Rate limiting on grade passback

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EricKean
Community Explorer

Hi,

I have an LTI 1.3 external tool that I've created and will be using to pass back grades from my app to Canvas.  Are there any rate limiting issues that I should be concerned about?  For example, it would be more helpful for grades to be passed back after students submit each question to keep things completely synced, but  this would require a much greater number of post requests than if I just did a single grade pass back upon assignment completion.

 

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James
Community Champion

@EricKean 

Sending the information as the students complete a question is not likely to cause a problem. It also helps the instructor see, from within Canvas, that the student is working on the assignment and lets the student know that they are not finished. It does, temporarily, lower their grade.

Of course, you can send the information once as the assignment is completed, but you'll still be rate limited. This might actually be worse. There is a possibility that a student might never finish an assignment, so you would need to send a grade message after the due date, regardless of their completion status. In theory, having the due date pass could trigger the LTI to send a bunch of results at once (in practice, most students complete the assignments before time runs out).

In a large class, passing grades back for each student as they answer each question is less likely to hit the rate limiting than trying to send the overall grade but all at once. I know that sounds counter-intuitive, but sending them as they happen means that they are spaced out.

The rate limiting on Canvas is intended to prevent abuse and one way to trigger that is to send a bunch of simultaneous requests from the same account. Not related to grade passback, but there are some requests that I can send 20 request at the same time and trigger the rate limiting, but if I space them out, even 50 ms apart, then I don't run afoul of the issue. It is related to the number of requests as well, so if I'm sending hundreds of requests, I might need to back off even a bit more, but it depends on the complexity of the request.

It's not the number of posts that affect the rate limiting. It's how those posts arrive. Sending too many in too short of a period of time is problematic. The remaining limit refreshes itself and if they are spread out enough, then you won't run into issues.

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