28

Is there a way to timeout a function? I have 10 minutes to perform a job. The job includes a for loop, here is an example:

<?php
foreach($arr as $key => $value){
   some_function($key, $value); //This function does SSH and SFTP stuff
}
?>

$arr has 15 elements and some_function() sometimes may take more than 1 minutes. In fact once it got hanged for 5 minutes.

Is there a way I can timeout the function call and move on with next element in $arr?

Thank you!!

2
  • some questions: what is it, that limits you to 10 minutes? doesn't it matter, if the ssh/sftp jobs get executed or not? and can you workaround this limitation by using some kind of queue?
    – aurora
    May 14, 2012 at 16:32
  • It is a crontab script which runs every 10 minutes. It is checking servers status and update the database. If I dont get response back in 1 minute, I am setting that server slow server...
    – Mo3z
    May 14, 2012 at 19:13

7 Answers 7

22

It depends on your implementation. 99% of the functions in PHP are blocking. Meaning processing will not continue until the current function has completed. However, if the function contains a loop you can add in your own code to interrupt the loop after a certain condition has been met.

Something like this:

foreach ($array as $value) {
  perform_task($value);
}

function perform_task($value) {
  $start_time = time();

  while(true) {
    if ((time() - $start_time) > 300) {
      return false; // timeout, function took longer than 300 seconds
    }
    // Other processing
  }
}

Another example where interrupting the processing IS NOT possible:

foreach ($array as $value) {
  perform_task($value);
}

function perform_task($value) {
    // preg_replace is a blocking function
    // There's no way to break out of it after a certain amount of time.
    return preg_replace('/pattern/', 'replace', $value);
}
3
  • Thanks Mike but I am some_function or perform_task is a core function and I am trying to avoid modifying the core method.
    – Mo3z
    May 14, 2012 at 16:49
  • 1
    Going the route: Creating a new script example.php and calling that script in some_function and defining set_time_limit...logic of some_function will be executed in example.php..
    – Mo3z
    May 14, 2012 at 19:11
  • same problem here, same technique. Jul 5, 2014 at 0:43
13

What you want is to use the pcntl_alarm function, which will trigger a SIGALRM signal on timeout.

For example:

// 10 minutes
pcntl_alarm( 600 );
pcntl_signal(SIGALRM, function() { print( "Timed-out!\n" ); exit( 0 ); });

Please see here the PHP manual for more on this: http://php.net/manual/en/function.pcntl-alarm.php

1
  • 1
    It seems to work only with sleep() function. curl_exec() and file_get_contents() don't get timeout-ed with this solution sadly.
    – Klesun
    Apr 9, 2018 at 20:21
9

PHP is single threaded... you have to use your OS's ability to fork another process.

The only way I know how to do this is with the exec command to fork off another full process. Put the stuff you want timed in a separate script, call exec on the script, then immediately sleep for 10 min. If at 10 min the process is still running kill it. (you should have it's PID by making the command run the new php code in the background, getting it via command line and returning it from the exec command).

0
5

You could try implementing this using 'curl'. Curl is -- from PHP -- mostly used to do HTTP/FTP stuff, but it supports many more protocols, including ssh/sftp. I've never done something ssh/sftp related using curl, so i can not give any additional advice, but you should be able to find additional information here on stackoverflow or somewhere else.

There is an option "CURLOPT_TIMEOUT" you could use to configure the timeout for your request (there's also an option "CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT"). You can even specify the timeouts in millisecond resolution (CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS / CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT_MS).

Anyway: for a cronjob i would recommend to use an additional "lock-file" your script writes when it's started and removes, when it's finished running. You can check for this lock-file within your script so if cron triggers your script before the last run finished, you can just exit your script without any further doing. That ensures, that your script will not be executed multiple times in parallel.

You can find more on the CURL options and CURL itself in the PHP documentation, too:

You have to make sure, that your installed libcurl and/or curl for php supports SSH/SFTP, though:

etc.

Hope that helps ...

4

Before starting into the loop, set a variable that remembers the time(). At the end of each iteration, check if the current time() is more than 60 seconds greater. If so, break. For instance:

<?php
$startTime=time();
foreach($arr as $key => $value){
    some_function($key, $value); //This function does SSH and SFTP stuff
    if (time()-$startTime>60) break; //change 60 to the max time, in seconds.
}
?>
1
  • Thanks David for your answer. I don't need to break the for loop, I need to break the some_function if it takes more than a minute.
    – Mo3z
    May 14, 2012 at 16:50
1

Take a look at set_time_limit. Now the function itself isn't really want you want as it only takes into consideration execution time, meaning 5 seconds in real life might still be only 0.2 seconds execution. But the reason for looking at the link is for the comments. There's a couple solutions that users have posted.

0

For those of you who are in command line, see how sleep is interrupted:

echo date("H:i:s\n");
pcntl_signal(SIGALRM ,function($signal){
echo "arghhh! i got interrupted \n";
},true);

pcntl_alarm(3);
sleep(20);
pcntl_signal_dispatch();


echo date("H:i:s\n");

pcntl_alarm(3);
sleep(20);

echo date("H:i:s\n");

pcntl_signal_dispatch();
echo "end\n";

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