Awesome
QueueClassicPlus
queue_classic is a simple Postgresql backed DB queue. However, it's a little too simple to use it as the main queueing system of a medium to large app. This was developed at Rainforest QA.
QueueClassicPlus adds many lacking features to QueueClassic.
- Standardized job format
- Retry on specific exceptions
- Singleton jobs
- Metrics
- Error logging / handling
- Transactions
- Rails generator to create new jobs
Compatibility
This version of the matchers are compatible with queue_classic 3.1+ which includes built-in scheduling. See other branches for other compatible versions.
Installation
Add these line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'queue_classic_plus'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Run the migration
QueueClassicPlus.migrate
Usage
Create a new job
rails g qc_plus_job test_job
# /app/jobs/my_job.rb
class Jobs::MyJob < QueueClassicPlus::Base
# Specified the queue name
@queue = :low
# Extry up to 5 times when SomeException is raised
retry! on: SomeException, max: 5
def self.perform(a, b)
# ...
end
end
# In your code, you can enqueue this task like so:
Jobs::MyJob.do(1, "foo")
# You can also schedule a job in the future by doing
Jobs::MyJob.enqueue_perform_in(1.hour, 1, "foo")
Run the QueueClassicPlus worker
QueueClassicPlus ships with its own worker and a rake task to run it. You need to use this worker to take advance of many features of QueueClassicPlus.
QUEUE=low bundle exec qc_plus:work
Other jobs options
Singleton Job
It's common for background jobs to never need to be enqueed multiple time. QueueClassicPlus support these type of single jobs. Here's an example one:
class Jobs::UpdateMetrics < QueueClassicPlus::Base
@queue = :low
# Use the lock! keyword to prevent the job from being enqueud once.
lock!
def self.perform(metric_type)
# ...
end
end
Note that lock!
only prevents the same job from beeing enqued multiple times if the argument match.
So in our example:
Jobs::UpdateMetrics.do 'type_a' # enqueues job
Jobs::UpdateMetrics.do 'type_a' # does not enqueues job since it's already queued
Jobs::UpdateMetrics.do 'type_b' # enqueues job as the arguments are different.
Transactions
By default, all QueueClassicPlus jobs are executed in a PostgreSQL
transaction. This decision was made because most jobs are usually
pretty small and it's preferable to have all the benefits of the
transaction. You can optionally specify a postgres statement timeout
(in seconds) for all transactions with the environment variable
POSTGRES_STATEMENT_TIMEOUT
.
You can disable this feature on a per job basis in the following way:
class Jobs::NoTransaction < QueueClassicPlus::Base
# Don't run the perform method in a transaction
skip_transaction!
@queue = :low
def self.perform(user_id)
# ...
end
end
Callbacks
Jobs support the following callbacks:
before_enqueue
after_enqueue
before_perform
after_perform
enqueue
callbacks are called when the job is initially enqueued. Caveats:- not called on retries
- not called when scheduled in the future (i.e.
Job.enqueue_perform_in
) - still called if enqueuing fails because a job with
lock!
is already enqueued.
perform
callbacks are called any time the job is picked up and run by a worker, including retries and jobs scheduled in the future.
Callbacks can either be implemented by providing a method to be called:
class Jobs::WithCallbackMethods < QueueClassicPlus::Base
before_enqueue :before_enqueue_method
@queue = :low
def self.before_enqueue_method(*args)
# ...
end
def self.perform(user_id)
# ...
end
end
or by providing a block:
class Jobs::WithCallbackBlocks < QueueClassicPlus::Base
before_enqueue do |*args|
# ...
end
@queue = :low
def self.perform(user_id)
# ...
end
end
The args
passed to the callback method/block will be the same as the arguments passed to QueueClassicPlus::Base.do
and QueueClassicPlus::Base.perform
.
Advanced configuration
If you want to log exceptions in your favorite exception tracker. You can configured it like so:
QueueClassicPlus.exception_handler = -> (exception, job) do
Sentry.capture_exception(exception, extra: { job: job, env: ENV })
end
If you use Librato, we push useful metrics directly to them.
Push metrics to your metric provider (only Librato is supported for now).
QueueClassicPlus.update_metrics
Call this in a cron job or something similar.
If you are using New Relic and want to push performance data to it, you can add this to an initializer:
require "queue_classic_plus/new_relic"
To instrument Datadog monitoring add this to your QC initializer:
require "queue_classic_plus/datadog"
The Datadog service name defaults to qc.job
. This can be changed in the initializer:
QueueClassicDatadog.config.dd_service = "custom_service_name"
Contributing
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request
Setting up the test database
createdb queue_classic_plus_test
Releasing
Releasing is done in CircleCI via the push_to_rubygems
, triggered by pushing a tagged commit.
You can create a new tag
while creating a new GitHub release.
** Note: The tag
is what publishes a new version of the gem. The release
is purely for documentation.