vote up 3 vote down star

I need a way to modify a value in a table after a certain amount of time has passed. My current method is as follow:

  • insert end time for wait period in table
  • when a user loads a page requesting the value to be changed, check to see if current >= end time
  • if it is, change the value and remove the end time field, if it isn't, do nothing

This is going to be a major feature on the site, and so efficiency is the key; with that in mind, you can probably see the problem with how I'm doing it. That same chunk of code is going to be called every time someone access a page that needs the information.

Any suggestions for improvements or better methods would be greatly appreciated, preferably in php or perl.

In response to cron job answers: Thanks, and I'd like to do something like that if possible, but hosts limits are the problem. Since this is a major part of the app, it can't be limited.

flag
What sort of timespan are you looking at? updating after a few seconds would be easy, updating after a few hours, more difficult. – Marc Gear Sep 23 '08 at 19:20
on a shared host, that's about the best you can do. If this is a major enough application that efficiency of this method is in question, you need a better host. You can get an affordable VPS that will give you root access and that you can run cron on as frequently as you like. – Aeon Sep 23 '08 at 20:03

5 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

You could use a trigger of some sort on each page load. I really have no idea how that would affect performance but maybe somebody else can shed some light.

link|flag
That's essentially what I'm doing, but thanks anyway. – cblades Sep 23 '08 at 23:14
vote up 0 vote down

If performance really starts to be an issue, (which means a lot more than you probably realize) you could use memchached to store the info...

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Your solution sounds very logical, since you don't have access to cron. Another way could be storing the value in a file, and the next time the page is loaded check when it was last modified (filemtime("checkfile.txt")), and decide if it needs modifying again. You should test performance for both methods.

link|flag
Sounds like a good idea; I'll give it a try. Thanks. – cblades Sep 23 '08 at 23:15
vote up 5 vote down

why not use a cron to update this information behind the scenes? that way you offload the checks on each page hit, and can actually schedule the timing to meet your app's requirements.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Can you use a cron job to check each field in the database periodically and update that way?

A big part of this is how frequently the updates are required. A lot of shared hosts limit the frequency of cron checks, for example no more than every 15 minutes, which could affect the application.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.