NAME
Net::Twitter::Role::RateLimit - Rate limit features for Net::Twitter
VERSION
version 4.00001
SYNOPSIS
use Net::Twitter;
my $nt = Net::Twitter->new(
traits => [qw/API::RESTv1_1 RateLimit/],
%other_options,
);
#...later
sleep $nt->until_rate(1.0) || $minimum_wait;
DESCRIPTION
This provides utility methods that return information about the current rate limit status.
METHODS
If current rate limit data is not resident, these methods will force a call to rate_limit_status
. Therefore, any of these methods can throw an error.
- rate_remaining
-
Returns the number of API calls available before the next reset.
- rate_reset
-
Returns the Unix epoch time of the next reset.
- rate_limit
-
Returns the current hourly rate limit.
- rate_ratio
-
Returns remaining API call limit, divided by the time remaining before the next reset, as a ratio of the total rate limit per hour.
For example, if
rate_limit
is 150, the total rate is 150 API calls per hour. Ifrate_remaining
is 75, and there 1800 seconds (1/2 hour) remaining before the next reset,rate_ratio
returns 1.0, because there are exactly enough API calls remaining to maintain he full rate of 150 calls per hour.If
rate_remaining
is 30 and there are 360 seconds remaining before reset,rate_ratio
returns 2.0, because there are enough API calls remaining to maintain twice the full rate of 150 calls per hour.As a final example, if
rate_remaining
is 15, and there are 7200 seconds remaining before reset,rate_ratio
returns 0.5, because there are only enough API calls remaining to maintain half the full rate of 150 calls per hour. - until_rate($target_ratio)
-
Returns the number of seconds to wait before making another rate limited API call such that
$target_ratio
of the full rate would be available. It always returns a number greater than, or equal to zero.Use a target rate of 1.0 in a timeline polling loop to get a steady polling rate, using all the allocated calls, and adjusted for other API calls as they occur.
Use a target rate < 1.0 to allow a process to make calls as fast as possible but not consume all of the calls available, too soon. For example, if you have a process building a large social graph, you may want to allow it make as many calls as possible, with no wait, until 20% of the available rate remains. Use a value of 0.2 for that purpose.
A target rate > than 1.0 can be used for a process that should only use "extra" available API calls. This is useful for an application that requires most of it's rate limit for normal operation.
AUTHOR
Marc Mims <marc@questright.com>
LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2009 Marc Mims
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.