Class RateLimiter
acquire() blocks if necessary until a permit is available, and then takes it. Once
 acquired, permits need not be released.
 RateLimiter is safe for concurrent use: It will restrict the total rate of calls from
 all threads. Note, however, that it does not guarantee fairness.
 
Rate limiters are often used to restrict the rate at which some physical or logical resource
 is accessed. This is in contrast to Semaphore which restricts the
 number of concurrent accesses instead of the rate (note though that concurrency and rate are
 closely related, e.g. see Little's
 Law).
 
A RateLimiter is defined primarily by the rate at which permits are issued. Absent
 additional configuration, permits will be distributed at a fixed rate, defined in terms of
 permits per second. Permits will be distributed smoothly, with the delay between individual
 permits being adjusted to ensure that the configured rate is maintained.
 
It is possible to configure a RateLimiter to have a warmup period during which time
 the permits issued each second steadily increases until it hits the stable rate.
 
As an example, imagine that we have a list of tasks to execute, but we don't want to submit more than 2 per second:
final RateLimiter rateLimiter = RateLimiter.create(2.0); // rate is "2 permits per second"
void submitTasks(List<Runnable> tasks, Executor executor) {
  for (Runnable task : tasks) {
    rateLimiter.acquire(); // may wait
    executor.execute(task);
  }
}
As another example, imagine that we produce a stream of data, and we want to cap it at 5kb per second. This could be accomplished by requiring a permit per byte, and specifying a rate of 5000 permits per second:
final RateLimiter rateLimiter = RateLimiter.create(5000.0); // rate = 5000 permits per second
void submitPacket(byte[] packet) {
  rateLimiter.acquire(packet.length);
  networkService.send(packet);
}
It is important to note that the number of permits requested never affects the
 throttling of the request itself (an invocation to acquire(1) and an invocation to 
 acquire(1000) will result in exactly the same throttling, if any), but it affects the throttling
 of the next request. I.e., if an expensive task arrives at an idle RateLimiter, it will be
 granted immediately, but it is the next request that will experience extra throttling,
 thus paying for the cost of the expensive task.
- Since:
- 13.0
- Author:
- Dimitris Andreou
- 
Method SummaryModifier and TypeMethodDescriptiondoubleacquire()Acquires a single permit from thisRateLimiter, blocking until the request can be granted.doubleacquire(int permits) Acquires the given number of permits from thisRateLimiter, blocking until the request can be granted.static RateLimitercreate(double permitsPerSecond) Creates aRateLimiterwith the specified stable throughput, given as "permits per second" (commonly referred to as QPS, queries per second).static RateLimiterCreates aRateLimiterwith the specified stable throughput, given as "permits per second" (commonly referred to as QPS, queries per second), and a warmup period, during which theRateLimitersmoothly ramps up its rate, until it reaches its maximum rate at the end of the period (as long as there are enough requests to saturate it).static RateLimiterCreates aRateLimiterwith the specified stable throughput, given as "permits per second" (commonly referred to as QPS, queries per second), and a warmup period, during which theRateLimitersmoothly ramps up its rate, until it reaches its maximum rate at the end of the period (as long as there are enough requests to saturate it).final doublegetRate()Returns the stable rate (aspermits per seconds) with which thisRateLimiteris configured with.final voidsetRate(double permitsPerSecond) Updates the stable rate of thisRateLimiter, that is, thepermitsPerSecondargument provided in the factory method that constructed theRateLimiter.toString()booleanAcquires a permit from thisRateLimiterif it can be acquired immediately without delay.booleantryAcquire(int permits) Acquires permits from thisRateLimiterif it can be acquired immediately without delay.booleantryAcquire(int permits, long timeout, TimeUnit unit) Acquires the given number of permits from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permits would not have been granted before the timeout expired.booleantryAcquire(int permits, Duration timeout) Acquires the given number of permits from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permits would not have been granted before the timeout expired.booleantryAcquire(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) Acquires a permit from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permit would not have been granted before the timeout expired.booleantryAcquire(Duration timeout) Acquires a permit from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permit would not have been granted before the timeout expired.
- 
Method Details- 
createCreates aRateLimiterwith the specified stable throughput, given as "permits per second" (commonly referred to as QPS, queries per second).The returned RateLimiterensures that on average no more thanpermitsPerSecondare issued during any given second, with sustained requests being smoothly spread over each second. When the incoming request rate exceedspermitsPerSecondthe rate limiter will release one permit every(1.0 / permitsPerSecond)seconds. When the rate limiter is unused, bursts of up topermitsPerSecondpermits will be allowed, with subsequent requests being smoothly limited at the stable rate ofpermitsPerSecond.- Parameters:
- permitsPerSecond- the rate of the returned- RateLimiter, measured in how many permits become available per second
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if- permitsPerSecondis negative or zero
 
- 
createCreates aRateLimiterwith the specified stable throughput, given as "permits per second" (commonly referred to as QPS, queries per second), and a warmup period, during which theRateLimitersmoothly ramps up its rate, until it reaches its maximum rate at the end of the period (as long as there are enough requests to saturate it). Similarly, if theRateLimiteris left unused for a duration ofwarmupPeriod, it will gradually return to its "cold" state, i.e. it will go through the same warming up process as when it was first created.The returned RateLimiteris intended for cases where the resource that actually fulfills the requests (e.g., a remote server) needs "warmup" time, rather than being immediately accessed at the stable (maximum) rate.The returned RateLimiterstarts in a "cold" state (i.e. the warmup period will follow), and if it is left unused for long enough, it will return to that state.- Parameters:
- permitsPerSecond- the rate of the returned- RateLimiter, measured in how many permits become available per second
- warmupPeriod- the duration of the period where the- RateLimiterramps up its rate, before reaching its stable (maximum) rate
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if- permitsPerSecondis negative or zero or- warmupPeriodis negative
- Since:
- 33.4.0 (but since 28.0 in the JRE flavor)
 
- 
createCreates aRateLimiterwith the specified stable throughput, given as "permits per second" (commonly referred to as QPS, queries per second), and a warmup period, during which theRateLimitersmoothly ramps up its rate, until it reaches its maximum rate at the end of the period (as long as there are enough requests to saturate it). Similarly, if theRateLimiteris left unused for a duration ofwarmupPeriod, it will gradually return to its "cold" state, i.e. it will go through the same warming up process as when it was first created.The returned RateLimiteris intended for cases where the resource that actually fulfills the requests (e.g., a remote server) needs "warmup" time, rather than being immediately accessed at the stable (maximum) rate.The returned RateLimiterstarts in a "cold" state (i.e. the warmup period will follow), and if it is left unused for long enough, it will return to that state.- Parameters:
- permitsPerSecond- the rate of the returned- RateLimiter, measured in how many permits become available per second
- warmupPeriod- the duration of the period where the- RateLimiterramps up its rate, before reaching its stable (maximum) rate
- unit- the time unit of the warmupPeriod argument
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if- permitsPerSecondis negative or zero or- warmupPeriodis negative
 
- 
setRatepublic final void setRate(double permitsPerSecond) Updates the stable rate of thisRateLimiter, that is, thepermitsPerSecondargument provided in the factory method that constructed theRateLimiter. Currently throttled threads will not be awakened as a result of this invocation, thus they do not observe the new rate; only subsequent requests will.Note though that, since each request repays (by waiting, if necessary) the cost of the previous request, this means that the very next request after an invocation to setRatewill not be affected by the new rate; it will pay the cost of the previous request, which is in terms of the previous rate.The behavior of the RateLimiteris not modified in any other way, e.g. if theRateLimiterwas configured with a warmup period of 20 seconds, it still has a warmup period of 20 seconds after this method invocation.- Parameters:
- permitsPerSecond- the new stable rate of this- RateLimiter
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if- permitsPerSecondis negative or zero
 
- 
getRatepublic final double getRate()Returns the stable rate (aspermits per seconds) with which thisRateLimiteris configured with. The initial value of this is the same as thepermitsPerSecondargument passed in the factory method that produced thisRateLimiter, and it is only updated after invocations to setRate(double).
- 
acquireAcquires a single permit from thisRateLimiter, blocking until the request can be granted. Tells the amount of time slept, if any.This method is equivalent to acquire(1).- Returns:
- time spent sleeping to enforce rate, in seconds; 0.0 if not rate-limited
- Since:
- 16.0 (present in 13.0 with voidreturn type})
 
- 
acquireAcquires the given number of permits from thisRateLimiter, blocking until the request can be granted. Tells the amount of time slept, if any.- Parameters:
- permits- the number of permits to acquire
- Returns:
- time spent sleeping to enforce rate, in seconds; 0.0 if not rate-limited
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if the requested number of permits is negative or zero
- Since:
- 16.0 (present in 13.0 with voidreturn type})
 
- 
tryAcquireAcquires a permit from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permit would not have been granted before the timeout expired.This method is equivalent to tryAcquire(1, timeout).- Parameters:
- timeout- the maximum time to wait for the permit. Negative values are treated as zero.
- Returns:
- trueif the permit was acquired,- falseotherwise
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if the requested number of permits is negative or zero
- Since:
- 33.4.0 (but since 28.0 in the JRE flavor)
 
- 
tryAcquireAcquires a permit from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permit would not have been granted before the timeout expired.This method is equivalent to tryAcquire(1, timeout, unit).- Parameters:
- timeout- the maximum time to wait for the permit. Negative values are treated as zero.
- unit- the time unit of the timeout argument
- Returns:
- trueif the permit was acquired,- falseotherwise
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if the requested number of permits is negative or zero
 
- 
tryAcquirepublic boolean tryAcquire(int permits) Acquires permits from thisRateLimiterif it can be acquired immediately without delay.This method is equivalent to tryAcquire(permits, 0, anyUnit).- Parameters:
- permits- the number of permits to acquire
- Returns:
- trueif the permits were acquired,- falseotherwise
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if the requested number of permits is negative or zero
- Since:
- 14.0
 
- 
tryAcquirepublic boolean tryAcquire()Acquires a permit from thisRateLimiterif it can be acquired immediately without delay.This method is equivalent to tryAcquire(1).- Returns:
- trueif the permit was acquired,- falseotherwise
- Since:
- 14.0
 
- 
tryAcquireAcquires the given number of permits from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permits would not have been granted before the timeout expired.- Parameters:
- permits- the number of permits to acquire
- timeout- the maximum time to wait for the permits. Negative values are treated as zero.
- Returns:
- trueif the permits were acquired,- falseotherwise
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if the requested number of permits is negative or zero
- Since:
- 33.4.0 (but since 28.0 in the JRE flavor)
 
- 
tryAcquireAcquires the given number of permits from thisRateLimiterif it can be obtained without exceeding the specifiedtimeout, or returnsfalseimmediately (without waiting) if the permits would not have been granted before the timeout expired.- Parameters:
- permits- the number of permits to acquire
- timeout- the maximum time to wait for the permits. Negative values are treated as zero.
- unit- the time unit of the timeout argument
- Returns:
- trueif the permits were acquired,- falseotherwise
- Throws:
- IllegalArgumentException- if the requested number of permits is negative or zero
 
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toString
 
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