Common background jobs library
This library provides a basic abstraction over BullMQ-powered background jobs. There are two types available:
- AbstractBackgroundJobProcessor: a base class for running jobs, it provides an instrumentation and logger integration plus
basic API for enqueuing jobs.
Getting Started
Install all dependencies:
npm install
Start Docker containers:
docker compose up -d
Run all tests:
npm run test
Usage
See test implementations in ./test/processors
folder. Extend AbstractBackgroundJobProcessor
and implement required methods.
Common jobs
For that type of jobs, you will need to extend AbstractBackgroundJobProcessor
and implement a processInternal
method.
It will be called when a job is dequeued. Processing logic is automatically wrapped into NewRelic and basic logger calls,
so you only need to add your domain logic.
Both queue and worker is automatically started when you instantiate the processor. There is a default configuration which
you can override by passing queueConfig.queueOptions
and workerOptions
params to the constructor.
Use dispose()
to correctly stop processing any new messages and wait for the current ones to finish.
Spies
Testing asynchronous code can be challenging. To address this, we've implemented a built-in spy functionality for jobs.
Example Usage
const scheduledJobIds = await processor.scheduleBulk([
{
id: randomUUID(),
value: 'first',
metadata: { correlationId: generateMonotonicUuid() },
},
{
id: randomUUID(),
value: 'second',
metadata: { correlationId: randomUUID() },
},
]);
const firstJob = await processor.spy.waitForJobWithId(scheduledJobIds[0], 'completed');
const secondJob = await processor.spy.waitForJob(
(data) => data.value === 'second',
'completed'
);
expect(firstJob.data.value).toBe('first');
expect(secondJob.data.value).toBe('second');
Spy Methods
-
processor.spy.waitForJobWithId(jobId, status)
:
- Waits for a job with a specific ID to reach the specified status.
- Returns the job instance when the status is achieved.
-
processor.spy.waitForJob(predicate, status)
:
- Waits for any job that matches the custom predicate to reach the specified status.
- Returns the matching job instance when the status is achieved.
Awaitable Job States
Spies can await jobs in the following states:
scheduled
: The job is scheduled but not yet processed.failed
: The job is processed but failed.completed
: The job is processed successfully.
Important Notes
- Spies do not need to be invoked before the job is processed, accommodating the unpredictability of asynchronous operations.
- Even if you call
await processor.spy.waitForJobWithId(scheduledJobId[], {state})
after the job has already been scheduled or processed, the spy can still resolve the job state for you. - Spies are disabled in production.
- To enable them, set the
isTest
option of BackgroundJobProcessorConfig
to true
in your processor configuration.
By utilizing these spy functions, you can more effectively manage and test the behavior of asynchronous jobs within your system.
Barriers
In case you want to conditionally delay execution of the job (e. g. until some data necessary for processing the job arrives, or until amount of jobs in the subsequent step go below the threshold), you can use the barrier
parameter, which delays the execution of the job until a specified condition passes.
Barrier looks like this:
const barrier = async(_job: Job<JobData>) => {
if (barrierConditionIsPassing) {
return {
isPassing: true,
}
}
return {
isPassing: false,
delayAmountInMs: 30000,
}
}
You pass it as a part of AbstractBackgroundJobProcessor config
.
You can also pass over some dependencies from the processor to the barrier:
class myJobProcessor extends AbstractBackgroundJobProcessor<Generics> {
protected override resolveExecutionContext(): ExecutionContext {
return {
userService: this.userService
}
}
}
This will be passed to the barrier:
const barrier = async(_job: Job<JobData>, context: ExecutionContext) => {
if (await context.userService.userExists(job.data.userId)) {
return {
isPassing: true,
}
}
return {
isPassing: false,
delayAmountInMs: 30000,
}
}
Available prebuilt barriers
@lokalise/background-jobs-common
provides one barrier out-of-the-box - a JobQueueSizeThrottlingBarrier, which is used to control amount of jobs that are being spawned by a job processor (in a different queue).
Here is an example usage:
import { createJobQueueSizeThrottlingBarrier } from '@lokalise/background-jobs-common'
const processor = new MyJobProcessor(
dependencies, {
barrier: createJobQueueSizeThrottlingBarrier({
maxQueueJobsInclusive: 2,
retryPeriodInMsecs: 30000,
})
})
await processor.start()
Note that throttling is based on an optimistic check (checking the count and executing the job that uses the barrier is not an atomic operation), so potentially it is possible to go over the limit in a highly concurrent system. For this reason it is recommended to set the limits with a buffer for the possible overflow.
This barrier depends on defining the following ExecutionContext:
import type { JobQueueSizeThrottlingBarrierContext } from '@lokalise/background-jobs-common'
class myJobProcessor extends AbstractBackgroundJobProcessor<Generics> {
protected override resolveExecutionContext(): JobQueueSizeThrottlingBarrierContext {
return {
throttledQueueJobProcessor: this.throttledQueueJobProcessor,
}
}
}
Queue events.
The library optimized the default event stream settings to save memory. Specifically, the library sets the default
maximum length of the BullMQ queue events stream to 0
(doc). This means the
event stream will not store any events by default, greatly reducing memory usage.
If you need to store more events in the stream, you can easily configure the maximum length via the queueOptions
parameter during the processor creation.
export class Processor extends AbstractBackgroundJobProcessor<Data> {
constructor(dependencies: BackgroundJobProcessorDependencies<Data>) {
super(dependencies, {
queueId: 'queue',
ownerName: 'example owner',
queueOptions: {
streams: {events:{maxLen: 1000}},
}
})
}
}