A deadlines library for Ruby inspired by Shopify and Kir Shatrov's blog series.
Cutoff.wrap(5) do
sleep(4)
Cutoff.checkpoint! # still have time left
sleep(2)
Cutoff.checkpoint! # raises an error
end
It has built-in patches for Mysql2 and Net::HTTP to auto-insert checkpoints and timeouts.
require 'cutoff/patch/mysql2'
client = Mysql2::Client.new
Cutoff.wrap(5) do
client.query('SELECT * FROM dual WHERE sleep(2)')
# Cutoff will automatically insert a /*+ MAX_EXECUTION_TIME(3000) */
# hint so that MySQL will terminate the query after the time remaining
#
# Or if time already expired, this will raise an error and not be executed
client.query('SELECT * FROM dual WHERE sleep(1)')
end
If you've already implemented timeouts for your networked dependencies, then you can be sure that no single HTTP request or database query can take longer than the time allotted to it.
For example, let's say you set a query timeout of 3 seconds. That means no single query will take longer than 3 seconds. However, imagine a bad controller action or background job executes 100 slow queries. In that case, the queries add up to 300 seconds, much too long.
Deadlines keep track of the total elapsed time in a request or job and interrupt it if it takes too long.
Add it to your Gemfile
:
gem 'cutoff'
Or install it manually:
gem install cutoff
API docs can be read on rubydoc.info, inline in the source code, or
you can generate them yourself with Ruby yard
:
bin/yardoc
Then open doc/index.html
in your browser.
The simplest way to use Cutoff is to use its class methods, although it can be used in an object-oriented manner as well.
Cutoff.wrap(3.5) do # number of allowed seconds for this block
# Do something time-consuming here
# At a good stopping point, call checkpoint!
# If the allowed time is exceeded, this raises a Cutoff::CutoffExceededError
# otherwise, it does nothing
Cutoff.checkpoint!
# Now continue executing
end
cutoff = Cutoff.new(6.4)
sleep(10)
cutoff.checkpoint! # Raises Cutoff::CutoffExceededError
Cutoff has some instance methods to get information about the time remaining, etc.
# If you're using Cutoff class methods, you can get the current instance
cutoff = Cutoff.current # careful, this will be nil if a cutoff isn't running
Once you have an instance, either by creating your own or from .current
, you
have access to these methods.
cutoff = Cutoff.current
# These return Floats
cutoff.allowed_seconds # Total seconds allowed (the seconds given when cutoff was started)
cutoff.seconds_remaining # Seconds left
cutoff.elapsed_seconds # Seconds since the cutoff was started
cutoff.ms_remaining # Milliseconds left
cutoff.exceeded? # True if the cutoff is expired
Cutoff is in early stages, but it aims to provide patches for common networked
dependencies. Patches automatically insert useful checkpoints and timeouts. The
patches so far are for mysql2
and Net::HTTP
. They are not loaded by default,
so you need to require them manually.
For example, to load the Mysql2 patch:
# In your Gemfile
gem 'cutoff', require: %w[cutoff cutoff/patch/mysql2]
# Or manually
require 'cutoff'
require 'cutoff/patch/mysql2'
Once it is enabled, any Mysql2::Client
object will respect the current
class-level cutoff if one is set.
require 'cutoff/patch/mysql2'
client = Mysql2::Client.new
Cutoff.wrap(3) do
sleep(4)
# This query will not be executed because the time is already expired
client.query('SELECT * FROM users')
end
Cutoff.wrap(3) do
sleep(1)
# There are 2 seconds left, so a MAX_EXECUTION_TIME query hint is added
# to inform MySQL we only have 2 seconds to execute this query
# The executed query will be "SELECT /*+ MAX_EXECUTION_TIME(2000) */ * FROM users"
client.query('SELECT * FROM users')
# MySQL only supports MAX_EXECUTION_TIME for SELECTs so no query hint here
client.query("INSERT INTO users(first_name) VALUES('Joe')")
sleep(3)
# We don't even execute this query because time is already expired
# This limit applies to all queries, including INSERTS, etc
client.query('SELECT * FROM users')
end
Once it is enabled, any Net::HTTP
requests will respect the current
class-level cutoff if one is set.
require 'cutoff/patch/net_http'
Cutoff.wrap(3) do
sleep(5)
# The cutoff is expired, so this hits a checkpoint and will not be executed
Net::HTTP.get(URI.parse('http://example.com'))
end
Cutoff.wrap(3) do
sleep(1.5)
# The cutoff has 1.5 seconds left, so this request will be executed
# open_timeout, read_timeout, and write_timeout (Ruby >= 2.6) will each
# be set to 1.5
# This means the overall time can be > 1.5 since the combined phases can take
# up to 4.5 seconds
Net::HTTP.get(URI.parse('http://example.com'))
end
In some cases, you may want to select some checkpoints to use, but not others.
For example, you may want to run some code that contains MySQL queries, but not
use the mysql2 patch. The exclude
and only
options support this.
Cutoff.wrap(10, exclude: :mysql2) do
# The mysql2 patch won't be used here
end
Cutoff.wrap(10, only: %i[foo bar]) do
# These checkpoints will be used
Cutoff.checkpoint!(:foo)
Cutoff.checkpoint!(:bar)
# These checkpoints will be skipped
Cutoff.checkpoint!(:asdf)
Cutoff.checkpoint!
end
One use of a cutoff is to add a deadline to a Rails controller action. This is
typically preferable to approaches like Rack::Timeout
that use the dangerous
Timeout
class.
Cutoff includes a built-in integration for this purpose. If Rails is installed,
the #cutoff
class method is available in your controllers.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
# You may want to set a long global cutoff, but it's not required
cutoff 30
end
class UsersController < ApplicationController
cutoff 5.0
def index
# Now in your action, you can call `checkpoint!`, or if you're using the
# patches, checkpoints will be added automatically
Cutoff.checkpoint!
end
end
Just like with controller filters, you can use filters with the cutoff method.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
# For example, use an :only filter
cutoff 5.0, only: :index
# Multiple calls work just fine. Last match wins
cutoff 2.5, only: :show
def index
# ...
end
def show
# ...
end
end
Consider adding a global error handler for the Cutoff::CutoffExceededError
in
case you want to display a nice error page for timeouts.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
rescue_from Cutoff::CutoffExceededError, with: :handle_cutoff_exceeded
def handle_cutoff_exceeded
# Render a nice error page
end
end
If Sidekiq is loaded, Cutoff includes middleware to support a :cutoff
option.
class MyWorker
include Sidekiq::Worker
sidekiq_options cutoff: 6.0
def perform
# ...
Cutoff.checkpoint!
# ...
end
end
When testing or debugging an application that uses Cutoff, you may want to disable Cutoff entirely. These methods are not thread-safe and not intended for production.
# This disables all cutoff timers, for both global and local instances
Cutoff.disable!
Cutoff.disabled? # => true
# Re-enable cutoff
Cutoff.enable!
In multi-threaded environments, cutoff class methods are independent in each thread. That means that if you start a cutoff in one thread then start a new thread, the second thread will not inherit the cutoff from its parent thread.
Cutoff.wrap(6) do
Thread.new do
# This code can run as long as it wants because the class-level
# cutoff is independent
Cutoff.wrap(3) do
# However, you can start a new cutoff inside the new thread and it
# will not affect any other threads
end
end
end
The same rules apply to fibers. Each fiber has independent class-level cutoff instances. This means you can use Cutoff in a multi-threaded web server or job runner without worrying about thread conflicts.
If you want to use a single cutoff for multi-threading, you'll need to pass an instance of a Cutoff.
cutoff = Cutoff.new(6)
cutoff.checkpoint! # parent thread can call checkpoint!
Thread.new do
# And the child thread can use the same cutoff
cutoff.checkpoint!
end
end
However, because patches use the class-level Cutoff methods, this only works when calling cutoff methods manually.
When using the Cutoff class methods, it is possible to nest multiple Cutoff
contexts with .wrap
or .start
.
Cutoff.wrap(10) do
# This outer block has a timeout of 10 seconds
Cutoff.wrap(3) do
# But this inner block is only allowed to take 3 seconds
end
end
A child cutoff can never be set for longer than the remaining time of its parent cutoff. So if a child is created for longer than the remaining allowed time, it will be reduced to the remaining time of the outer cutoff.
Cutoff.wrap(5) do
sleep(4)
# There is only 1 second remaining in the parent
Cutoff.wrap(3) do
# So this inner block will only have 1 second to execute
end
end
Cutoff tries to use the best timer available on whatever platform it's running
on. If a monotonic clock is available, that will be used, or failing that, if
concurrent-ruby is loaded, that will be used. If neither is available,
Time.now
is used.
This mean that Cutoff tries its best to prevent time from travelling backwards. However, the clock uniformity, resolution, and stability is determined by the system Cutoff is running on.
If you find that Cutoff.wrap
is too limiting for some integrations, Cutoff
also provides the start
and stop
methods. Extra care is required to use
these to prevent a cutoff from being leaked. Every start
call must be
accompanied by a stop
call, otherwise the cutoff will continue to run and
could affect a context other than the intended one.
Cutoff.start(2.5)
begin
# Execute code here
Cutoff.checkpoint!
ensure
# Always stop in an ensure statement to make sure an exception cannot leave
# a cutoff running
Cutoff.stop
end
# Nested cutoffs are still supported
outer = Cutoff.start(10)
begin
# Outer 10s cutoff is used here
Cutoff.checkpoint!
inner = Cutoff.start(5)
begin
# Inner 5s cutoff is used here
Cutoff.checkpoint!
ensure
# Stops the inner cutoff
# We don't need to pass the instance here, but it does prevent some types of mistakes
Cutoff.stop(inner)
end
ensure
# Stops the outer cutoff
Cutoff.stop(outer)
end
Cutoff.start(10)
Cutoff.start(5)
begin
# Code here
ensure
# This stops all cutoffs
Cutoff.clear_all
end
Be careful, you can easily make a mistake when using this API, so prefer .wrap
when possible.
Cutoff is designed to only stop code execution at predictable points. It will never interrupt a running program unless:
checkpoint!
is called- a network timeout is exceeded
Patches are designed to ease the burden on developers to manually call
checkpoint!
or configure network timeouts. The ruby Timeout
class is not
used. See Julia Evans' post on Why Ruby's Timeout is dangerous.
Patches are only applied by explicit opt-in, and Cutoff can always be used as a standalone library.