The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.

NAME

Object::RateLimiter - A flood control (rate limiter) object

SYNOPSIS

use Object::RateLimiter;

my $ctrl = Object::RateLimiter->new(
  events  => 3,
  seconds => 5
);

# Run some subs, as a contrived example;
# no more than 3 in 5 seconds, per our constructor above:
my @work = (
  sub { "foo" },
  sub { "bar" },
  # ...
);

while (my $some_item = shift @work) {
  if (my $delay = $ctrl->delay) {
    # Delayed $delay seconds.
    sleep $delay;
  } else {
    # No delay.
    $some_item->()
  }
}

# Clear the event history if it's stale:
$ctrl->expire;

# Clear the event history unconditionally:
$ctrl->clear;

DESCRIPTION

This is a generic rate-limiter object, implementing the math described in http://www.perl.com/pub/2004/11/11/floodcontrol.html.

Fractional seconds are supported.

new

my $ctrl = Object::RateLimiter->new(
  events  => 3,
  seconds => 5
);

Constructs a new rate-limiter with a clean event history.

clone

my $new_ctrl = $ctrl->clone( events => 4 );

Clones an existing rate-limiter; new options can be provided, overriding previous settings.

The new limiter contains a clone of the event history; the old rate-limiter is left untouched.

clear

$ctrl->clear;

Clears the event history.

Always returns true.

delay

if (my $delay = $ctrl->delay) {
  sleep $delay;  # ... or do something else
} else {
  # Not delayed.
  do_work;
}

The delay() method determines if some work can be done now, or should wait.

When called, event timestamps are considered; if we have exceeded our limit, the delay in (possibly fractional) seconds until the event would be allowed is returned.

A return value of 0 indicates that the event does not need to wait.

events

Returns the events limit the object was constructed with.

expire

$ctrl->expire;

Clears the event history if the last seen event is outside of our time window.

Returns true if "clear" was called.

(You're not required to call expire(), but it can be useful to force a cleanup.)

seconds

Returns the seconds limit the object was constructed with.

AUTHOR

Jon Portnoy avenj@cobaltirc.org

Based on the math from Algorithm::FloodControl as described in an article written by the author: http://www.perl.com/pub/2004/11/11/floodcontrol.html

Licensed under the same terms as Perl.