8

Is there a way to run a task in rust, a thread at best, at a specific time or in an interval again and again?

So that I can run my function every 5 minutes or every day at 12 o'clock.

In Java there is the TimerTask, so I'm searching for something like that.

2 Answers 2

4

You can use Timer::periodic to create a channel that gets sent a message at regular intervals, e.g.

use std::old_io::Timer;

let mut timer = Timer::new().unwrap();
let ticks = timer.periodic(Duration::minutes(5));
for _ in ticks.iter() {
    your_function();
}

Receiver::iter blocks, waiting for the next message, and those messages are 5 minutes apart, so the body of the for loop is run at those regular intervals. NB. this will use a whole thread for that single function, but I believe one can generalise to any fixed number of functions with different intervals by creating multiple timer channels and using select! to work out which function should execute next.

I'm fairly sure that running every day at a specified time, correctly, isn't possible with the current standard library. E.g. using a simple Timer::periodic(Duration::days(1)) won't handle the system clock changing, e.g. when the user moves timezones, or goes in/out of daylight savings.

2
  • 4
    Link to Timer::periodic is dead
    – diralik
    May 25, 2019 at 20:07
  • You can also use crates like timer and it's schedule function.
    – proc
    Sep 12, 2019 at 23:14
1

For the latest Rust nightly-version:

use std::old_io::Timer;
use std::time::Duration;

let mut timer1 = Timer::new().unwrap();
let mut timer2 = Timer::new().unwrap();
let tick1 = timer1.periodic(Duration::seconds(1));
let tick2 = timer2.periodic(Duration::seconds(3));

loop {
    select! {
        _ = tick1.recv() => do_something1(),
        _ = tick2.recv() => do_something2()
    }
}
1
  • 1
    Can you provide some explanation about the differences of this method compared to dbaupps ? What I can see is that you're spawning two tasks and I'm assuming they're running independently ?
    – proc
    Feb 7, 2015 at 2:17

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