Simple Elixir macros for linear retry, exponential backoff and wait with composable delays.
Add retry
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[{:retry, "~> 0.18"}]
end
Ensure retry
is started before your application:
def application do
[applications: [:retry]]
end
Check out the API reference for the latest documentation.
The retry([with: _,] do: _, after: _, else: _)
macro provides a way to retry a block of code on failure with a variety of delay and give up behaviors. By default, the execution of a block is considered a failure if it returns :error
, {:error, _}
or raises a runtime error.
An optional list of atoms can be specified in :atoms
if you need to retry anything other than :error
or {:error, _}
, e.g. retry([with: _, atoms: [:not_ok]], do: _, after: _, else: _)
.
Similarly, an optional list of exceptions can be specified in :rescue_only
if you need to retry anything other than RuntimeError
, e.g. retry([with: _, rescue_only: [CustomError]], do: _, after: _, else: _)
.
The after
block evaluates only when the do
block returns a valid value before timeout. On the other hand, the else
block evaluates only when the do
block remains erroneous after timeout. Both are optional. By default, the else
clause will return the last erroneous value or re-raise the last exception. The default after
clause will simply return the last successful value.
result = retry with: constant_backoff(100) |> Stream.take(10) do
ExternalApi.do_something # fails if other system is down
after
result -> result
else
error -> error
end
This example retries every 100 milliseconds and gives up after 10 attempts.
result = retry with: linear_backoff(10, 2) |> cap(1_000) |> Stream.take(10) do
ExternalApi.do_something # fails if other system is down
after
result -> result
else
error -> error
end
This example increases the delay linearly with each retry, starting with 10 milliseconds, caps the delay at 1 second and gives up after 10 attempts.
result = retry with: exponential_backoff() |> randomize |> expiry(10_000), rescue_only: [TimeoutError] do
ExternalApi.do_something # fails if other system is down
after
result -> result
else
error -> error
end
result = retry with: constant_backoff(100) |> Stream.take(10) do
ExternalApi.do_something # fails if other system is down
end
This example is equivalent to:
result = retry with: constant_backoff(100) |> Stream.take(10) do
ExternalApi.do_something # fails if other system is down
after
result -> result
else
e when is_exception(e) -> raise e
e -> e
end
use Retry.Annotation
@retry with: constant_backoff(100) |> Stream.take(10)
def some_func(arg) do
ExternalApi.do_something # fails if other system is down
end
This example shows how you can annotate a function to retry every 100 milliseconds and gives up after 10 attempts.
The with:
option of retry
accepts any Stream
that yields integers. These integers will be interpreted as the amount of time to delay before retrying a failed operation. When the stream is exhausted retry
will give up, returning the last value of the block.
result = retry with: Stream.cycle([500]) do
ExternalApi.do_something # fails if other system is down
after
result -> result
else
error -> error
end
This will retry failures forever, waiting 0.5 seconds between attempts.
Retry.DelayStreams
provides a set of fully composable helper functions for building useful delay behaviors such as the ones in previous examples. See the Retry.DelayStreams
module docs for full details and addition behavior not covered here. For convenience these functions are imported by use Retry
so you can, usually, use them without prefixing them with the module name.
Similar to retry(with: _, do: _)
, the wait(delay_stream, do: _, after: _, else: _)
macro provides a way to wait for a block of code to be truthy with a variety of delay and give up behaviors. The execution of a block is considered a failure if it returns false
or nil
.
wait constant_backoff(100) |> expiry(1_000) do
we_there_yet?
after
_ ->
{:ok, "We have arrived!"}
else
_ ->
{:error, "We're still on our way :("}
end
This example retries every 100 milliseconds and expires after 1 second.
The after
block evaluates only when the do
block returns a truthy value. On the other hand, the else
block evaluates only when the do
block remains falsy after timeout. Both are optional. By default, a success value will be returned as {:ok, value}
and an erroneous value will be returned as {:error, value}
.
Pretty nifty for those pesky asynchronous tests and building more reliable systems in general!