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Deferred execution

Defer adds three methods for working with deferred code execution:

  • defer accepts a block and executes it (potentially) on a thread pool. It returns an object that can be awaited with wait. These objects are Promises made by concurrent-ruby. You can use their API, but it's not fully supported and tested in conjunction with effects.
  • wait accepts a promise or an array of promises returned by defer and returns their values. The method blocks the current thread until all values are available.
  • later postpones block execution until the handler is finished (see examples below).

Defer

A simple example:

class CreateUser
  include Dry::Effects.Resolve(:user_repo, :send_invitation)
  include Dry::Effects.Defer

  def call(values)
    user = user_repo.create(values)
    defer { send_invitation.(user) }
    user
  end
end

In the code above, send_invitation is run on a thread pool. It's the simplest way to run code concurrently.

Code within the defer block can use some effects but not all of them. For instance, Interrupt is not supported because you cannot return from one thread to another. This is a limitation of Ruby and threads in general.

Handling

The default handler uses concurrent-ruby to do the heavy lifting. As an option, it accepts the executor—usually a thread pool where the code will be run.

Three special values are also supported: :io returns the global pool for long, blocking (IO) tasks, :fast returns the global pool for short, fast operations, and :immediate returns the global ImmediateExecutor object.

By default, Dry::Effects::Handler.Defer uses :io.

class HandleDefer
  include Dry::Effects::Handler.Defer(executor: :immediate)

  def initialize(app)
    @app = app
  end

  def call(env)
    # defer tasks in @app will be run on the same thread
    with_defer { @app.(env) }
  end
end

The executor can be passed directly to with_defer:

def call(env)
  with_defer(executor: :fast) { @app.(env) }
end

Using null executor

For skipping deferred tasks, create a mocked executor

require 'concurrent/executor/executor_service'

NullExecutor = Object.new.extend(Concurrent::ExecutorService).tap do |null|
  def null.post
  end
end

and provide it in middleware

class HandleDefer
  include Dry::Effects::Handler.Defer
  include Dry::Effects::Handler.Env(:environment)

  def initialize(app)
    @app = app
  end

  def call(env)
    with_defer(executor: executor) { @app.(env) }
  end

  def executor
    environment.equal?(:test) ? NullExecutor : :io
  end
end

Later

later doesn't return a result that can be awaited. Instead, it starts deferred blocks on handler exit. Consider this example:

class CreateUser
  def call(values)
    user_repo.transaction do
      user = user_repo.create(values)
      defer { send_invitation.(user) }
      user_account = account_repo.create(user)
      user
    end
  end
end

There is no guarantee send_invitation will be run after the transaction finishes. It may lead to race conditions or anomalies. If account_repo.create fails with an exception, the transaction will be rolled back yet the invitation will be sent!

later captures the block but doesn't run it:

later { send_invitation.(user) }

The invitaition will be sent when with_defer exits:

with_defer { @app.(env) }

It usually happens outside of any transaction so that anomalies don't occur.

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