Is it possible to use cache.ram for a TCP socket? In my setup, establishing a TCP connection to a remote machine is time consuming and I need to find a workaround to have snappier response to the Web UI.
Any help appreciated. Thanks, Bernard On Monday, February 4, 2013 11:46:22 AM UTC-8, Bernard wrote: > > Hi web2py users, > I've been using web2py for a few months now, thank you to the > developers for the great work. > > I'm working on an interactive web based monitoring and control > Application that communicates with ~30 mobile field units at a time to get > periodic 'semi-realtime' status reports (2-5 second poll period) and allow > the user to change settings of the field units on demand. The > communications channel is using TCP sockets: the web2py workstation end is > the TCP client and each field unit is running as a TCP server on an > embedded low performance field unit. The front end is currently doing > periodic Ajax polling every 2 seconds and updating the GUI. I also would > like to support multiple web users connected to the Application on the > front end. > > I've searched the mailing lists of web2py and other frameworks but > could not find a use case similar to mine. There are many ways > implementing this, it's not easy to figure out which is best and what > pitfalls may lie ahead. > Here are some of the approaches that I have considered: > 1- Use a background asynchronous "Data Acquisition" task always running > and fills a "RealTime" table in the database (by polling all field units > every 2 seconds). For each web request, the controller would then pick up > the latest values from the database and serve them up to Web clients > without having to worry about pulling the data. The background task keeps > the sockets open to improve performance. > 2- The controller communicates with the ~30 field units directly, > bypassing any database overhead. The controller needs a persistent > reference to the 30 TCP sockets to make the comms faster. Is there a way to > parallelize the TCP request/response in the request thread to communicate > with ~30 units quickly? To handle multiple Web users, I can cache the > controller function so that it doesn't run on every web client request. > 3- Have web2py controller communicate with a separate data acquisition > process > via message queues. The web2py parts would never deal with the low level > comms and the external data acquisition component would abstract all > that. However, this is at the expense of having to create an external > component and define the interface to it and adding a messaging framework > between web2py and the data acquisition process. > 4- Controller kicks off a worker thread that collects the field unit > status. Controller function cached to avoid having a task for every web > request. > 5- Other ideas that might be better suited to this application? > > If anybody has gone through something similar, can you please help with > your experience? > If you see any issues or potential weaknesses in any of these approaches, > your feedback would be greatly appreciated. > > Regards, > Bernard > > -- --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "web2py-users" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to web2py+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.