The Ratx Erlang application provides overload protection for Erlang systems. It provides queueing facilities for tasks to be executed so their concurrency can be limited on a running system.
Ratx owes its inspiration to Ulf Wigers jobs
framework and
Jesper Louis Andersen safetyvalve
, but it is a different
implementation and a different approach as well.
The main difference and goal is to try to eliminate the one gen_server
process to handle all requests. And, the same as safetyvalve
to
have one process per queue, which can be supervised(and restarted,
if something go wrong).
ets:update_counter/3
seems the best options and natural to try, and
heavily used in production for such use cases with good effort.
Due to this change, the queue process should only handle all done
-s,
and dropping of entries in a queue after timeout. If queue is full, no
messages or calls will be sent to a queue process, that is a protection
for a process on big birsts.
Example of using
ratx:start_link(test_queue, [{limit, 10}, {queue, 100}, {queue_timeout, 1000}]),
Action = fun(I, Time) -> io:format("~p..", [I]), timer:sleep(Time) end,
[spawn(fun() -> ratx:run(test_queue, fun() -> Action(I, 40) end) end) || I <- lists:seq(1, 30)], ok.