailer or some of the side bits but I'm going to guess that you're not going to see much win out of it.
What I would suggest instead is either running through runner/console like you said you didn't want to but rather than bootstrapping each time, try to batch things so that you're doing 1000 at a time instead of 1. There are a lot of projects that use this style, some of the bulk mailers spring to mind if you want examples. DJ (delayed_job) does similar by storing a bit in the database saying that this code needs to be run at some point in the future using the environment stack but it tries to batch together as much as it can so you may get win from that.
The other option is to have a persistent mini-rails app with as much stripped out as possible so that the memory usage is lower which can listen for requests and do your bidding when you want it to. This would be more memory but the latency of bootstrapping would be essentially nullified.
Lastly, as an afterthought, this would be a great use for Postgres.
I have an application that checks a database every minute for any emails that are supposed to be sent out at that time. I was thinking about making this a rake task that would be run by a cron job every minute. Would there be a better solution to this?
From what I have read, this isn't ideal because rake has to load the entire rails environment every minute and this becomes expensive.
Thoughts?
Thanks.
You can use backgroundrb. This, however, will eat up memory away from your main Rails app as it will spawn one Ruby instance exclusive to backgroundrb.
You can also define a SystemController (or equivalent) in your main application, with various actions corresponding to the various household tasks your application should perform. You can "prod" it from crontab using wget or curl, the advantage being that it shares resources with your main application. Depending on how paranoid or you are, or on how vulnerable to DOS (or other types of attacks) exposing such a controller to, possibly, the outside world, you may choose to block access to this controller's URL from addresses other than the loopback (ideally in your reverse proxy, alternatively from the controller itself.)
One really simple method would be to have a script that does..
while true do
check_and_send_messages()
sleep 60
end
..which means you are not constantly respawning the Rails environment.
Obviously it has various flaws, but also has some benefits (for example, with your 1-Rake-per-minute, it the Rake task takes more than one minute, Rake will be running multiple times at once)
Also, the Railscasts episodes Rake in Background, Starling and Workling, and Custom Daemon might give you some ideas (they are describing exactly this task)
It turns out there's actually something built just for this: ar_mailer. ar_mailer queues up the e-mails into the DB and then sends them out periodically using the ar_mailer command. You can call ar_mailer every minute.
The nice thing about ar_mailer is that it basically requires very little change in terms of how you already send e-mails. You just need to inherit from ar_mailer instead of ActiveMailer. Using this method, you won't have to worry about running rake tasks in the background, forking processes, or anything like that - and in effect you get a real mail server with queued messages that are deleted when the mail is actually sent. This feature is important if you have a system that sends out large numbers of e-mail enmass. I've used ar_mailer to build a social network - so I can attest to its robustness.
Here's a good article that talks about ar_mailer in depth. I would strongly advise against rolling your own solution here as Eric has built a time-tested solution to this very problem.
I do what Vlad suggested (#2), with only local requests honored, and I'm paranoid enough to also require a specific query string tacked on to the url.
I have several periodic actions set up this way.
I have a Rails application that unfortunately after a request to a controller, has to do some crunching that takes awhile. What are the best practices in Rails for providing feedback or progress on a long running task or request? These controller methods usually last 60+ seconds.
I'm not concerned with the client side... I was planning on having an Ajax request every second or so and displaying a progress indicator. I'm just not sure on the Rails best practice, do I create an additional controller? Is there something clever I can do? I want answers to focus on the server side using Rails only.
Thanks in advance for your help.
Edit:
If it matters, the http request are for PDFs. I then have Rails in conjunction with Ruport generate these PDFs. The problem is, these PDFs are very large and contain a lot of data. Does it still make sense to use a background task? Let's assume an average PDF takes about one minute to two minutes, will this make my Rails application unresponsive to any other server request during this time?
Edit 2:
Ok, after further investigation, it seems my Rails application is indeed unresponsive to any other HTTP requests after a request comes in for a large PDF. So, I guess the question now becomes: What is the best threading/background mechanism to use? It must be stable and maintained. I'm very surprised Rails doesn't have something like this built in.
Edit 3:
I have read this page: http://wiki.rubyonrails.org/rails/pages/HowToRunBackgroundJobsInRails. I would love to read about various experiences with these tools.
Edit 4:
I'm using Passenger Phusion "modrails", if it matters.
Edit 5:
I'm using Windows Vista 64 bit for my development machine; however, my production machine is Ubuntu 8.04 LTS. Should I consider switching to Linux for my development machine? Will the solutions presented work on both?
The Workling plugin allow you to schedule background tasks in a queue (they would perform the lengthy task). As of version 0.3 you can ask a worker for its status, this would allow you to display some nifty progress bars.
Another cool feature with Workling is that the asynchronous backend can be switched: you can used DelayedJobs, Spawn (classic fork), Starling...
I have a very large volume site that generates lots of large CSV files. These sometimes take several minutes to complete. I do the following:
I have a jobs table with details of the requested file. When the user requests a file, the request goes in that table and the user is taken to a "jobs status" page that lists all of their jobs.
I have a rake task that runs all outstanding jobs (a class method on the Job model).
I have a separate install of rails on another box that handles these jobs. This box just does jobs, and is not accessible to the outside world.
On this separate box, a cron job runs all outstanding jobs every 60 seconds, unless jobs are still running from the last invocation.
The user's job status page auto-refreshes to show the status of the job (which is updated by the jobs box as the job is started, running, then finished). Once the job is done, a link appears to the results file.
It may be too heavy-duty if you just plan to have one or two running at a time, but if you want to scale... :)
Calling ./script/runner in the background worked best for me. (I was also doing PDF generation.) It seems like the lowest common denominator, while also being the simplest to implement. Here's a write-up of my experience.
A simple solution that doesn't require any extra Gems or plugins would be to create a custom Rake task for handling the PDF generation. You could model the PDF generation process as a state machine with states such as submitted, processing and complete that are stored in the model's database table. The initial HTTP request to the Rails application would simply add a record to the table with a submitted state and return.
There would be a cron job that runs your custom Rake task as a separate Ruby process, so the main Rails application is unaffected. The Rake task can use ActiveRecord to find all the models that have the submitted state, change the state to processing and then generate the associated PDFs. Finally, it should set the state to complete. This enables your AJAX calls within the Rails app to monitor the state of the PDF generation process.
If you put your Rake task within your_rails_app/lib/tasks then it has access to the models within your Rails application. The skeleton of such a pdf_generator.rake would look like this:
namespace :pdfgenerator do
desc 'Generates PDFs etc.'
task :run => :environment do
# Code goes here...
end
end
As noted in the wiki, there are a few downsides to this approach. You'll be using cron to regularly create a fairly heavyweight Ruby process and the timing of your cron jobs would need careful tuning to ensure that each one has sufficient time to complete before the next one comes along. However, the approach is simple and should meet your needs.
This looks quite an old thread. However, what I have down in my app, which required to run multiple Countdown Timers for different pages, was to use Ruby Thread. The timer must continue running even if the page was closed by users. Ruby makes it easy to write multi-threaded programs with the Thread class. Ruby threads are a lightweight and efficient way to achieve parallelism in your code. I hope this will help other wanderers who is looking to achieve background: parallelism/concurrent services in their app. Likewise Ajax makes it a lot easier to call a specific Rails [custom] action every second.
This really does sound like something that you should have a background process running rather than an application instance(passenger/mongrel whichever you use) as that way your application can stay doing what it's supposed to be doing, serving requests, while a background task of some kind, Workling is good, handles the number crunching. I know that this doesn't deal with the issue of progress, but unless it is absolutely essential I think that is a small price to pay.
You could have a user click the action required, have that action pass the request to the Workling queue, and have it send some kind of notification to the user when it is completed, maybe an email or something. I'm not sure about the practicality of that, just thinking out loud, but my point is that it really seems like that should be a background task of some kind.
I'm using Windows Vista 64 bit for my
development machine; however, my
production machine is Ubuntu 8.04 LTS.
Should I consider switching to Linux
for my development machine? Will the
solutions presented work on both?
Have you considered running Linux in a VM on top of Vista?
I recommend using Resque gem with it's resque-status plug-in for your heavy background processes.
Resque
Resque is a Redis-backed Ruby library for creating background jobs,
placing them on multiple queues, and processing them later.
Resque-status
resque-status is an extension to the resque queue system that provides
simple trackable jobs.
Once you run a job on a Resque worker using resque-status extension, you will be able to get info about your ongoing progresses and ability to kill a specific process very easily. See examples:
status.pct_complete #=> 0
status.status #=> 'queued'
status.queued? #=> true
status.working? #=> false
status.time #=> Time object
status.message #=> "Created at ..."
Also resque and resque-status has a cool web interface to interact with your jobs which is so cool.
There is the brand new Growl4Rails ... that is for this specific use case (among others as well).
http://www.writebetterbits.com/2009/01/update-to-growl4rails.html
I use Background Job (http://codeforpeople.rubyforge.org/svn/bj/trunk/README) to schedule tasks. I am building a small administration site that allows Site Admins to run all sorts of things you and I would run from the command line from a nice web interface.
I know you said you were not worried about the client side but I thought you might find this interesting: Growl4Rails - Growl style notifications that were developed for pretty much what you are doing judging by the example they use.
I've used spawn before and definitely would recommend it.
Incredibly simple to set up (which many other solutions aren't), and works well.
Check out BackgrounDRb, it is designed for exactly the scenario you are describing.
I think it has been around for a while and is pretty mature. You can monitor the status of the workers.
It's a pretty good idea to develop on the same development platform as your production environment, especially when working with Rails. The suggestion to run Linux in a VM is a good one. Check out Sun xVM for Open Source virtualization software.
I personally use active_messaging plugin with a activemq server (stomp or rest protocol). This has been extremely stable for us, processing millions of messages a month.
I've been sending emails on my application (ruby 1.8.7, rails 2.3.2) like this
Thread.new{UserMailer.deliver_signup_notification(user)}
Since ruby use green threads, there's any performance advantage doing this, or I can just use
UserMailer.deliver_signup_notification(user)
?
Thanks
Global VM lock will still almost certainly apply while sending that email, meaning no difference.
You should not start threads in a request/response cycle. You should not start threads at all unless you can watch them from create to join, and even then, it is rarely worth the trouble it creates.
Rails is not thread-safe, and is not meant to be from within your controller actions. Only since Rails 2.3 has just dispatching been thread-safe, and only if you turn it on in environment.rb with config.threadsafe!.
This article explains in more detail. If you want to send your message asynchronously use BackgroundRb or its analog.
In general, using green threads to run background tasks asynchronously will mean that your application can respond to the user before the mail is sent. You're not concerned about exploiting multiple CPUs; you're only concerned on off-loading the work onto a background process and returning a web page as soon as possible.
And from examining the Rails documentation, it looks like deliver_signup_notification will block long enough to get the mail queued (although I may be wrong). So using a thread here might make your application seem more responsive, depending on how your mailer is configured.
Unfortunately, it's not clear to me that deliver_signup_notification is necessarily thread-safe. I'd want to read the documentation carefully before relying on that.
Note also that you're making assumptions about the lifetime of a Rails process once a request has been served. Many Rails applications using DRb (or a similar tool) to offload these background tasks onto an entirely separate worker process. The easiest way to do this changes fairly often--see Google for a number of popular libraries.
I have used your exact strategy and our applications are currently running in production (but rails 2.2.2). I've kept a close eye on it and our load has been relatively low (Less than 20 emails sent per day average, with peaks of around 150/day).
So far we have noticed no problems, and this appears to have resolved several performance issues we were having when using Google's mailserver.
If you need something in a hurry then give it a shot, it has been working for us.
They'll be the same as far as I know.