On 2 May 2001, Vivek Khera wrote:
> I've got an application that creates work and posts the work requests
> to a table. Each work request is just a single row in the table.
> I've also got two systems that do the work based on the requests in
> the table.
>
> It seems that ideally, I could use the LISTEN/NOTIFY features to tell
> the consumers when there is work. However, what I really need is a
> blocking LISTEN. That is, it just sits there until it gets a NOTIFY.
>
> Right now, the consumer checks for work every so often, and most of
> the time finds none.
>
> What's the best way to implement such a thing in Perl? Is there a
> blocking LISTEN?
I'm not a serious expert on such things, but, in Perl, LISTEN/NOTIFY is
handled through DBI/DBD, so the LISTEN/NOTIFY notification will come
only when a regular query is sent.
Could you possibly do something like:
while (1) {
execute regular, simple query (eg "SELECT 1;")
check for notification, and handle it
sleep for x minutes/seconds/msecs
}
It's still a loop w/a query, but at least the query should be extremely
speedy and have low impact on DB performance.
If you find a better way, please let me know.
HTH,
--
Joel Burton <jburton@scw.org>
Director of Information Systems, Support Center of Washington