I am building a backend module (written in PHP) that will be used for monitoring private chat rooms that has no activity for [Exactly] 300 seconds (5 minutes). If it is, the script will update the database (sets the max users to a certain number, and other stuffs). I am monitoring the span of idle time by the time difference of now() and last message sent.
What I did: set a cron job that will run (through php-cli) my monitoring script every minute or 60 seconds. Inside the monitoring script:
$expire_time = time() + 60;
//this loop will run for 60 seconds
while(time() < $expire_time)
{
$idle_time = get_all_chatrooms_idle_time();
foreach($idle_time as $s_time)
{
if($s_time >= 300)
{
update_changes();
}
}
usleep(500000);
}
The condition of instantly setting max users after 300 seconds idle time can't be bargained. So I cant really follow advice like: "avoid doing anything until something actually asks for it" even though it makes a lot of sense.
Reason? The data of active and inactive chatrooms need to be real time because it will also be displayed on a dashboard. The chatroom moderators' pay depends on it.
Why not check them every dashboard load? I'm sorry but still not possible.
The checking needs to be server side and the dashboard updates itself with ajax, polling every second.
When I attach the monitoring code to the page being requested by my ajax calls I think it's more resource intensive than my current implementation (correct me if Im wrong)
Let me give you some rough estimate on the number of users so you can imagine the load/traffic we're getting:
- number of chatters including moderators: ~800
- number of chatrooms: ~250
- (x) number of chatroom moderators: ~50
- (x) my boss and his staff:
(x) - can view the dashboard
Is there a better way? Am I doing it right?