Net::Twitter::Role::RateLimit(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Net::Twitter::Role::RateLimit(3pm) |
Net::Twitter::Role::RateLimit - Rate limit features for Net::Twitter
version 4.01043
use Net::Twitter; my $nt = Net::Twitter->new( traits => [qw/API::REST RateLimit/], %other_options, ); #...later sleep $nt->until_rate(1.0) || $minimum_wait;
RateLimit only works with Twitter API v1. The rate limiting strategy of Twitter API v1.1 is very different. A v1.1 compatible RateLimit role may be coming, but isn't available, yet. It's interface will necessarily be different.
This provides utility methods that return information about the current rate limit status.
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.
For example, if "rate_limit" is 150, the total rate is 150 API calls per hour. If "rate_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.
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.
Marc Mims <marc@questright.com>
Copyright (c) 2016 Marc Mims
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2018-01-18 | perl v5.26.1 |