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I have a video transcode server and as a video gets transcoded I need to send the converted versions of the video to a CDN and show my CMS admins the progresses of processes.

At first (I guess just like most of other RoR developers :) I looked for a gem for this purpose. Honestly, I was unable to find one. This made me think of that I was missing something.

When I google around, just get 'paperclip' and 'carrierview' as answers. But I don't want a gem to make users upload a file to server. I want to copy a file from my server to another server.

I've found a native class of Ruby called Net::SCP after some research and it has a progress reporting parameter. I'm using Resque for background processes. So I might use this.

BUT, when I use this block:

scp.upload!("/path/to/local", "/path/to/remote") do |ch, name, sent, total|   
puts "#{name}: #{sent}/#{total}" 
end

It calls back 'sent' parameter VERY frequantly. Sending about 5 update queries per second to my DB is not a good idea, I think? Is there a work around for this situation?

So what do you suggest me to do? Is there a gem around for the purpose I ask for? Or what should I use?

Thank you.

1 Answer 1

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+50

You could increase the chunk size option for Net::SCP#upload!, as the documentation implies:

Whenever a new chunk of data is […] sent to a file, the [block given to upload] will be invoked […]

And further in #upload:

:chunk_size - the size of each "chunk" that should be sent. Defaults to 2048. Changing this value may improve throughput at the expense of decreasing interactivity.

… which is what you seem to want.

chunk_size = 100.kilobytes
scp.upload!(local_fname, remote_fname, chunk_size: chunk_size) do |ch, name, sent, total|   
  puts "#{name}: #{sent}/#{total}"
end
3
  • Hey! Thank you very much for your answer! I guess this is absoletly what I'm looking for! BUT... It's not clear to me the intervals. What 2048 actually is? Should I decrease or increase it?
    – scaryguy
    May 1, 2013 at 11:14
  • Well, I've used try and fail method and find out that greater chunk size, the more latency of callbacks. Thank you very much for your answer!
    – scaryguy
    May 1, 2013 at 13:07
  • I'd guess chunk_size refers to the number of bytes submitted at once. So increasing (from 2k to 100k in my example) should be the way to go.
    – DMKE
    May 2, 2013 at 8:26

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