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I am using with_lock to lock the block of instruction where I am going to call update_all. If an exception is raised inside the block, does a locked object stay locked?

For example, validator:handle_conflict raise the exception ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError, will with_lock release the lock? If it doesn't release lock, how to release the lock when exception is raised?

attr_accessible :original_updated_at

def original_updated_at
   @original_updated_at || updated_at.to_f
end

validate :handle_conflict, only: :update_all


  def set_total_and_buckets_used
    begin
      /////

      else
        self.with_lock do
          self.reload
          attributes["updated_at"] = Time.now.utc
          Product.where(:id => self.id).update_all(attributes)
          self.attributes = attributes
        end
      end
    rescue ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError => e
      if tries < MAX_RETRIES
        tries += 1
        sleep(1 + tries)
        retry
      else
        raise Exception.new(timeout.inspect)
      end
    end
    attributes
  end


  def handle_conflict
    if self.updated_at.to_f > original_updated_at
      @original_updated_at = nil
      raise ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError.new("Car is changed while you were editing")
    end
  end

1 Answer 1

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If you look at the implementation, you can see that with_lock wraps your block into a transaction. So, when an exception is raised in you block, your transaction is rollbacked and your lock released.

By the way:

  • locking your record ensures you that you won't have to deal with a StaleObjectError.
  • I don't think your code work works, why don't you just update your model:

self.with_lock do update_your_attributes self.save end

1
  • I updated question with code for original_updated_at. If you check in the code I am using handle_conflict which is throwing an exception ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError. if self.updated_at.to_f > original_updated_at is true. I updated Oct 2, 2018 at 17:57

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