Please go to the new official fork
Beanstalkd is a fast, lightweight queueing backend inspired by mmemcached. The Ruby Beanstalk client is a bit raw, however, so Stalker provides a thin wrapper to make job queueing from your Ruby app easy and fun.
From anywhere in your app:
require 'stalker'
Stalker.enqueue('email.send', :to => '[email protected]')
Stalker.enqueue('post.cleanup.all')
Stalker.enqueue('post.cleanup', :id => post.id)
In a standalone file, typically jobs.rb or worker.rb:
require 'stalker'
include Stalker
job 'email.send' do |args|
Pony.send(:to => args['to'], :subject => "Hello there")
end
job 'post.cleanup.all' do |args|
Post.all.each do |post|
enqueue('post.cleanup', :id => post.all)
end
end
job 'post.cleanup' do |args|
Post.find(args['id']).cleanup
end
First, make sure you have Beanstalkd installed and running:
$ sudo port install beanstalkd
$ beanstalkd
Stalker:
$ sudo gem install stalker
Now run a worker using the stalk binary:
$ stalk jobs.rb
Working 3 jobs: [ email.send post.cleanup.all post.cleanup ]
Working send.email ([email protected])
Finished send.email in 31ms
Stalker will log to stdout as it starts working each job, and then again when the job finishes including the ellapsed time in milliseconds.
Filter to a list of jobs you wish to run with an argument:
$ stalk jobs.rb post.cleanup.all,post.cleanup
Working 2 jobs: [ post.cleanup.all post.cleanup ]
In a production environment you may run one or more high-priority workers (limited to short/urgent jobs) and any number of regular workers (working all jobs). For example, two workers working just the email.send job, and four running all jobs:
$ for i in 1 2; do stalk jobs.rb email.send > log/urgent-worker.log 2>&1; end
$ for i in 1 2 3 4; do stalk jobs.rb > log/worker.log 2>&1; end
If you include an error
block in your jobs definition, that block will be invoked when a worker encounters an error. You might use this to report errors to an external monitoring service:
error do |e, job, args|
Exceptional.handle(e)
end
If you wish to run a block of code prior to any job:
before do |job|
puts "About to work #{job}"
end
- Jobs are serialized as JSON, so you should stick to strings, integers, arrays, and hashes as arguments to jobs. e.g. don't pass full Ruby objects - use something like an ActiveRecord/MongoMapper/CouchRest id instead.
- Because there are no class definitions associated with jobs, you can queue jobs from anywhere without needing to include your full app's environment.
- If you need to change the location of your Beanstalk from the default (localhost:11300), set BEANSTALK_URL in your environment, e.g. export BEANSTALK_URL=beanstalk://example.com:11300/
- The stalk binary is just for convenience, you can also run a worker with a straight Ruby command: $ ruby -r jobs -e Stalker.work
If you wish to hack on Stalker, install these extra gems:
$ gem install contest mocha
Make sure you have a beanstalkd running, then run the tests:
$ ruby test/stalker_test.rb
Created by Adam Wiggins
Patches from Jamie Cobbett, Scott Water, Keith Rarick, Mark McGranaghan, Sean Walberg, Adam Pohorecki
Heavily inspired by Minion by Orion Henry
Released under the MIT License: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php