“Meteor code must always run within a Fiber” when calling Collection.insert on server

試著忘記壹切 提交于 2019-11-26 07:29:40

问题


I have the following code in server/statusboard.js;

var require = __meteor_bootstrap__.require,
    request = require(\"request\")   


function getServices(services) {
  services = [];
  request(\'http://some-server/vshell/index.php?type=services&mode=json\', function (error, response, body) {
    var resJSON = JSON.parse(body);
     _.each(resJSON, function(data) {
       var host = data[\"host_name\"];
       var service = data[\"service_description\"];
       var hardState = data[\"last_hard_state\"];
       var currState = data[\"current_state\"];
       services+={host: host, service: service, hardState: hardState, currState: currState};
       Services.insert({host: host, service: service, hardState: hardState, currState: currState});
    });
  });
}

Meteor.startup(function () {
  var services = [];
  getServices(services);
  console.log(services);
});

Basically, it\'s pulling some data from a JSON feed and trying to push it into a collection.

When I start up Meteor I get the following exception;

app/packages/livedata/livedata_server.js:781
      throw exception;
            ^
Error: Meteor code must always run within a Fiber
    at [object Object].withValue (app/packages/meteor/dynamics_nodejs.js:22:15)
    at [object Object].apply (app/packages/livedata/livedata_server.js:767:45)
    at [object Object].insert (app/packages/mongo-livedata/collection.js:199:21)
    at app/server/statusboard.js:15:16
    at Array.forEach (native)
    at Function.<anonymous> (app/packages/underscore/underscore.js:76:11)
    at Request._callback (app/server/statusboard.js:9:7)
    at Request.callback (/usr/local/meteor/lib/node_modules/request/main.js:108:22)
    at Request.<anonymous> (/usr/local/meteor/lib/node_modules/request/main.js:468:18)
    at Request.emit (events.js:67:17)
Exited with code: 1

I\'m not too sure what that error means. Does anyone have any ideas, or can suggest a different approach?


回答1:


As mentioned above it is because your executing code within a callback.

Any code you're running on the server-side needs to be contained within a Fiber.

Try changing your getServices function to look like this:

function getServices(services) {
  Fiber(function() { 
    services = [];
    request('http://some-server/vshell/index.php?type=services&mode=json', function (error, response, body) {
      var resJSON = JSON.parse(body);
       _.each(resJSON, function(data) {
         var host = data["host_name"];
         var service = data["service_description"];
         var hardState = data["last_hard_state"];
         var currState = data["current_state"];
         services+={host: host, service: service, hardState: hardState, currState: currState};
         Services.insert({host: host, service: service, hardState: hardState, currState: currState});
      });
    });
  }).run();  
}

I just ran into a similar problem and this worked for me. What I have to say though is that I am very new to this and I do not know if this is how this should be done.

You probably could get away with only wrapping your insert statement in the Fiber, but I am not positive.




回答2:


Just wrapping your function in a Fiber might not be enough and can lead to unexpected behavior.

The reason is, along with Fiber, Meteor requires a set of variables attached to a fiber. Meteor uses data attached to a fiber as a dynamic scope and the easiest way to use it with 3rd party api is to use Meteor.bindEnvironment.

T.post('someurl', Meteor.bindEnvironment(function (err, res) {
  // do stuff
  // can access Meteor.userId
  // still have MongoDB write fence
}, function () { console.log('Failed to bind environment'); }));

Watch these videos on evented mind if you want to know more: https://www.eventedmind.com/posts/meteor-dynamic-scoping-with-environment-variables https://www.eventedmind.com/posts/meteor-what-is-meteor-bindenvironment




回答3:


Based on my tests you have to wrap the insert in code I tested that is similar to the above example.

For example, I did this and it still failed with Fibers error.

function insertPost(args) {
  if(args) {
Fiber(function() { 
    post_text = args.text.slice(0,140);
    T.post('statuses/update', { status: post_text }, 
        function(err, reply) {          
            if(reply){
                // TODO remove console output
                console.log('reply: ' + JSON.stringify(reply,0,4));
                console.log('incoming twitter string: ' + reply.id_str);
                // TODO insert record
                var ts = Date.now();
                id = Posts.insert({
                    post: post_text, 
                    twitter_id_str: reply.id_str,
                    created: ts
                });
            }else {
                console.log('error: ' + JSON.stringify(err,0,4));
                // TODO maybe store locally even though it failed on twitter
                // and run service in background to push them later?
            }
        }
    );
}).run();
  }
}

I did this and it ran fine with no errors.

function insertPost(args) {
  if(args) { 
post_text = args.text.slice(0,140);
T.post('statuses/update', { status: post_text }, 
    function(err, reply) {          
        if(reply){
            // TODO remove console output
            console.log('reply: ' + JSON.stringify(reply,0,4));
            console.log('incoming twitter string: ' + reply.id_str);
            // TODO insert record
            var ts = Date.now();
            Fiber(function() {
                id = Posts.insert({
                    post: post_text, 
                    twitter_id_str: reply.id_str,
                    created: ts
                });
            }).run();
        }else {
            console.log('error: ' + JSON.stringify(err,0,4));
            // TODO maybe store locally even though it failed on twitter
            // and run service in background to push them later?
        }
    }
);
  }
}

I thought this might help others encountering this issue. I have not yet tested calling the asynchy type of external service after internal code and wrapping that in a Fiber. That might be worth testing as well. In my case I needed to know the remote action happened before I do my local action.

Hope this contributes to this question thread.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10192938/meteor-code-must-always-run-within-a-fiber-when-calling-collection-insert-on-s

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