In an effort to rethink how documentation work, we recently introduced Articles, longer-form prose that can sit side by side with shorter Q&A. We sat down with team leads from across Stack to learn how this new features has changed their approach.
When I deploy software, I’m lazy. Very lazy. This is why I lean heavily on Continous Deployment (CD) to automatically test and deploy software when it’s merged into my main branch. I don’t have time to deploy code by hand. So gauche!
I have a setup in an MVC site where a set of calculations are being run async, and when they're done the results are saved to the database. These calculations have a few parameters they're based one. When the process starts, it logs those parameters to a DB table to indicate that they're running, and deletes them from that log table when the process is done.
I'm trying to figure out if there's a way if, when the process starts and finds that a process with those same parameters is already running, to somehow cancel or kill the original process.
There's a report displayed on the the page. The report itself is defined by two parameters called OrgId and PlanId. The report has different options and parameters that can be assigned to different line items. If any of those line item options get changed, a bunch of things need to get recalculated on the back end.
The report that is displayed on the page is just for one year, but once we calculate for that year to send back to the browser, we also need to calculate for ALL the years that the user has set up in their account and store those to a results table. That recalculation of all years is what I'm doing async.
The reason I'm doing it async is that it can take a few minutes to fully calculate.
Now, if the user makes another change to those line item options before the async function has completed, then the data that async function has is obsolete. I want to kill it and start over again with the new data.
Changing the options causes a recalculation of the single year report, and then and async call for calculating all the years for that OrgId/PlanId combination.
That async call has its results stored to a database.
If the same OrgId/PlanId is recalculated again before that first async call is finished, it's because the options have changed again. So I want to kill the original async call and start the recalculation again.
Ok lets say you have that static list, how do you access the already running threads?
Trying to think of this with out having to run some other process that's looking for those calls, or gets the call and has the cancel token. Then waits for the same call to come in again to stop it.