Would anyone know where I could find a tutorial on how to create a background daemon ruby thread in rails?
Moses
Would anyone know where I could find a tutorial on how to create a background daemon ruby thread in rails?
Moses
Try looking at the Process module (or maybe it's a class?) , and the Daemons gem.
Or if you could clarify exactly what you need I could try to help more.
Hi Moses,
mmccall wrote:
Would anyone know where I could find a tutorial on how to create a background daemon ruby thread in rails?
Not sure if this is what you're looking for, but you might want to take a look at BackgroundRb.
HTH, Bill
I want to create a task or thread running in the background monitoring an entry within a database table within ruby and comparing this entry with the current time. If the current time is greater than a limit. The task will report an alert to the specified user by email.
Moses
One way to do this is just to create a ruby script which includes the rails environment, loads the record using active record, and sends an email using active mailer. Then have cron run that script periodically.
Hi,
One way to do this is just to create a ruby script which includes the rails environment, loads the record using active record, and sends an email using active mailer. Then have cron run that script periodically.
This is probably the best way to go.
You could do this pretty neatly by using rake. You only need to create a task and then use rake for invoking it. In your case you could do it by hand or via cron. If you include ‘environment’ as a dependency for your task, then your rails environment will be loaded for you and you can access your models as usual. It’s easy, it’s clean, it’s descriptive as it will be listed under rake -T and it’s easy to launch from the command line.
If for any reason you prefer a script and not a task (not sure why you’d actually want it), then you don’t need to care about how to load the enviroment or whatever. You can invoke any script with script/runner and the rails boot-up sequence will be executed before calling your script, so you can also here access your models as always.
regards,
javier ramirez
Thanks