9-defer-commit

command
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Published: Jul 12, 2022 License: BSD-3-Clause Imports: 12 Imported by: 0

README

Defer Commit

This example demonstrates the context function DeferCommit.

Usually the goka-context takes care of committing the incoming message offset once the callback has returned and all the started side-operations like SetValue, Emit or Loopback have returned to make sure that the message is not reconsumed, except in case of failure.

However, there are rare use cases which require more control over the comitting behavior of the context, especially when using external services that implement asynchronous/callback interfaces.

The following example simulates to forward messages into a different kafka cluster (so ctx.Emit won't work, but an extra goka.Emitter will do).

Without DeferCommit we would have two options: (a) use emitter.EmitSync and wait for the result. This however disables batching - so it comes with performance penalty. (b) use emitter.Emit which fails when the returned Promise fails asynchronously. This however means that failing to emit a message results in data loss as the message will not be reconsumed.

DeferCommit returns a function func(error) that passes the responsibility to commit to the caller. Failing to call that function will cause the messages to be reconsumed eventually and most likely to block the processor, as the involved input messages never seem to be processed and the Processor waits indefinitely. If DeferCommit is called multiple times, all returned functions need to be called individually.

It should be used like this:

func callback(ctx goka.Context, msg interface{}){
  // ...

  commit := ctx.DeferCommit()

  // in some async-code 
  go func(){
       
    if /* no error */{
    // success
      commit(nil)
    }else{
      // call commit with error. 
      // This will actually not commit the message but shutdown the processor.
      commit(errors.New("some error"))
    }
  }()
}

The example uses one emitter that emits the current unix-timestamp into topic input-topic. The forwarding processor instantiates a new emitter that represents the asynchronous component and emits the message to a forward-topic using DeferCommit. The third processor just prints the received messages.

Running the example prints the message every second:

go run main.go

# output: 
# 2021/02/17 11:18:50 received message time: 1613557129
# 2021/02/17 11:18:51 received message time: 1613557130
# 2021/02/17 11:18:52 received message time: 1613557131
# 2021/02/17 11:18:53 received message time: 1613557132

Stopping and restarting the example continues to print the incrementing timestamp.

Now run the example with disabled commit. Note that stopping with ctrl-c does not work as the processor hangs at the uncommitted messages. Doing ctrl-\ does the trick and prints the stack trace.

go run main.go --no-commit

# output:
# 2021/02/17 11:20:28 received message time: 1613557228
# 2021/02/17 11:20:29 received message time: 1613557229
# 2021/02/17 11:20:30 received message time: 1613557230
# ^C
# <stack trace>

Running it again, shows that the messages are reconsumed as the offset was not commited

go run main.go --no-commit

# output:
# --> old messages are reconsumed
# 2021/02/17 11:21:48 received message time: 1613557228
# 2021/02/17 11:21:48 received message time: 1613557229
# 2021/02/17 11:21:48 received message time: 1613557230
## --> new messages start here
# 2021/02/17 11:21:48 received message time: 1613557306
# 2021/02/17 11:21:48 received message time: 1613557307
# 2021/02/17 11:21:48 received message time: 1613557308

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