1

I use a consumer to take items from a queue and send the items to an external API

public void run(){
    try {
        while(true){
             //will peek() an item from a queue and send it to an external API
             sendRequest(item);
             thread.sleep(100);
        }
    } catch(InterruptedException e){
        Thread.currentThread().interrupt();
    }
}

And have another method to send the request

public void sendRequest(JSONibject item){
     // send request

    if(response.getStatus() == 200){
        //will remove the item from the queue
    }
    if(response.getStatus() == 500){
        //keep the item in the queue and set time for resending
    }
}

So what I want to do is when I get the 500 response which means the server is not up. I will keep the items in the queue and try to resend the items every 5 mins. How can I control the while loop in that situation?

3 Answers 3

0

Let sendRequest return true on success and false when it fails.
Then in the while loop, create a 2nd loop:

while (!sendRequest(item)) {
    thread.sleep(1000*60*5);
}

Or something like this in sendRequest:

if(response.getStatus() == 500){
    thread.sleep(1000*60*5);
    sendRequest(item);
}
0

Not sure about your whole context but try something like bellow.

So what you need to do is have another Array or ArrayList or List in either the consumer method or globally of type <JSONibject>. In this array/arraylist/list just add those items that return the code 500. Use the Timer to schedule to run every 5 minutes and there send all the items from this array/arraylist/list.

First, create a timmer by importing it. (Also import TimerTask)

import java.util.Timer;
import java.util.TimerTask;

Then create a timer object and the ArrayList and Implement the logic somehow like bellow.

 public void run() {
    try {
        ArrayList<JSONibject> itemsToResend = new ArrayList<>();
        Timer timer = new Timer();
        while (true) {
            //will peek() an item from a queue and send it to an external API
            JSONibject output = sendRequest(item);
            if (output == null) {
                itemsToResend.add(output);
            }

            //This will run evey 5 minutes.
            timer.scheduleAtFixedRate(new TimerTask() {
                @Override
                public void run() {
                    if(itemsToResend.size() > 0){
                        //Apply a loop to send the items again,
                        //Remove those items that are returned null.
                    }
                }
            }, 5 * 60 * 1000, 5 * 60 * 1000);

            Thread.sleep(100);
        }

    } catch (InterruptedException e) {
        Thread.currentThread().interrupt();
    }

Kindly look at this thread for more on Timer

You would also need to change the sendRequest to something like:

public JSONibject sendRequest(JSONibject item) {
    // send request

    if (response.getStatus() == 200) {
        //Means consumed
        return null;
    }
    if (response.getStatus() == 500) {
        //Means not consumed and we should retry after 5 min.
        return item;
    }
}

Maybe this will give you some starting point or some direction to go.

0

You can use Custom Exception here as well. For example, create custom exception class as

public class ServerDownException extends Exception {
      public ServerDownException(String error) {
             super(error);
      }
}

...

public void run(){
try {
    while(true){
       try {
         //will peek() an item from a queue and send it to an external API
         sendRequest(item);
         thread.sleep(100);
       } catch(ServerDownException ex) {
         thread.sleep(/*milliseconds*/ 5000);
       }
    }
} catch(InterruptedException e){
    Thread.currentThread().interrupt();
}
}

....

public void sendRequest(JSONibject item) throws ServerDownException {
 // send request

if(response.getStatus() == 200){
    //will remove the item from the queue
}
if(response.getStatus() == 500){
    //keep the item in the queue and set time for resending
    throw new ServerDownException("500 Server Down Error");
}

}

You can handle different server errors using several custom exception classes.

2
  • A hint: "server up" isn't an exceptional event in this case, it's rather the expected case. Renaming the exception to ServerDownException would be less confusing as it is thrown in this case.
    – LuCio
    Oct 16, 2018 at 14:49
  • Thanks @LuCio. Updated my answer.
    – Prakash13
    Oct 16, 2018 at 15:16

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.