I know this question was posted 4 years ago, but I hope someone can find this useful.
Here is a way to do that
There are something called worker pool https://gobyexample.com/worker-pools Using go routines and channels
But in the following code I adapt it to a handler. (Consider for simplicity I'm ignoring the errors and I'm using jobs as global variable)
package main
import (
"fmt"
"net/http"
"time"
)
var jobs chan int
func worker(jobs <-chan int) {
fmt.Println("Register the worker")
for i := range jobs {
fmt.Println("worker processing job", i)
time.Sleep(time.Second * 5)
}
}
func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
jobs <- 1
fmt.Fprintln(w, "hello world")
}
func main() {
jobs = make(chan int, 100)
go worker(jobs)
http.HandleFunc("/request", handler)
http.ListenAndServe(":9090", nil)
}
The explanation:
main()
- Runs the worker in background using a go routine
- Start the service with my handler
- note that the worker in this moment is ready to receive a job
worker()
- it is a go routine that receives a channel
- the for loop never ends because the channel is never closed
- when a the channel contain a job, do some work (e.g. waits for 5 seconds)
handler()
- writes to the channel to active a job
- immediately returns printing "hello world" to the page
the cool thing is that you can send as many requests you want and because this scenario only contains 1 worker. the next request will wait until the previous one finished.
This is awesome Go!
http.StatusAccepted
there instead ofhttp.StatusOK
– 200 implies you've serviced the request. 202 tells the client that you intend to service the request, but you've not necessarily done so yet. 204 (http.StatusNoContent
) is also sometimes acceptable, but I probably wouldn't use it in this case.