I am trying to use Ruby's daemon
gem and loop the restart of a daemon that has its own loop. My code looks like this now:
require 'daemons'
while true
listener = Daemons.call(:force => true) do
users = accounts.get_updated_user_list
TweetStream::Client.new.follow(users) do |status|
puts "#{status.text}"
end
end
sleep(60)
listener.restart
end
Running this gives me the following error (after 60 seconds):
undefined method `restart' for #<Daemons::Application:0x007fc5b29f5658> (NoMethodError)
So obviously Daemons.call
doesn't return a controllable daemon like I think it does. What do I need to do to set this up correctly. Is a daemon the right tool here?
I think this is what you're after, although I haven't tested it.
Here's how it works:
TweetStream uses EventMachine internally, as a way of polling the API forever and handling the responses. I can see why you might have felt stuck, because the normal TweetStream API blocks forever and doesn't give you a way to intervene at any point. However, TweetStream does allow you to set up other things in the same event loop. In your case, a timer. I found the documentation on how to do that here: https://github.com/intridea/tweetstream#removal-of-on_interval-callback
By starting up our own EventMachine reactor, we're able to inject our own code into the reactor as well as use TweetStream. In this case, we're using a simple timer that just restarts the client every 60 seconds.
EventMachine is an implementation of something called the Reactor Pattern. If you want to fully understand and maintain this code, it would serve you well to find some resources about it and gain a full understanding. The reactor pattern is very powerful, but can be difficult to grasp at first.
However, this code should get you started. Also, I'd consider renaming the RestartingUserTracker to something more appropriate.