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Home/ Questions/Q 8124075
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T06:21:32+00:00 2026-06-06T06:21:32+00:00

I’m doing a lot of HTTP requests and I chose HTTP::Async to do the

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I’m doing a lot of HTTP requests and I chose HTTP::Async to do the job. I’ve over 1000 requests to make, and if I simply do the following (see code below), a lot of requests time out by the time they get processed because it can take tens of minutes before processing gets to them:

for my $url (@urls) {
    $async->add(HTTP::Request->new(GET => $url));
}
while (my $resp = $async->wait_for_next_response) {
    # use $resp
}

So I decided to do 25 requests per time, but I can’t think of a way to express it in code.

I tried the following:

while (1) {
    L25:
    for (1..25) {
        my $url = shift @urls;
        if (!defined($url)) {
            last L25;
        }
        $async->add(HTTP::Request->new(GET => $url));
    }
    while (my $resp = $async->wait_for_next_response) {
        # use $resp
    }
}

This however doesn’t work well as because it’s too slow now. Now it waits until all 25 requests have been processed until it adds another 25. So if it has 2 requests left, it does nothing. I’ve to wait for all requests to be processed to add the next batch of 25.

How could I improve this logic to make $async do something while I process records, but also make sure they don’t time out.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T06:21:34+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 6:21 am

    You’re close, you just need to combine the two approaches! 🙂

    Untested, so think of it as pseudo code. In particular I am not sure if total_count is the right method to use, the documentation doesn’t say. You could also just have an $active_requests counter that you ++ when adding a request and -- when you get a response.

    while (1) {
    
       # if there aren't already 25 requests "active", then add more
       while (@urls and $async->total_count < 25) {
           my $url = shift @urls;
           $async->add( ... );
       }
    
       # deal with any finished requests right away, we wait for a
       # second just so we don't spin in the main loop too fast.
       while (my $response = $async->wait_for_next_response(1)) {
          # use $response
       }
    
       # finish the main loop when there's no more work
       last unless ($async->total_count or @urls);
    
    }
    
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