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I have to call this function

$rep_id=$this->getit($domain);

but some domain takes 2/3 minutes I want to go next if it take long time. I have set set_time_limit(3000); at the begin of php page

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  • It depends on getit implementation. If it is curl-based, then you can specify timeouts manually.
    – zerkms
    Apr 17, 2011 at 4:36
  • What does getit() do? Post it's function body.
    – Khez
    Apr 17, 2011 at 4:36

2 Answers 2

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set_time_limit() won't work as that sets the time for the script as a whole. I'm not sure if this is really possible with php but you might be able to pull it off with forking. I'm thinking something along the lines of starting a timer (using time() for a timestamp) and looping until it reaches X time, meanwhile forking your $this->geitit() as a child process. Then when the timer runs out, kill the child process. Might work, but dunno.

I guess maybe an alternative is to make it a separate script with a specified timeout using that set_time_limit() and then call it from a main script using exec()

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Assuming the call to getit() is in the main thread (i.e. not being spawned in a new thread), the execution of it will likely block the rest of the script. However, if getit() is self-aware with its own timer, you could design it to dump out if that execution limit is reached, returning an error code indicating the problem. If you decide to embark on this change, consider adding an optional paramater to specify the time limit on call.

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