MiniScheduler adds recurring jobs to Sidekiq.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'mini_scheduler'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install mini_scheduler
In a Rails application, create files needed in your application to configure mini_scheduler:
$ bin/rails g mini_scheduler:install
$ bin/rails db:migrate
An initializer is created named config/initializers/mini_scheduler.rb
which lists all the configuration options.
By default each instance of MiniScheduler will run with a single worker. To amend this behavior:
if Sidekiq.server? && defined?(Rails)
Rails.application.config.after_initialize do
MiniScheduler.start(workers: 5)
end
end
This is useful for cases where you have extremely long running tasks that you would prefer did not starve.
Create jobs with a recurring schedule like this:
class MyHourlyJob
include Sidekiq::Worker
extend MiniScheduler::Schedule
every 1.hour
def execute(args)
# some tasks
end
end
Options for schedules:
- queue followed by a queue name, like "queue :email", default queue is "default"
- every followed by a duration in seconds, like "every 1.hour".
- daily at: followed by a duration since midnight, like "daily at: 12.hours", to run only once per day at a specific time.
To view the scheduled jobs, their history, and the schedule, go to sidekiq's web UI and look for the "Scheduler" tab at the top.
To enable this view in Sidekiq, add require "mini_scheduler/web"
to routes.rb
:
require "sidekiq/web"
require "mini_scheduler/web"
Rails.application.routes.draw do
...
end
If you have questions about using mini_scheduler or found a problem, you can find us at https://meta.discourse.org.