Sorry for that, but normal response would require a bunch of text/theory. Because your good question you've already written a good answer :)
First of all we should define the terms. The 'debounce' in terms of underscore/lodash should be learned under the David Corbacho’s article explanation:
Debounce: Think of it as "grouping multiple events in one". Imagine that you go home, enter in the elevator, doors are closing... and suddenly your neighbor appears in the hall and tries to jump on the elevator. Be polite! and open the doors for him: you are debouncing the elevator departure. Consider that the same situation can happen again with a third person, and so on... probably delaying the departure several minutes.
Throttle: Think of it as a valve, it regulates the flow of the executions. We can determine the maximum number of times a function can be called in certain time. So in the elevator analogy you are polite enough to let people in for 10 secs, but once that delay passes, you must go!
Your are asking about debounce
sinse first element would be pushed to list:
So that, by analogy with the elevator. Elevator should go up after 10 minutes after the lift came first person. It does not matter how many people crammed into the elevator more.
In case of distributed fault-tolerant system this should be viewed as a set of requirements:
- Processing of the new list must begin within X time, after inserting the first element (ie the creation of the list).
- The worker crash should not break anything.
- Dead lock free.
- The first requirement must be fulfilled regardless of the number of workers - be it 1 or N.
I.e. you should know (in distributed way) - group of workers have to wait, or you can start the list processing. As soon as we utter the phrase "distributed" and "fault-tolerant". These concepts always lead with they friends:
- Atomicity (eg by blocking)
- Reservation
In practice
In practice, i am afraid that your system needs to be a little bit more complicated (maybe you just do not have written, and you already have it).
Your method:
- Pessimistic locking with mutex via SET NX PX.
NX
is a guarantee that only one process at a time doing the work (atomicity). The PX
ensures that if something happens with this process the lock is released by the Redis (one part of fault-tolerant about dead locking).
- All workers try to catch one mutex (per list key), so just one be happy and would process list after X time. This process can update TTL of mutex (if need more time as originally wanted). If process would crash - the mutex would be unlocked after TTL and be grabbed with other worker.
My suggestion
The fault-tolerant reliable queue processing in Redis built around RPOPLPUSH:
- RPOPLPUSH item from processing to special list (per worker per list).
- Process item
- Remove item from special list
Requirements
So, if worker would crashed we always can return broken message from special list to main list. And Redis guarantees atomicity of RPOPLPUSH/RPOP. That is, there is only a problem group of workers to wait a while.
And then two options. First - if have much of clients and lesser workers use locking on side of worker. So try to lock mutex in worker and if success - start processing.
And vice versa. Use SET NX PX each time you execute LPUSH/RPUSH (to have "wait N time before pop from me" solution if you have many workers and some push clients). So push is:
SET myListLock 1 PX 10000 NX
LPUSH myList value
And each worker just check if myListLock exists we should wait not at least key TTL before set processing mutex and start to drain.