PgLock
Uses Postgres advisory locks to enable you to syncronize actions across processes and machines.
Installation
This gem requires Ruby 2.1+
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'pg_lock'And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install pg_lock
Usage
Create a PgLock.new instance and call the lock method to ensure exclusive execution of a block of code.
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base").lock do
# stuff
endNow no matter how many times this code is executed across any number of machines, one block of code will be allowed to execute at a time.
Session based locking
The postgres lock is unique across different database sessions, if the same session tries to aquire the same lock it will succeed. So while PgLock will guarantee unique execution across machines and processes, it will not block the same process (sharing the same connection session) from running. For example while you would think the middle block would not run in this example:
key = "all_your_base"
PgLock.new(name: key).lock do
puts "First block called"
PgLock.new(name: key).lock do
puts "Second block called because it's sharing the same session"
end
endThe result will be:
First block called
Second block called because it's sharing the same session
If you need to syncronize code execution inside of the same process you should use a mutex.
Timeout
By default, locked blocks will timeout after 60 seconds of execution, the lock will be released and any code executing will be terminated by a Timeout::Error will be raised. You can lower or raise this value by passing in a ttl (time to live) argument:
begin
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base", ttl: 30).lock do
# stuff
end
rescue Timeout::Error
puts "Took longer than 30 seconds to execute"
endTo disable the timeout pass in a falsey value:
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base", ttl: false).lock do
# stuff
endRetry Attempts
By default if a lock cannot be aquired, PgLock will try 3 times with a 1 second delay between tries. You can configure this behavior using attempts and attempt_interval arguments:
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base", attempts: 10, attempt_interval: 5).lock do
# stuff
endTo run once use attempts: 1.
Raise Error on Failed Lock
You can optionally raise an error if a block cannot be executed in the given number of attempts by using the lock! method:
begin
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base").lock! do
# stuff
end
rescue PgLock::UnableToLockError
# do stuff
endManual Lock
The create method will return the PgLock instance if a lock object was created, or false if no lock was aquired. You should manually delete a successfully created lock object:
begin
lock = PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base")
lock.create
# do stuff
ensure
lock.delete
endYou can check on the status of a lock with the acquired? method:
begin
lock = PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base")
lock.create
if lock.acquired?
# do stuff
end
ensure
lock.delete
endLogging
By default there is no logging, if you want you can provide a logging block:
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base", log: ->(data) { puts data.inspect }).lock do
# stuff
endOne argument will be passed to the block, a hash. You can optionally define a default log for all instances:
PgLock::DEFAULT_LOG = ->(data) { puts data.inspect }Note: When you enable logging exceptions raised when deleting a lock will be swallowed. To re-raise you can use the exception in data[:exception].
Database Connection
This library defaults to use Active Record. If you want to use another library, or spin up a dedicated connection you can use the connection argument:
my_connection = MyCustomConnectionObject.new
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base", connection: my_connection).lock do
# stuff
endThe object needs to respond to the exec method where the first argument is a query string, and the second is an array of bind arguments. For example to use with sequel you could do something like this:
connection = Module do
def self.exec(sql, bind)
DB.fetch(sql, bind)
end
end
PgLock.new(name: "all_your_base", connection: my_connection).lock do
# stuff
endWhere DB is to be your database connection.
Development
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To run tests you'll need a database:
$ createdb pg_lock_test
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release to create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.
Contributing
- Fork it ( https://github.com/[my-github-username]/pg_lock/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create a new Pull Request
Acknowledgements
Originally written by @mikehale