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node-resque
Advanced tools
Delayed Tasks in nodejs. A very opinionated but compatible API with resque and resque scheduler
I learn best by examples:
/////////////////////////
// REQUIRE THE PACKAGE //
/////////////////////////
var NR = require("node-resque");
///////////////////////////
// SET UP THE CONNECTION //
///////////////////////////
var connectionDetails = {
host: "127.0.0.1",
password: "",
port: 6379,
database: 0,
}
//////////////////////////////
// DEFINE YOUR WORKER TASKS //
//////////////////////////////
var jobs = {
"add": {
perform: function(a,b,callback){
var answer = a + b;
callback(null, answer);
},
},
"subtract": {
perform: function(a,b,callback){
var answer = a - b;
callback(null, answer);
},
},
"multiply": function(a,b,callback) {
callback(null, a * b);
},
};
////////////////////
// START A WORKER //
////////////////////
var worker = new NR.worker({connection: connectionDetails, queues: ['math']}, jobs, function(){
worker.workerCleanup(); // optional: cleanup any previous improperly shutdown workers
worker.start();
});
///////////////////////
// START A SCHEDULER //
///////////////////////
var scheduler = new NR.scheduler({connection: connectionDetails}, function(){
scheduler.start();
});
/////////////////////////
// REGESTER FOR EVENTS //
/////////////////////////
worker.on('start', function(){ console.log("worker started"); })
worker.on('end', function(){ console.log("worker ended"); })
worker.on('cleaning_worker', function(worker, pid){ console.log("cleaning old worker " + worker); })
worker.on('poll', function(queue){ console.log("worker polling " + queue); })
worker.on('job', function(queue, job){ console.log("working job " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job)); })
worker.on('reEnqueue', function(queue, job, plugin){ console.log("reEnqueue job (" + plugin + ") " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job)); })
worker.on('success', function(queue, job, result){ console.log("job success " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job) + " >> " + result); })
worker.on('failure', function(queue, job, failure){ console.log("job failure " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job) + " >> " + failure); })
worker.on('error', function(queue, job, error){ console.log("error " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job) + " >> " + error); })
worker.on('pause', function(){ console.log("worker paused"); })
scheduler.on('start', function(){ console.log("scheduler started"); })
scheduler.on('end', function(){ console.log("scheduler ended"); })
scheduler.on('error', function(error){ console.log("scheduler error >> " + error); })
scheduler.on('poll', function(){ console.log("scheduler polling"); })
scheduler.on('working_timestamp', function(timestamp){ console.log("scheduler working timestamp " + timestamp); })
scheduler.on('transferred_job', function(timestamp, job){ console.log("scheduler enquing job " + timestamp + " >> " + JSON.stringify(job)); })
////////////////////////
// CONNECT TO A QUEUE //
////////////////////////
var queue = new NR.queue({connection: connectionDetails}, jobs, function(){
queue.enqueue('math', "add", [1,2]);
queue.enqueue('math', "add", [2,3]);
queue.enqueueIn(3000, 'math', "subtract", [2,1]);
});
new queue
requires only the "queue" variable to be set. You can also pass the jobs
hash to it.
new worker
has some additonal options:
options = {
looping: true,
timeout: 5000,
queues: "*",
name: os.hostname() + ":" + process.pid
}
The configuration hash passed to new worker
, new scheduler
or new queue
can also take a connection
option.
var connectionDetails = {
package: "redis",
host: "127.0.0.1",
password: "",
port: 6379,
database: 0,
namespace: "resque",
}
var worker = new NR.worker({connection: connectionDetails, queues: 'math'}, jobs, function(){
worker.start();
});
You can also pass redis client directly.
// assume you already initialize redis client before
var connectionDetails = { redis: redisClient }
var worker = new NR.worker({connection: connectionDetails, queues: 'math'}, jobs, function(){
worker.start();
});
worker.end()
before shutting down your application if you want to properly clear your worker status from resquebeforeEnqueue
or afterEnqueue
, be sure to pass the jobs
argument to the new Queue
constructorhostname:pid+unique_id
. For example:var name = os.hostname() + ":" + process.pid + "+" + counter;
var worker = new NR.worker({connection: connectionDetails, queues: 'math', 'name' : name}, jobs);
Additonal methods provided on the queue
object:
You can use the queue object to check on your wokrers:
{ 'host:pid': 'queue1, queue2', 'host:pid': 'queue1, queue2' }
{"run_at":"Fri Dec 12 2014 14:01:16 GMT-0800 (PST)","queue":"test_queue","payload":{"class":"slowJob","queue":"test_queue","args":[null]},"worker":"workerA"}
queue.workingOn
with the worker names as keys.Just like ruby's resque, you can write worker plugins. They look look like this. The 4 hooks you have are before_enqueue
, after_enqueue
, before_perform
, and after_perform
var myPlugin = function(worker, func, queue, job, args, options){
var self = this;
self.name = 'myPlugin';
self.worker = worker;
self.queue = queue;
self.func = func;
self.job = job;
self.args = args;
self.options = options;
}
////////////////////
// PLUGIN METHODS //
////////////////////
myPlugin.prototype.before_enqueue = function(callback){
// console.log("** before_enqueue")
callback(null, true);
}
myPlugin.prototype.after_enqueue = function(callback){
// console.log("** after_enqueue")
callback(null, true);
}
myPlugin.prototype.before_perform = function(callback){
// console.log("** before_perform")
callback(null, true);
}
myPlugin.prototype.after_perform = function(callback){
// console.log("** after_perform")
callback(null, true);
}
And then your plugin can be invoked within a job like this:
var jobs = {
"add": {
plugins: [ 'myPlugin' ],
pluginOptions: {
myPlugin: { thing: 'stuff' },
},
perform: function(a,b,callback){
var answer = a + b;
callback(null, answer);
},
},
}
notes
(error, toRun)
. if toRun = false
on beforeEnqueue
, the job beign inqueued will be thrown away, and if toRun = false
on beforePerfporm
, the job will be reEnqued and not run at this time. However, it doesn't really matter what toRun
returns on the after
hooks.worker.error
in your plugin. If worker.error
is null, no error will be logged in the resque error queue.var jobs = {
"add": {
plugins: [ require('myplugin') ],
pluginOptions: {
myPlugin: { thing: 'stuff' },
},
perform: function(a,b,callback){
var answer = a + b;
callback(null, answer);
},
},
}
node-resque provides a wrapper around the worker
object which will auto-scale the number of resque workers. This will process more than one job at a time as long as there is idle CPU within the event loop. For example, if you have a slow job that sends email via SMTP (with low rendering overhead), we can process many jobs at a time, but if you have a math-heavy operation, we'll stick to 1. The multiWorker
handles this by spawngning more and more node-resque workers and managing the pool.
var NR = require(__dirname + "/../index.js");
var connectionDetails = {
package: "redis",
host: "127.0.0.1",
password: ""
}
var multiWorker = new NR.multiWorker({
connection: connectionDetails,
queues: ['slowQueue'],
minTaskProcessors: 1,
maxTaskProcessors: 100,
checkTimeout: 1000,
maxEventLoopDelay: 10,
toDisconnectProcessors: true,
}, jobs, function(){
// normal worker emitters
multiWorker.on('start', function(workerId){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] started"); })
multiWorker.on('end', function(workerId){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] ended"); })
multiWorker.on('cleaning_worker', function(workerId, worker, pid){ console.log("cleaning old worker " + worker); })
multiWorker.on('poll', function(workerId, queue){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] polling " + queue); })
multiWorker.on('job', function(workerId, queue, job){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] working job " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job)); })
multiWorker.on('reEnqueue', function(workerId, queue, job, plugin){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] reEnqueue job (" + plugin + ") " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job)); })
multiWorker.on('success', function(workerId, queue, job, result){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] job success " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job) + " >> " + result); })
multiWorker.on('failure', function(workerId, queue, job, failure){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] job failure " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job) + " >> " + failure); })
multiWorker.on('error', function(workerId, queue, job, error){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] error " + queue + " " + JSON.stringify(job) + " >> " + error); })
multiWorker.on('pause', function(workerId){ console.log("worker["+workerId+"] paused"); })
// multiWorker emitters
multiWorker.on('internalError', function(error){ console.log(error); })
multiWorker.on('multiWorkerAction', function(verb, delay){ console.log("*** checked for worker status: " + verb + " (event loop delay: " + delay + "ms)"); })
multiWorker.start();
});
Most of this code was inspired by / stolen from coffee-resque and coffee-resque-scheduler. Thanks!
FAQs
an opinionated implementation of resque in node
The npm package node-resque receives a total of 4,476 weekly downloads. As such, node-resque popularity was classified as popular.
We found that node-resque demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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