Awesome
django-db-queue
Simple database-backed job queue. Jobs are defined in your settings, and are processed by management commands.
Asynchronous tasks are run via a job queue. This system is designed to support multi-step job workflows.
Supported and tested against:
- Django 3.2, 4.0, 4.1, 4.2, 5.0
- Python 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12
Getting Started
Installation
Install from PIP
pip install django-db-queue
Add django_dbq
to your installed apps
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...,
"django_dbq",
]
Run migrations
manage.py migrate
Upgrading from 1.x to 2.x
Note that version 2.x only supports Django 3.1 or newer. If you need support for Django 2.2, please stick with the latest 1.x release.
Describe your job
In e.g. project.common.jobs:
import time
def my_task(job):
logger.info("Working hard...")
time.sleep(10)
logger.info("Job's done!")
Set up your job
In project.settings:
JOBS = {
"my_job": {
"tasks": ["project.common.jobs.my_task"],
},
}
Hooks
Failure Hooks
When an unhandled exception is raised by a job, a failure hook will be called if one exists enabling you to clean up any state left behind by your failed job. Failure hooks are run in your worker process (if your job fails).
A failure hook receives the failed Job
instance along with the unhandled exception raised by your failed job as its arguments. Here's an example:
def my_task_failure_hook(job, e):
... # clean up after failed job
To ensure this hook gets run, simply add a failure_hook
key to your job config like so:
JOBS = {
"my_job": {
"tasks": ["project.common.jobs.my_task"],
"failure_hook": "project.common.jobs.my_task_failure_hook",
},
}
Creation Hooks
You can also run creation hooks, which happen just after the creation of your Job
instances and are executed in the process
in which the job was created, not the worker process.
A creation hook receives your Job
instance as its only argument. Here's an example:
def my_task_creation_hook(job):
... # configure something before running your job
To ensure this hook gets run, simply add a creation_hook
key to your job config like so:
JOBS = {
"my_job": {
"tasks": ["project.common.jobs.my_task"],
"creation_hook": "project.common.jobs.my_task_creation_hook",
},
}
Pre & Post Task Hooks
You can also run pre task or post task hooks, which happen in the normal processing of your Job
instances and are executed inside the worker process.
Both pre and post task hooks receive your Job
instance as their only argument. Here's an example:
def my_pre_task_hook(job):
... # configure something before running your task
To ensure these hooks are run, simply add a pre_task_hook
or post_task_hook
key (or both, if needed) to your job config like so:
JOBS = {
"my_job": {
"tasks": ["project.common.jobs.my_task"],
"pre_task_hook": "project.common.jobs.my_pre_task_hook",
"post_task_hook": "project.common.jobs.my_post_task_hook",
},
}
Notes:
- If the
pre_task_hook
fails (raises an exception), the task function is not run, and django-db-queue behaves as if the task function itself had failed: the failure hook is called, and the job is goes into theFAILED
state. - The
post_task_hook
is always run, even if the job fails. In this case, it runs after thefailure_hook
. - If the
post_task_hook
raises an exception, this is logged but the the job is not marked as failed and the failure hook does not run. This is because thepost_task_hook
might need to perform cleanup that always happens after the task, no matter whether it succeeds or fails.
Start the worker
In another terminal:
python manage.py worker
Create a job
Using the name you configured for your job in your settings, create an instance of Job.
Job.objects.create(name="my_job")
Prioritising jobs
Sometimes it is necessary for certain jobs to take precedence over others. For example; you may have a worker which has a primary purpose of dispatching somewhat important emails to users. However, once an hour, you may need to run a really important job which needs to be done on time and cannot wait in the queue for dozens of emails to be dispatched before it can begin.
In order to make sure that an important job is run before others, you can set the priority
field to an integer higher than 0
(the default). For example:
Job.objects.create(name="normal_job")
Job.objects.create(name="important_job", priority=1)
Job.objects.create(name="critical_job", priority=2)
Jobs will be ordered by their priority
(highest to lowest) and then the time which they were created (oldest to newest) and processed in that order.
Scheduling jobs
If you'd like to create a job but have it run at some time in the future, you can use the run_after
field on the Job model:
Job.objects.create(
name="scheduled_job",
run_after=(timezone.now() + timedelta(minutes=10)),
)
Of course, the scheduled job will only be run if your python manage.py worker
process is running at the time when the job is scheduled to run. Otherwise, it will run the next time you start your worker process after that time has passed.
It's also worth noting that, by default, scheduled jobs run as part of the same queue as all other jobs, and so if a job is already being processed at the time when your scheduled job is due to run, it won't run until that job has finished. If increased precision is important, you might consider using the queue_name
feature to run a separate worker dedicated to only running scheduled jobs.
Terminology
Job
The top-level abstraction of a standalone piece of work. Jobs are stored in the database (ie they are represented as Django model instances).
Task
Jobs are processed to completion by tasks. These are simply Python functions, which must take a single argument - the Job
instance being processed. A single job will often require processing by more than one task to be completed fully. Creating the task functions is the responsibility of the developer. For example:
def my_task(job):
logger.info("Doing some hard work")
do_some_hard_work()
Workspace
The workspace is an area that can be used 1) to provide additional arguments to task functions, and 2) to categorize jobs with additional metadata. It is implemented as a Python dictionary, available on the job
instance passed to tasks as job.workspace
. The initial workspace of a job can be empty, or can contain some parameters that the tasks require (for example, API access tokens, account IDs etc).
When creating a Job, the workspace is passed as a keyword argument:
Job.objects.create(name="my_job", workspace={"key": value})
Then, the task function can access the workspace to get the data it needs to perform its task:
def my_task(job):
cats_import = CatsImport.objects.get(pk=job.workspace["cats_import_id"])
Tasks within a single job can use the workspace to communicate with each other. A single task can edit the workspace, and the modified workspace will be passed on to the next task in the sequence. For example:
def my_first_task(job):
job.workspace['message'] = 'Hello, task 2!'
def my_second_task(job):
logger.info("Task 1 says: %s" % job.workspace['message'])
The workspace can be queried like any JSONField. For instance, if you wanted to display a list of jobs that a certain user had initiated, add user_id
to the workspace when creating the job:
Job.objects.create(name="foo", workspace={"user_id": request.user.id})
Then filter the query with it in the view that renders the list:
user_jobs = Job.objects.filter(workspace__user_id=request.user.id)
Worker process
A worker process is a long-running process, implemented as a Django management command, which is responsible for executing the tasks associated with a job. There may be many worker processes running concurrently in the final system. Worker processes wait for a new job to be created in the database, and call the each associated task in the correct sequeunce.. A worker can be started using python manage.py worker
, and a single worker instance is included in the development procfile
.
Configuration
Jobs are configured in the Django settings.py
file. The JOBS
setting is a dictionary mapping a job name (eg import_cats
) to a list of one or more task function paths. For example:
JOBS = {
'import_cats': ['apps.cat_importer.import_cats.step_one', 'apps.cat_importer.import_cats.step_two'],
}
Job states
Jobs have a state
field which can have one of the following values:
NEW
(has been created, waiting for a worker process to run the next task)READY
(has run a task before, awaiting a worker process to run the next task)PROCESSING
(a task is currently being processed by a worker)STOPPING
(the worker process has received a signal from the OS requesting it to exit)COMPLETED
(all job tasks have completed successfully)FAILED
(a job task failed)
State diagram
API
Model methods
Job.get_queue_depths
If you need to programatically get the depth of any queue you can run the following:
from django_dbq.models import Job
...
Job.objects.create(name="do_work", workspace={})
Job.objects.create(name="do_other_work", queue_name="other_queue", workspace={})
queue_depths = Job.get_queue_depths()
print(queue_depths) # {"default": 1, "other_queue": 1}
Important: When checking queue depths, do not assume that the key for your queue will always be available. Queue depths of zero won't be included in the dict returned by this method.
Management commands
manage.py delete_old_jobs
There is a management command, manage.py delete_old_jobs
, which deletes any
jobs from the database which are in state COMPLETE
or FAILED
and were
created more than (by default) 24 hours ago. This could be run, for example, as a cron task, to ensure the jobs table remains at a reasonable size. Use the --hours
argument to control the age of jobs that will be deleted.
manage.py worker
To start a worker:
manage.py worker [queue_name] [--rate_limit]
queue_name
is optional, and will default todefault
- The
--rate_limit
flag is optional, and will default to1
. It is the minimum number of seconds that must have elapsed before a subsequent job can be run.
manage.py queue_depth
If you'd like to check your queue depth from the command line, you can run manage.py queue_depth [queue_name [queue_name ...]]
and any
jobs in the "NEW" or "READY" states will be returned.
Important: If you misspell or provide a queue name which does not have any jobs, a depth of 0 will always be returned.
Gotcha: bulk_create
Because the Job
model has logic in its save
method, and because save
doesn't get called when using bulk_create
, you can't easily use bulk_create
to create multiple Job
instances at the same time.
If you really need to do this, you should be able to get it to work by using django_dbq.tasks.get_next_task_name
to compute the next task name from the name
of the job, and then use that value to populate the next_task
field on each of the unsaved Job
instances before calling bulk_create
. Note that if you use the approach, the job's creation_hook
will not be called.
Testing
It may be necessary to supply a DATABASE_PORT environment variable.
Windows support
Windows is supported on a best-effort basis only, and is not covered by automated or manual testing.
Code of conduct
For guidelines regarding the code of conduct when contributing to this repository please review https://www.dabapps.com/open-source/code-of-conduct/