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We have a daemon which scans a table for dirty bits and then schedules dirty rows to a delayed_job in batches. In order to avoid a constant select from data where dirty = 1, we set up a memcached barrier, which wraps the table scan, like

   loop do # daemon
     until Rails.cache.fetch("have_dirty_rows") do end
     page = 1
     loop do # paginate dirty rows
       dirty_batch = paginate(#:select     => "*",
                           :order      => "id",
                           :per_page   => DIRTY_GET_BATCH_SIZE,
                           :conditions => {:dirty => 1},
                           :page       => page)
       if dirty_batch.empty?
         Rails.cache.write("have_dirty_rows",false)
         break
       end
       ...
       page = page.next
     end
   end

Unless I add some sleep 0.0001 or such, the loop eats 100% CPU still. Is there an efficient mechanism in Ruby/Rails which will block on something like the memcached value, or which we can feed from a memcached value, so it's not polling all the time?

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  • Doubt it. Polling is cumbersome, but works well for interfacing many different types of processes. The only other way would be a cronjob that I can think of.
    – Dex
    Jul 16, 2011 at 2:54
  • 2
    Examine the issue one step before this solution that will kill a server, meaning, where does the dirty rows comes from? Can't you really do something in code the moment you know you are setting dirty bits?
    – kain
    Jul 16, 2011 at 4:39
  • In fact, I'm wondering how the wait is implemented in general, such as for an AMQP client. There are many cases where you don't have control of the source of the values you're watching to change...
    – Alexy
    Jul 19, 2011 at 19:06

1 Answer 1

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Active polling is BAD ! Where are the dirty bits comin from? It woul be better if this process uses a message queue mechanism (eg RabbitMQ ) to notify other processes. That something has changed in the database.

2
  • The question about an ability to block a Ruby process. RabbitMQ is indeed a consideration, but blocking is interesting in itself...
    – Alexy
    Jul 19, 2011 at 5:59
  • mmh, maybe this will help you: makandra.com/notes/1026-simple-database-mutex
    – Klaus
    Jul 22, 2011 at 12:20

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