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189 lines
6.4 KiB
Markdown
189 lines
6.4 KiB
Markdown
# Background Jobs
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This crate provides tooling required to run some processes asynchronously from a usually
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synchronous application. The standard example of this is Web Services, where certain things
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need to be processed, but processing them while a user is waiting for their browser to respond
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might not be the best experience.
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### Usage
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#### Add Background Jobs to your project
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```toml
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[dependencies]
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actix = "0.8"
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background-jobs = "0.5.1"
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failure = "0.1"
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futures = "0.1"
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serde = "1.0"
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serde_drive = "1.0"
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sled = "0.24"
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```
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#### To get started with Background Jobs, first you should define a job.
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Jobs are a combination of the data required to perform an operation, and the logic of that
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operation. They implment the `Job`, `serde::Serialize`, and `serde::DeserializeOwned`.
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```rust
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use background_jobs::Job;
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use serde_derive::{Deserialize, Serialize};
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#[derive(Clone, Debug, Deserialize, Serialize)]
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pub struct MyJob {
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some_usize: usize,
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other_usize: usize,
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}
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impl MyJob {
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pub fn new(some_usize: usize, other_usize: usize) -> Self {
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MyJob {
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some_usize,
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other_usize,
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}
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}
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}
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impl Job for MyJob {
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fn run(self, _: ()) -> Box<dyn Future<Item = (), Error = Error> + Send> {
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info!("args: {:?}", self);
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Box::new(Ok(()).into_future())
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}
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}
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```
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The run method for a job takes an additional argument, which is the state the job expects to
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use. The state for all jobs defined in an application must be the same. By default, the state
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is an empty tuple, but it's likely you'll want to pass in some Actix address, or something
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else.
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Let's re-define the job to care about some application state.
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```rust
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#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
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pub struct MyState {
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pub app_name: String,
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}
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impl MyState {
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pub fn new(app_name: &str) -> Self {
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MyState {
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app_name: app_name.to_owned(),
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}
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}
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}
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impl Job<MyState> for MyJob {
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fn run(self, state: MyState) -> Box<dyn Future<Item = (), Error = Error> + Send> {
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info!("{}: args, {:?}", state.app_name, self);
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Box::new(Ok(()).into_future())
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}
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}
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```
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#### Next, define a Processor.
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Processors are types that define default attributes for jobs, as well as containing some logic
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used internally to perform the job. Processors must implement `Proccessor` and `Clone`.
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```rust
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use background_jobs::{Backoff, MaxRetries, Processor};
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const DEFAULT_QUEUE: &'static str = "default";
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#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
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pub struct MyProcessor;
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impl Processor<MyState> for MyProcessor {
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// The kind of job this processor should execute
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type Job = MyJob;
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// The name of the processor. It is super important that each processor has a unique name,
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// because otherwise one processor will overwrite another processor when they're being
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// registered.
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const NAME: &'static str = "MyProcessor";
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// The queue that this processor belongs to
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//
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// Workers have the option to subscribe to specific queues, so this is important to
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// determine which worker will call the processor
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//
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// Jobs can optionally override the queue they're spawned on
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const QUEUE: &'static str = DEFAULT_QUEUE;
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// The number of times background-jobs should try to retry a job before giving up
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//
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// Jobs can optionally override this value
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const MAX_RETRIES: MaxRetries = MaxRetries::Count(1);
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// The logic to determine how often to retry this job if it fails
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//
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// Jobs can optionally override this value
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const BACKOFF_STRATEGY: Backoff = Backoff::Exponential(2);
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}
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```
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#### Running jobs
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By default, this crate ships with the `background-jobs-actix` feature enabled. This uses the
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`background-jobs-actix` crate to spin up a Server and Workers, and provides a mechanism for
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spawning new jobs.
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`background-jobs-actix` on it's own doesn't have a mechanism for storing worker state. This
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can be implemented manually by implementing the `Storage` trait from `background-jobs-core`,
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or the `background-jobs-sled-storage` crate can be used to provide a
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[Sled](https://github.com/spacejam/sled)-backed jobs store.
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With that out of the way, back to the examples:
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##### Main
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```rust
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use actix::System;
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use background_jobs::{ServerConfig, SledStorage, WorkerConfig};
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use failure::Error;
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fn main() -> Result<(), Error> {
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// First set up the Actix System to ensure we have a runtime to spawn jobs on.
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let sys = System::new("my-actix-system");
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// Set up our Storage
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let db = Db::start_default("my-sled-db")?;
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let storage = SledStorage::new(db)?;
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// Start the application server. This guards access to to the jobs store
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let queue_handle = ServerConfig::new(storage).start();
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// Configure and start our workers
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let mut worker_config = WorkerConfig::new(move || MyState::new("My App"));
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worker_config.register(MyProcessor);
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worker_config.set_processor_count(DEFAULT_QUEUE, 16);
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worker_config.start(queue_handle.clone());
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// Queue our jobs
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queue_handle.queue::<MyProcessor>(MyJob::new(1, 2))?;
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queue_handle.queue::<MyProcessor>(MyJob::new(3, 4))?;
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queue_handle.queue::<MyProcessor>(MyJob::new(5, 6))?;
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// Block on Actix
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sys.run()?;
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Ok(())
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}
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```
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##### Complete Example
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For the complete example project, see [the examples folder](https://git.asonix.dog/Aardwolf/background-jobs/src/branch/master/examples/actix-example)
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#### Bringing your own server/worker implementation
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If you want to create your own jobs processor based on this idea, you can depend on the
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`background-jobs-core` crate, which provides the Processor and Job traits, as well as some
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other useful types for implementing a jobs processor and job store.
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### Contributing
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Feel free to open issues for anything you find an issue with. Please note that any contributed code will be licensed under the GPLv3.
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### License
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Copyright © 2019 Riley Trautman
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Background Jobs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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Background Jobs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. This file is part of Background Jobs.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Background Jobs. If not, see [http://www.gnu.org/licenses/](http://www.gnu.org/licenses/).
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