My Perl application uses resources that become temporarily unavailable at times, causing exceptions using die. Most notably, it accesses SQLite databases that are shared by multiple threads and with other applications using through DBIx::Class. Whenever such an exception occurs, the operation should be retried until a timeout has been reached.
I prefer concise code, therefore I quickly got fed up with repeatedly typing 7 extra lines for each such operation:
use Time::HiRes 'sleep';
use Carp;
# [...]
for (0..150) {
sleep 0.1 if $_;
eval {
# database access
};
next if $@ =~ /database is locked/;
}
croak $@ if $@;
... so I put them into a (DB access-specific) function:
sub _retry {
my ( $timeout, $func ) = @_;
for (0..$timeout*10) {
sleep 0.1 if $_;
eval { $func->(); };
next if $@ =~ /database is locked/;
}
croak $@ if $@;
}
which I call like this:
my @thingies;
_retry 15, sub {
$schema->txn_do(
sub {
@thingies = $thingie_rs->search(
{ state => 0, job_id => $job->job_id },
{ rows => $self->{batchsize} } );
if (@thingies) {
for my $thingie (@thingies) {
$thingie->update( { state => 1 } );
}
}
} );
};
Is there a better way to implement this? Am I re-inventing the wheel? Is there code on CPAN that I should use?
