Tries

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Solidify your code and retry on petty exceptions.

Tries lets you retry a block of code multiple times, which is convenient for example when communicating with external APIs that might return an error the one second but work fine the next.

You can specify exactly how often the block of code is retried and which exceptions are caught.

Read the accompanying blog post.

Requirements

Ruby >= 1.9.2

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'tries'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install tries

Usage

3.tries on: Timeout::Error do
  Mechanize.new.get 'https://www.google.com/'
end

Detailed usage

Helper code to explain how it works

FooError = Class.new(StandardError)
BarError = Class.new(StandardError)

@error_counter = 0

def method_that_raises_exception
  @error_counter += 1
  puts "Counter is #{@error_counter}"

  case @error_counter
  when 1 then raise FooError
  when 2 then raise FooError
  when 3 then raise BarError
  when 4 then raise StandardError
  end

  puts 'You made it through!'
end

Rescue all errors

4.tries do
  method_that_raises_exception
end

# => Counter is 1
# => Counter is 2
# => Counter is 3
# => Counter is 4
# => Counter is 5
# => You made it through!

Rescue a specific error

3.tries on: FooError do
  method_that_raises_exception
end

# => Counter is 1
# => Counter is 2
# => Counter is 3
# => BarError

Rescue multiple errors

3.tries on: [FooError, BarError] do
  method_that_raises_exception
end

# => Counter is 1
# => Counter is 2
# => Counter is 3
# => Counter is 4
# => StandardError

Delay execution after error

delay is in seconds, fractions are possible

Static delay

4.tries delay: 1.5 do
  method_that_raises_exception
end

# => Counter is 1
# waits 1.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 2
# waits 1.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 3
# waits 1.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 4
# waits 1.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 5
# => You made it through!

Incremental delay

4.tries delay: 1.5, incremental: true do
  method_that_raises_exception
end

# => Counter is 1
# waits 1.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 2
# waits 3 seconds...
# => Counter is 3
# waits 4.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 4
# waits 6 seconds...
# => Counter is 5
# => You made it through!

Callback on error

You can set a method or Proc to be called every time an exception occurs. Either set it globally in an initializer, e.g. to log all exceptions to a service like Airbrake, or locally when calling tries. If both a global callback and a local callback are set, both are called, the global one first.

Global callback

# config/initializers/tries.rb
Tries.configure do |config|
  config.on_error = lambda do |exception, attempts, next_delay|
    puts "Whow, a #{exception.class} just occurred! It was attempt nr. #{attempts} to do whatever I was doing."
    if next_delay
      puts "I'm gonna wait #{next_delay} seconds and try again."
    else
      puts "A delay was not configured so I'm gonna go for it again immediately."
    end
  end
end
3.tries delay: 0.5, incremental: true do
  method_that_raises_exception
end

# => Counter is 1
# => Whow, a FooError just occurred! It was attempt nr. 1 to do whatever I was doing.
# => I'm gonna wait 0.5 seconds and try again.
# waits 0.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 2
# => Whow, a FooError just occurred! It was attempt nr. 2 to do whatever I was doing.
# => I'm gonna wait 1.0 seconds and try again.
# waits 1 second...
# => Counter is 3
# => Whow, a BarError just occurred! It was attempt nr. 3 to do whatever I was doing.
# => I'm gonna wait 1.5 seconds and try again.
# waits 1.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 4
# => StandardError

When using Rails, a global callback also lets you effectively disable Tries in development environment:

# config/initializers/tries.rb
Tries.configure do |config|
  config.on_error = lambda do |exception, attempts, next_delay|
    raise exception if Rails.env.development?
  end
end

Local callback

callback = lambda do |exception, attempts, next_delay|
  puts "Local callback! Exception: #{exception.class}, attempt: #{attempts}, next_delay: #{next_delay}"
end

3.tries delay: 0.5, incremental: true, on_error: callback do
  method_that_raises_exception
end

# => Counter is 1
# => Local callback! Exception: FooError, attempt: 1, next_delay: 0.5
# waits 0.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 2
# => Local callback! Exception: FooError, attempt: 2, next_delay: 1.0
# waits 1 second...
# => Counter is 3
# => Local callback! Exception: BarError, attempt: 3, next_delay: 1.5
# waits 1.5 seconds...
# => Counter is 4
# => StandardError

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request