Is Your Node Process Too Busy?
toobusy-js
is a fork of lloyd's node-toobusy that removes native dependencies
in favor of using the unref
introduced in node 0.9.1.
This package is a simpler install without native dependencies, but requires node >= 0.9.1.
Node-Toobusy
What happens when your service is overwhelmed with traffic?
Your server can do one of two things:
- Stop working, or...
- Keep serving as many requests as possible
This library helps you do the latter.
How it works
toobusy
polls the node.js event loop and keeps track of "lag",
which is long requests wait in node's event queue to be processed.
When lag crosses a threshold, toobusy
tells you that you're too busy.
At this point you can stop request processing early
(before you spend too much time on them and compound the problem),
and return a "Server Too Busy" response.
This allows your server to stay responsive under extreme load,
and continue serving as many requests as possible.
installation
npm install toobusy-js
usage
var toobusy = require('toobusy-js'),
express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
if (toobusy()) {
res.send(503, "I'm busy right now, sorry.");
} else {
next();
}
});
app.get('/', function(req, res) {
var i = 0;
while (i < 1e5) i++;
res.send("I counted to " + i);
});
var server = app.listen(3000);
process.on('SIGINT', function() {
server.close();
toobusy.shutdown();
process.exit();
});
tunable parameters
The one knob that the library exposes is "maximum lag".
This number represents the maximum amount of time in milliseconds that the event queue is behind,
before we consider the process too busy.
var toobusy = require('toobusy-js');
toobusy.maxLag(10);
toobusy.interval(250);
var currentMaxLag = toobusy.maxLag(), interval = toobusy.interval();
The default maxLag value is 70ms, and the default check interval is 500ms.
This allows an "average" server to run at 90-100% CPU
and keeps request latency at around 200ms.
For comparison, a maxLag value of 10ms results in 60-70% CPU usage,
while latency for "average" requests stays at about 40ms.
These numbers are only examples,
and the specifics of your hardware and application can change them drastically,
so experiment!
The default of 70 should get you started.
references
There is nothing new under the sun. (Ecclesiastes 1:9)
Though applying "event loop latency" to node.js was not directly inspired by anyone else's work,
this concept is not new. Here are references to others who apply the same technique:
license
WTFPL