Sideband
Run simple jobs in a separate sideband thread.
Sideband makes it easy to pass small jobs off to a separate in-process thread. It makes no attempt to handle errors, nor return any results. Its primary focus is queueing up potentially IO blocking bits of code, where the results of which are not necessarily vital to your application's business logic.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'sideband'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install sideband
Usage
To be used Sideband needs to be intialized, typically in an Rails initializer (but can be used outside of Rails).
Sideband.initialize!
To pass work off to Sideband, you can add anything that is callable (procs, lambdas, workers) to its queue:
Sideband.queue << -> { Something.expensive }
Sideband will queue the work, then return immediately. The work will get called whenever the thread scheduler schedules the worker thread--typically after your controller renders.
Sideband is truly fire-and-forget, any exceptions are caught and thrown away. If you want to handle exception, you should probably do so in a custom worker.
class MetricWorker < Sideband::Worker
def initialize(params)
@params = params
end
def call
Metric.create!(@params)
rescue ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid
Rails.logger.error("Could not save Metric: #{@params}")
end
end
Sideband.queue << MetricWorker.new(params[:metric])
Metricworker.new(params[:metric]).enqueue
A practical Rails example:
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def create
@user = User.create(params[:user])
Sideband.queue << -> { UserMailer.welcome_email(@user).deliver }
render :welcome
end
end
Contributing
- Fork it
- 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 new Pull Request