If you've ever used ActiveResource or for that matter, coded anything that involves interacting with a remote API, you've probably had the misfortune of having that API go down or become unresponsive. The experienced old geezers would already have forseen the problem and set a timeout on those API calls. For the rest of us, it's a good time to get acquainted with the idea of fail-fast and how no response is better than a slow response.

So what happens when the API you're accessing via ActiveResource or Net::HTTP (or whatever, really, so long as there's a network socket involved!) becomes unresponsive?

Unfettered outbound remote connections can kill your server

ActiveResource (or Net::HTTP or whatever you're using) would block while waiting for the API to return. What did we learn about blocking IO in Operating Systems 101? That your process or thread gets stuck waiting for a response that's what. So now your Mongrel/Thin/Ebb/X web server process basically stuck waiting for a response from an API that might return a response in 30 seconds, or maybe it'll never return at all. It won't be long before all your web server processes get blocked and its time to "kill dash nine" ( kill -9 ) some processes and bring out the 500 error page. Yes, your server has been incapacitated and your website is now basically offline.





Timeouts and you

If you're using Net::HTTP you can easily safeguard yourself against errors like this by setting a timeout on the socket connection. Like so:

def fetch_something_from_some_api(uri) http = Net::HTTP.new(uri.host, uri.port) http.read_timeout = timeout response = http.start { http.request(Net::HTTP::Get.new("#{uri.path}?#{uri.query}")) } response.is_a?(Net::HTTPSuccess) ? do_something_with(response.body) : nil rescue Timeout::Error logger.warn("Timeout accessing #{uri}: #{$!}") nil rescue logger.warn("Error accessing #{uri}: #{$!}") nil end

Take note that you really do need to explicitly rescue from the Timeout::Error (or Interrupt ) since it's a child of the Interrupt class and not a StandardError .

Any good client library should also allow you to specify a timeout on the socket connection so read the API documentation.

So what's this about ActiveResource?

So back to ActiveResource: Michael Koziarski was kind enough to commit my 2 patches (this and this) to ActiveResource so now on edge Rails, you can do this:

class Person < ActiveResource::Base self.site = 'http://api.people.com:3000/' self.timeout = 5 end

This sets the timeout to 5 seconds on the underlying Net::HTTP instance that ActiveResource uses. The default timeout (to be exact, the read_timeout ) for Net::HTTP is 60 seconds on most Ruby implementations (that includes MRI). That's far too long if your ActiveResource call is in a public-facing controller!

If you are using ActiveResource anywhere and haven't safeguarded your application with a timeout, I think it's a good idea to fix it by using edge Rails or at least applying the patch!