lib | ||
test | ||
.document | ||
.gitignore | ||
Gemfile | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
Rakefile | ||
README.md | ||
timeout-interrupt.gemspec | ||
VERSION |
timeout-interrupt
Works like ruby's timeout, but interrupts every call, also syscalls, which blocks the hole ruby-process.
It uses POSIX's alarm and traps ALRM-signals.
Known limitations bacause of alarm and ALRM are, that you can not use alarm or trap ALRM.
Scopes
If you need scopes with inner and outer time outs, you should know:
The first timed out Timeout will be raised:
include TimeoutInterrupt
timeout(1) { # Will be raised
timeout(10) { sleep 2 } # Will not be raised
}
If you want to know, which was raised, you need custom exceptions:
class CustomErrorWillBeRaised <Exception
end
class CustomErrorNotRaise <Exception
end
include TimeoutInterrupt
timeout( 1, CustomErrorWillBeRaised) { # Will be raised again
timeout( 10, CustomErrorNotRaise) { sleep 2 } # Will not be raised
}
Problems
Memory-Leaks or no clean up
Do not forget, syscall can have allocated memory. If you interrupt a call, which can not free his allocations, you will have a memory leak. If it opens a file, reads it and closes it and while it reads, a time out occurs, the file will not be closed.
So, use it only, if your process did not live any longer or if you call something, which never allocate mem or opens a file.
Every time, a process dies, all his memory will be freed and every file will be closed, so let your process die and you should be safe.
Exception-handling
Timeouts can break your exception-handling! You should not handling exception while you wait for a timeout:
include TimeoutInterrupt
timeout(1) {
begin
transaction_begin
do_something
ensure
clean_up
transaction_end
end
}
Same happens, if clean_up will raise an exception.
And same problem you have with ruby's Timeout.timeout
.
Copyleft
Copyright (c) 2021 Denis Knauf. See LICENSE.txt for further details.