Socket
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall

pgjobq

Package Overview
Dependencies
3
Maintainers
1
Alerts
File Explorer

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

    pgjobq

PostgreSQL backed job queues


Maintainers
1

Readme

pgjobq

A job queue built on top of Postgres.

Project status

Please do not use this for anything other than experimentation or inspiration. At some point I may decide to support this long term (at which point this warning will be removed), but until then this is just a playground subject to breaking changes (including breaking schema changes).

Purpose

Sometimes you have a Postgres database and need a queue. You could stand up more infrastructure (SQS, Redis, etc), or you could use your existing database. There are plenty of use cases for a persistent queue that do not require infinite scalability, snapshots or any of the other advanced features full fledged queues/event buses/job brokers have.

Features

  • Best effort at most once delivery (jobs are only delivered to one worker at a time)
  • Automatic redelivery of failed jobs (even if your process crashes)
  • Low latency delivery (near realtime, uses PostgreSQL's NOTIFY feature)
  • Low latency completion tracking (using NOTIFY)
  • Dead letter queuing
  • Job attributes and attribute filtering
  • Job dependencies (for processing DAG-like workflows or making jobs process FIFO)
  • Persistent scheduled jobs (scheduled in the database, not the client application)
  • Job cancellation (guaranteed for jobs in the queue and best effort for checked-out jobs)
  • Bulk sending and polling to support large workloads
  • Back pressure / bound queues
  • Fully typed async Python client (using asyncpg)
  • Exponential back off for retries
  • Telemetry hooks for sampling queries with EXPLAIN or integration with OpenTelemetry.

Possible features:

  • Reply-to queues and response handling

Examples

from contextlib import AsyncExitStack

import anyio
import asyncpg  # type: ignore
from pgjobq import create_queue, connect_to_queue, migrate_to_latest_version

async def main() -> None:

    async with AsyncExitStack() as stack:
        pool: asyncpg.Pool = await stack.enter_async_context(
            asyncpg.create_pool(  # type: ignore
                "postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost/postgres"
            )
        )
        await migrate_to_latest_version(pool)
        await create_queue("myq", pool)
        queue = await stack.enter_async_context(
            connect_to_queue("myq", pool)
        )
        async with anyio.create_task_group() as tg:

            async def worker() -> None:
                async with queue.receive() as msg_handle_rcv_stream:
                    # receive a single job
                    async with (await msg_handle_rcv_stream.receive()).acquire():
                        print("received")
                        # do some work
                        await anyio.sleep(1)
                        print("done processing")
                        print("acked")

            tg.start_soon(worker)
            tg.start_soon(worker)

            async with queue.send(b'{"foo":"bar"}') as completion_handle:
                print("sent")
                await completion_handle.wait()
                print("completed")
                tg.cancel_scope.cancel()


if __name__ == "__main__":
    anyio.run(main)
    # prints:
    # "sent"
    # "received"
    # "done processing"
    # "acked"
    # "completed"

Development

  1. Clone the repo
  2. Start a disposable PostgreSQL instance (e.g docker run -it -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=postgres -p 5432:5432 postgres)
  3. Run make test

See this release on GitHub: v0.10.0

FAQs


Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc