Ratelimiting Algorithms
Fixed Window
This algorithm divides time into fixed durations/windows. For example each window is 10 seconds long. When a new request comes in, the current time is used to determine the window and a counter is increased. If the counter is larger than the set limit, the request is rejected.
In fixed & sliding window algorithms, the reset time is based on fixed time boundaries (which depend on the period), not on when the first request was made. So two requests made right before the window ends still count toward the current window, and limits reset at the start of the next window.
Pros
- Very cheap in terms of data size and computation
- Newer requests are not starved due to a high burst in the past
Cons
- Can cause high bursts at the window boundaries to leak through
- Causes request stampedes if many users are trying to access your server, whenever a new window begins
Usage
Sliding Window
Builds on top of fixed window but instead of a fixed window, we use a rolling window. Take this example: We have a rate limit of 10 requests per 1 minute. We divide time into 1 minute slices, just like in the fixed window algorithm. Window 1 will be from 00:00:00 to 00:01:00 (HH:MM:SS). Let’s assume it is currently 00:01:15 and we have received 4 requests in the first window and 5 requests so far in the current window. The approximation to determine if the request should pass works like this:
Pros
- Solves the issue near boundary from fixed window.
Cons
- More expensive in terms of storage and computation
- It’s only an approximation because it assumes a uniform request flow in the previous window
Usage
reset
field in the limit
method of sliding window does not
provide an exact reset time. Instead, the reset time is the start time of
the next window.
Token Bucket
Consider a bucket filled with maximum number of tokens that refills constantly at a rate per interval. Every request will remove one token from the bucket and if there is no token to take, the request is rejected.
Pros
- Bursts of requests are smoothed out and you can process them at a constant rate.
- Allows setting a higher initial burst limit by setting maximum number of tokens higher than the refill rate
Cons
- Expensive in terms of computation
Usage
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