concurrent_rails 0.1.8 → 0.3.1

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data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -2,8 +2,7 @@
2
2
 
3
3
  ![status](https://github.com/luizkowalski/concurrent_rails/actions/workflows/ruby.yml/badge.svg?branch=master)
4
4
 
5
- Multithread is hard. [concurrent-ruby](https://github.com/ruby-concurrency/concurrent-ruby) did an amazing job
6
- implementing the concepts of multithread in the Ruby world. The problem is that Rails doesn't play nice with it. Rails have a complex way of managing threads called Executor and concurrent-ruby (most specifically, [Future](https://github.com/ruby-concurrency/concurrent-ruby/blob/master/docs-source/future.md)) does not work seamlessly with it.
5
+ Multithread is hard. [concurrent-ruby](https://github.com/ruby-concurrency/concurrent-ruby) did an amazing job implementing the concepts of multithread in the Ruby world. The problem is that Rails doesn't play nice with it. Rails have a complex way of managing threads called Executor and concurrent-ruby (most specifically, [Future](https://github.com/ruby-concurrency/concurrent-ruby/blob/master/docs-source/future.md)) does not work seamlessly with it.
7
6
 
8
7
  The goal of this gem is to provide a simple library that allows the developer to work with Futures without having to care about Rails's Executor and the whole pack of problems that come with it: autoload, thread pools, active record connections, etc.
9
8
 
@@ -13,8 +12,7 @@ This library provides three classes that will help you run tasks in parallel: `C
13
12
 
14
13
  ### Promises
15
14
 
16
- `Promises` is the recommended way from `concurrent-ruby` to create `Future`s as `Concurrent::Future` will be deprecated at some point.
17
- Similar to other classes, all you have to do is call `.future` helper and pass a block:
15
+ `Promises` is the recommended way from `concurrent-ruby` to create `Future`s as `Concurrent::Future` will be deprecated at some point. All you have to do is call `#future` and pass a block to be executed asynchronously:
18
16
 
19
17
  ```ruby
20
18
  irb(main):001:0> future = ConcurrentRails::Promises.future(5) { |v| sleep(v); 42 }
@@ -40,9 +38,52 @@ irb(main):002:0> future.value
40
38
  => 84
41
39
  ```
42
40
 
43
- ### Future
41
+ ### Delayed futures
44
42
 
45
- `ConcurrentRails::Future` will execute your code in a separated thread and you can check the progress of it whenever you need it. When the task is ready, you can access the result with `#result` function:
43
+ Delayed future is a future that is enqueued but not run until `#touch` or any other method that requires a resolution is called.
44
+
45
+ ```ruby
46
+ irb(main):002:0> delay = ConcurrentRails::Promises.delay { 42 }
47
+ => #<ConcurrentRails::Promises:0x00007f8b55333d48 @executor=:io, @instan...
48
+
49
+ irb(main):003:0> delay.state
50
+ => :pending
51
+
52
+ irb(main):004:0> delay.touch
53
+ => #<Concurrent::Promises::Future:0x00007f8b553325b0 pending>
54
+
55
+ irb(main):005:0> delay.state
56
+ => :fulfilled
57
+
58
+ irb(main):006:0> delay.value
59
+ => 42
60
+ ```
61
+
62
+ Three methods will trigger a resolution: `#touch`, `#value` and `#wait`: `#touch` will simply trigger the execution but won't block the main thread, while `#wait` and `#value` will block the main thread until a resolution is given.
63
+
64
+ ### Callbacks
65
+
66
+ Delayed and regular futures can set a callback to be executed after the resolution of the future. There are three different callbacks:
67
+
68
+ * `on_resolution`: runs after the future is resolved and yields three parameters to the callback in the following order: `true/false` for future's fulfillment, `value` as the result of the future execution, and `reason`, that will be `nil` if the future fulfilled or the error that the future triggered.
69
+
70
+ * `on_fulfillment`: runs after the future is fulfilled and yields `value` to the callback
71
+
72
+ * `on_rejection`: runs after the future is rejected and yields the `error` to the callback
73
+
74
+ ```ruby
75
+ delay = ConcurrentRails::Promises.delay { complex_find_user_query }.
76
+ on_fulfillment { |user| user.update!(name: 'John Doe') }.
77
+ on_rejection { |reason| log_error(reason) }
78
+
79
+ delay.touch
80
+ ```
81
+
82
+ All of these callbacks have a bang version (e.g. `on_fulfillment!`). The bang version will execute the callback on the same thread pool that was initially set up and the version without bang will run asynchronously on a different executor.
83
+
84
+ ### (Deprecated) Future
85
+
86
+ `ConcurrentRails::Future` will execute your code in a separate thread and you can check the progress of it whenever you need it. When the task is ready, you can access the result with `#result` function:
46
87
 
47
88
  ```ruby
48
89
  irb(main):001:0> future = ConcurrentRails::Future.new do
@@ -81,7 +122,7 @@ irb(main):005:0> future.reason
81
122
  => #<ZeroDivisionError: divided by 0>
82
123
  ```
83
124
 
84
- ### Multi
125
+ ### (Deprecated) Multi
85
126
 
86
127
  `ConcurrentRails::Multi` will let you execute multiple tasks in parallel and aggregate the results of each task when they are done. `Multi` accepts an undefined number of `Proc`s.
87
128
 
@@ -132,6 +173,39 @@ irb(main):007:0> multi.errors
132
173
 
133
174
  It is worth mention that a failed proc will return `nil`.
134
175
 
176
+ ## Testing
177
+ If you are using RSpec, you will notice that it might not play well with threads. ActiveRecord opens a database connection for every thread and since RSpec tests are wrapped in a transaction, by the time your promise tries to access something on the database, for example, a user, gems like Database Cleaner probably already triggered and deleted the user, resulting in `ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound` errors. You have a couple of solutions like disable transactional fixtures if you are using it or update the Database Cleaner strategy (that will result in much slower tests).
178
+ Since none of these solutions were satisfactory to me, I created `ConcurrentRails::Testing` with two strategies: `immediate` and `fake`. When you wrap a Promise's `future` with `immediate`, the executor gets replaced from `:io` to `:immediate`. It still returns a promise anyway. This is not the case with `fake` strategy: it executes the task outside the `ConcurrentRails` engine and returns whatever `.value` would return:
179
+
180
+ `immediate` strategy:
181
+ ```ruby
182
+ irb(main):001:1* result = ConcurrentRails::Testing.immediate do
183
+ irb(main):002:1* ConcurrentRails::Promises.future { 42 }
184
+ irb(main):003:0> end
185
+ =>
186
+ #<ConcurrentRails::Promises:0x000000013e5fc870
187
+ ...
188
+ irb(main):004:0> result.class
189
+ => ConcurrentRails::Promises # <-- Still a `ConcurrentRails::Promises` class
190
+ irb(main):005:0> result.executor
191
+ => :immediate # <-- default executor (:io) gets replaced
192
+ ```
193
+
194
+ `fake` strategy:
195
+
196
+ ```ruby
197
+ irb(main):001:1* result = ConcurrentRails::Testing.fake do
198
+ irb(main):002:1* ConcurrentRails::Promises.future { 42 }
199
+ irb(main):003:0> end
200
+ => 42 # <-- yields the task but does not return a Promise
201
+ irb(main):004:0> result.class
202
+ => Integer
203
+ ```
204
+
205
+ You can also set the stragegy globally using `ConcurrentRails::Testing.fake!` or `ConcurrentRails::Testing.immediate!`
206
+
207
+ ## Further reading
208
+
135
209
  For more information on how Futures work and how Rails handle multithread check these links:
136
210
 
137
211
  [Future documentation](https://github.com/ruby-concurrency/concurrent-ruby/blob/master/docs-source/future.md)
@@ -143,19 +217,19 @@ For more information on how Futures work and how Rails handle multithread check
143
217
  Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
144
218
 
145
219
  ```ruby
146
- gem 'concurrent_rails', '~> 0.1.8'
220
+ gem 'concurrent_rails', '~> 0.2.1'
147
221
  ```
148
222
 
149
223
  And then execute:
150
224
 
151
225
  ```bash
152
- $ bundle
226
+ bundle
153
227
  ```
154
228
 
155
229
  Or install it yourself as:
156
230
 
157
231
  ```bash
158
- $ gem install concurrent_rails
232
+ gem install concurrent_rails
159
233
  ```
160
234
 
161
235
  ## Contributing
@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
1
+ # frozen_string_literal: true
2
+
3
+ module ConcurrentRails
4
+ module DelayAdapter
5
+ extend ActiveSupport::Concern
6
+
7
+ class_methods do
8
+ def delay(*args, &task)
9
+ delay_on(:io, *args, &task)
10
+ end
11
+
12
+ def delay_on(executor, *args, &task)
13
+ new(executor).delay_on_rails(*args, &task)
14
+ end
15
+ end
16
+
17
+ def delay_on_rails(*args, &task)
18
+ @instance = rails_wrapped { delay_on(executor, *args, &task) }
19
+
20
+ self
21
+ end
22
+ end
23
+ end
@@ -2,11 +2,10 @@
2
2
 
3
3
  module ConcurrentRails
4
4
  class Future
5
- extend Forwardable
6
-
7
- def initialize(executor: :fast, &block)
5
+ def initialize(executor: :io, &block)
8
6
  @executor = executor
9
7
  @future = run_on_rails(block)
8
+ ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn('ConcurrentRails::Future is deprecated. See README for details')
10
9
  end
11
10
 
12
11
  def execute
@@ -17,15 +16,13 @@ module ConcurrentRails
17
16
 
18
17
  %i[value value!].each do |method_name|
19
18
  define_method method_name do
20
- rails_wrapped do
21
- ActiveSupport::Dependencies.interlock.permit_concurrent_loads do
22
- future.__send__(method_name)
23
- end
19
+ permit_concurrent_loads do
20
+ future.__send__(method_name)
24
21
  end
25
22
  end
26
23
  end
27
24
 
28
- def_delegators :@future, :state, :reason, :rejected?, :complete?, :add_observer
25
+ delegate :state, :reason, :rejected?, :complete?, :add_observer, to: :future
29
26
 
30
27
  private
31
28
 
@@ -41,6 +38,12 @@ module ConcurrentRails
41
38
  Rails.application.executor.wrap(&block)
42
39
  end
43
40
 
41
+ def permit_concurrent_loads(&block)
42
+ rails_wrapped do
43
+ ActiveSupport::Dependencies.interlock.permit_concurrent_loads(&block)
44
+ end
45
+ end
46
+
44
47
  attr_reader :executor, :future
45
48
  end
46
49
  end
@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
1
+ # frozen_string_literal: true
2
+
3
+ module ConcurrentRails
4
+ module FutureAdapter
5
+ extend ActiveSupport::Concern
6
+
7
+ class_methods do
8
+ def future(*args, &task)
9
+ future_on(:io, *args, &task)
10
+ end
11
+
12
+ def future_on(executor, *args, &task)
13
+ new(executor).future_on_rails(*args, &task)
14
+ end
15
+ end
16
+
17
+ def future_on_rails(*args, &task)
18
+ @instance = rails_wrapped { future_on(executor, *args, &task) }
19
+
20
+ self
21
+ end
22
+ end
23
+ end
@@ -3,9 +3,7 @@
3
3
  module ConcurrentRails
4
4
  class Multi
5
5
  def self.enqueue(*actions, executor: :io)
6
- unless actions.all? { |action| action.is_a?(Proc) }
7
- raise ArgumentError, '#enqueue accepts `Proc`s only'
8
- end
6
+ raise ArgumentError, '#enqueue accepts `Proc`s only' unless actions.all?(Proc)
9
7
 
10
8
  new(actions, executor).enqueue
11
9
  end
@@ -1,61 +1,83 @@
1
1
  # frozen_string_literal: true
2
2
 
3
+ require 'concurrent_rails/future_adapter'
4
+ require 'concurrent_rails/delay_adapter'
5
+
3
6
  module ConcurrentRails
4
7
  class Promises
5
- extend Forwardable
6
8
  include Concurrent::Promises::FactoryMethods
7
-
8
- class << self
9
- def future(*args, &task)
10
- future_on(:fast, *args, &task)
11
- end
12
-
13
- def future_on(executor, *args, &task)
14
- new(executor).run_on_rails(*args, &task)
15
- end
16
- end
9
+ include ConcurrentRails::DelayAdapter
10
+ include ConcurrentRails::FutureAdapter
17
11
 
18
12
  def initialize(executor)
19
13
  @executor = executor
20
14
  end
21
15
 
22
- def run_on_rails(*args, &task)
23
- @future_instance = rails_wrapped { future_on(executor, *args, &task) }
24
-
25
- self
16
+ %i[value value!].each do |method_name|
17
+ define_method(method_name) do |timeout = nil, timeout_value = nil|
18
+ permit_concurrent_loads do
19
+ instance.public_send(method_name, timeout, timeout_value)
20
+ end
21
+ end
26
22
  end
27
23
 
28
24
  %i[then chain].each do |chainable|
29
25
  define_method(chainable) do |*args, &task|
30
26
  method = "#{chainable}_on"
31
- @future_instance = rails_wrapped do
32
- future_instance.__send__(method, executor, *args, &task)
27
+ @instance = rails_wrapped do
28
+ instance.public_send(method, executor, *args, &task)
33
29
  end
34
30
 
35
31
  self
36
32
  end
37
33
  end
38
34
 
39
- %i[value value!].each do |method_name|
40
- define_method(method_name) do |timeout = nil, timeout_value = nil|
35
+ def touch
36
+ @instance = rails_wrapped { instance.touch }
37
+
38
+ self
39
+ end
40
+
41
+ def wait(timeout = nil)
42
+ result = permit_concurrent_loads { instance.__send__(:wait_until_resolved, timeout) }
43
+
44
+ timeout ? result : self
45
+ end
46
+
47
+ %i[on_fulfillment on_rejection on_resolution].each do |method|
48
+ define_method(method) do |*args, &callback_task|
41
49
  rails_wrapped do
42
- ActiveSupport::Dependencies.interlock.permit_concurrent_loads do
43
- future_instance.__send__(method_name, timeout, timeout_value)
44
- end
50
+ @instance = instance.__send__("#{method}_using", executor, *args, &callback_task)
45
51
  end
52
+
53
+ self
46
54
  end
47
- end
48
55
 
49
- %i[state reason rejected? resolved? fulfilled?].each do |delegatable|
50
- def_delegator :@future_instance, delegatable
56
+ define_method("#{method}!") do |*args, &callback_task|
57
+ rails_wrapped do
58
+ @instance = instance.__send__(:add_callback, "callback_#{method}", args, callback_task)
59
+ end
60
+
61
+ self
62
+ end
51
63
  end
52
64
 
65
+ delegate :state, :reason, :rejected?, :resolved?, :fulfilled?, to: :instance
66
+
67
+ attr_reader :executor
68
+
53
69
  private
54
70
 
55
71
  def rails_wrapped(&block)
56
72
  Rails.application.executor.wrap(&block)
57
73
  end
58
74
 
59
- attr_reader :future_instance, :executor
75
+ def permit_concurrent_loads(&block)
76
+ rails_wrapped do
77
+ ActiveSupport::Dependencies.interlock.permit_concurrent_loads(&block)
78
+ end
79
+ end
80
+
81
+ attr_reader :instance
60
82
  end
61
83
  end
@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
1
+ # frozen_string_literal: true
2
+
3
+ module ConcurrentRails
4
+ class Testing
5
+ class << self
6
+ attr_reader :execution_mode
7
+
8
+ %w[immediate fake real].each do |test_mode|
9
+ define_method(test_mode) do |&task|
10
+ @execution_mode = test_mode
11
+ result = task.call
12
+ @execution_mode = :real
13
+
14
+ result
15
+ end
16
+
17
+ define_method("#{test_mode}!") do
18
+ @execution_mode = test_mode
19
+ end
20
+
21
+ define_method("#{test_mode}?") do
22
+ execution_mode == test_mode
23
+ end
24
+ end
25
+ end
26
+
27
+ module TestingFuture
28
+ def future(*args, &task)
29
+ if ConcurrentRails::Testing.immediate?
30
+ future_on(:immediate, *args, &task)
31
+ elsif ConcurrentRails::Testing.fake?
32
+ yield
33
+ else
34
+ super
35
+ end
36
+ end
37
+ end
38
+
39
+ ConcurrentRails::Promises.extend(TestingFuture)
40
+ end
41
+ end
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
1
1
  # frozen_string_literal: true
2
2
 
3
3
  module ConcurrentRails
4
- VERSION = '0.1.8'
4
+ VERSION = '0.3.1'
5
5
  end
@@ -4,7 +4,5 @@ require 'concurrent_rails/future'
4
4
  require 'concurrent_rails/multi'
5
5
  require 'concurrent_rails/promises'
6
6
  require 'concurrent_rails/railtie'
7
+ require 'concurrent_rails/testing'
7
8
  require 'concurrent_rails/version'
8
-
9
- module ConcurrentRails
10
- end
metadata CHANGED
@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
1
1
  --- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
2
2
  name: concurrent_rails
3
3
  version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
4
- version: 0.1.8
4
+ version: 0.3.1
5
5
  platform: ruby
6
6
  authors:
7
7
  - Luiz Eduardo Kowalski
8
8
  autorequire:
9
9
  bindir: bin
10
10
  cert_chain: []
11
- date: 2021-05-05 00:00:00.000000000 Z
11
+ date: 2021-11-14 00:00:00.000000000 Z
12
12
  dependencies:
13
13
  - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
14
14
  name: rails
@@ -24,6 +24,20 @@ dependencies:
24
24
  - - ">="
25
25
  - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
26
26
  version: '5.2'
27
+ - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
28
+ name: minitest-reporters
29
+ requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
30
+ requirements:
31
+ - - "~>"
32
+ - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
33
+ version: '1.4'
34
+ type: :development
35
+ prerelease: false
36
+ version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
37
+ requirements:
38
+ - - "~>"
39
+ - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
40
+ version: '1.4'
27
41
  - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
28
42
  name: rubocop
29
43
  requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
@@ -38,6 +52,20 @@ dependencies:
38
52
  - - ">="
39
53
  - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
40
54
  version: '1.12'
55
+ - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
56
+ name: rubocop-minitest
57
+ requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
58
+ requirements:
59
+ - - ">="
60
+ - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
61
+ version: '0.12'
62
+ type: :development
63
+ prerelease: false
64
+ version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
65
+ requirements:
66
+ - - ">="
67
+ - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
68
+ version: '0.12'
41
69
  - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
42
70
  name: rubocop-performance
43
71
  requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
@@ -63,10 +91,13 @@ files:
63
91
  - README.md
64
92
  - Rakefile
65
93
  - lib/concurrent_rails.rb
94
+ - lib/concurrent_rails/delay_adapter.rb
66
95
  - lib/concurrent_rails/future.rb
96
+ - lib/concurrent_rails/future_adapter.rb
67
97
  - lib/concurrent_rails/multi.rb
68
98
  - lib/concurrent_rails/promises.rb
69
99
  - lib/concurrent_rails/railtie.rb
100
+ - lib/concurrent_rails/testing.rb
70
101
  - lib/concurrent_rails/version.rb
71
102
  homepage: https://github.com/luizkowalski/concurrent_rails
72
103
  licenses:
@@ -90,7 +121,7 @@ required_rubygems_version: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
90
121
  - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
91
122
  version: '0'
92
123
  requirements: []
93
- rubygems_version: 3.1.6
124
+ rubygems_version: 3.2.31
94
125
  signing_key:
95
126
  specification_version: 4
96
127
  summary: Multithread is hard