NAME
Parallel::Downloader - simply download multiple files at once
VERSION
version 0.132071
SYNOPSIS
use HTTP::Request::Common qw( GET POST );
use Parallel::Downloader 'async_download';
# simple example
my @responses = async_download( requests => \@requests );
# complex example
my @complex_reqs = ( ( map POST( "http://google.com", [ type_id => $_ ] ), ( 1..60 ) ),
my $downloader = Parallel::Downloader->new(
requests => \@complex_reqs,
workers => 50,
conns_per_host => 12,
aehttp_args => {
timeout => 30,
on_prepare => sub {
print "download started ($AnyEvent::HTTP::ACTIVE / $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_PER_HOST)\n"
}
},
debug => 1,
logger => sub {
my ( $downloader, $message ) = @_;
print "downloader sez [$message->{type}]: $message->{msg}\n";
},
);
my @complex_responses = $downloader->run;
DESCRIPTION
This is not a library to build a parallel downloader on top of. It is a
downloading client build on top of AnyEvent::HTTP.
Its goal is not to be better, faster, or smaller than anything else. Its
goal is to provide the user with a single function they can call with a
bunch of HTTP requests and which gives them the responses for them with
as little fuss as possible and most importantly, without downloading
them in sequence.
It handles the busywork of grouping requests by hosts and limiting the
amount of simultaneous requests per host, separate from capping the
amount of overall connections. This allows the user to maximize their
own connection without abusing remote hosts.
Of course, there are facilities to customize the exact limits employed
and to add logging and such; but "async_download" is the premier piece
of API and should be enough for most uses.
FUNCTIONS
async_download
Can be requested to be exported, will instantiate a Parallel::Downloader
object with the given parameters, run it and return the results. Its
parameters are as follows:
requests (required)
Reference to an array of HTTP::Request objects, all of which will be
downloaded.
aehttp_args
A reference to a hash containing arguments that will be passed to
AnyEvent::HTTP::http_request.
Default is an empty hashref.
conns_per_host
Sets the number of connections allowed per host by changing the
corresponding AnyEvent::HTTP package variable.
Default is '4'.
debug
A boolean that determines whether logging operations are a NOP or
actually run. Set to any true value to activate the logging.
Default is '0'.
logger
A reference to a sub that will receive a hash containing logging
information. Whether that sub then prints them to screen or into a
database or other targets is up to the user.
Default is a sub that prints to the screen.
workers
The amount of workers to be used for downloading. Useful for controlling
the global amount of connections your machine will try to establish.
Default is '10'.
build_response
A reference to a sub that will be called on completion of a request to
build the response variable that will be returned for this request. It
receives as parameters the body of the response, a hash ref of the
response headers and the original request.
Default is a sub that returns the parameters wrapped in an array
reference.
sorted
A boolean that determines whether the returned responses are sorted in
the same order as the input requests. Can be useful to disable if
build_response was overridden to not return an array or not return the
request as the third element of the response array.
Default is '1'.
METHODS
run
Runs the downloads for the given parameters and returns an array of
array references, each containing the decoded contents, the headers and
the HTTP::Request object.
SUPPORT
Bugs / Feature Requests
Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at
You will be notified automatically of any progress on your issue.
Source Code
This is open source software. The code repository is available for
public review and contribution under the terms of the license.
AUTHOR
Christian Walde <walde.christian@googlemail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Christian Walde has dedicated the work to the Commons by waiving all of
his or her rights to the work worldwide under copyright law and all
related or neighboring legal rights he or she had in the work, to the
extent allowable by law.
Works under CC0 do not require attribution. When citing the work, you
should not imply endorsement by the author.