29 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
29 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
summary: "Command queue design that serializes auto-reply command execution"
|
|
read_when:
|
|
- Changing auto-reply execution or concurrency
|
|
---
|
|
# Command Queue (2025-11-25)
|
|
|
|
We now serialize all command-based auto-replies (WhatsApp Web listener) through a tiny in-process queue to prevent multiple commands from running at once.
|
|
|
|
## Why
|
|
- Some auto-reply commands are expensive (LLM calls) and can collide when multiple inbound messages arrive close together.
|
|
- Serializing avoids competing for terminal/stdin, keeps logs readable, and reduces the chance of rate limits from upstream tools.
|
|
|
|
## How it works
|
|
- `src/process/command-queue.ts` holds a single FIFO queue and drains it synchronously; only one task runs at a time.
|
|
- `getReplyFromConfig` wraps command execution with `enqueueCommand(...)`, so every config-driven command reply flows through the queue automatically.
|
|
- When verbose logging is enabled, queued commands emit a short notice if they waited more than ~2s before starting.
|
|
- Typing indicators (`onReplyStart`) still fire immediately on enqueue so user experience is unchanged while we wait our turn.
|
|
|
|
## Scope and guarantees
|
|
- Applies only to config-driven command replies; plain text replies are unaffected.
|
|
- Default lane (`main`) is process-wide for inbound + main heartbeats to keep the primary workflow serialized.
|
|
- Additional lanes may exist (e.g. `cron`) so background jobs can run in parallel without blocking inbound replies.
|
|
- No external dependencies or background worker threads; pure TypeScript + promises.
|
|
|
|
## Troubleshooting
|
|
- If commands seem stuck, enable verbose logs and look for “queued for …ms” lines to confirm the queue is draining.
|
|
- `enqueueCommand` exposes a lightweight `getQueueSize()` helper if you need to surface queue depth in future diagnostics.
|