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iron_worker_php is PHP language binding for IronWorker.

IronWorker is a massively scalable background processing system. See How It Works

Getting Started

Branches

  • 1.* - Laravel 4.0/4.1/4.2/5.0 compatible, PHP 5.2 compatible version. No namespaces.
  • 2.* - Laravel 5.1+ compatible, PSR-4 compatible version with namespaces.
  • master branch - same as 2.*

Get credentials

To start using iron_worker_php, you need to sign up and get an oauth token.

  1. Go to http://iron.io/ and sign up.
  2. Get an Oauth Token at http://hud.iron.io/tokens

Install iron_worker_php

There are two ways to use iron_worker_php:

Using composer

Create composer.json file in project directory:

{
    "require": {
        "iron-io/iron_worker": "2.*"
    }
}

Do composer install (install it if needed: https://getcomposer.org/download/)

And use it:

require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';

$worker = new \IronWorker\IronWorker();
Using classes directly (strongly not recommended)
  1. Copy classes from src to target directory
  2. Grab IronCore classes there and copy to target directory
  3. Include them all.
require 'src/HttpException.php';
require 'src/JsonException.php';
require 'src/IronCore.php';
require 'src/IronWorker.php';
require 'src/IronWorkerException.php';

$worker = new \IronWorker\IronWorker();

Configure

Three ways to configure IronWorker:

  • Passing array with options:
<?php
$worker = new \IronWorker\IronWorker(array(
    'token' => 'XXXXXXXXX',
    'project_id' => 'XXXXXXXXX'
));
  • Passing ini file name which stores your configuration options. Rename sample_config.ini to config.ini and include your Iron.io credentials (token and project_id):
<?php
$worker = new \IronWorker\IronWorker('iron.json');
  • Automatic config search - pass zero arguments to constructor and library will try to find config file in following locations:

    • iron.ini in current directory
    • iron.json in current directory
    • IRON_WORKER_TOKEN, IRON_WORKER_PROJECT_ID and other environment variables
    • IRON_TOKEN, IRON_PROJECT_ID and other environment variables
    • .iron.ini in user's home directory
    • .iron.json in user's home directory

Creating a Worker

Here's an example worker:

<?php
echo "Hello PHP World!\n";

Upload code to server

Using CLI tool (preferred)

  • Get CLI tool
  • Download or create iron.json config file with project_id/password
  • Create HelloWorld.worker file, example:
runtime 'php'
exec 'HelloWorld.php'
  • Upload!
$ iron_worker upload HelloWorld

.worker syntax reference

Worker examples

You can find worker examples here: iron_worker_examples

Queueing a Worker

<?php
$payload = array()
$options = array('label' => 'label_name', 'cluster' => 'dedicated')
$task_id = $worker->postTask('HelloWorld', $payload, $options);

queueing options

  • priority: The priority queue to run the task in. Valid values are 0, 1, and 2. 0 is the default.
  • timeout: The maximum runtime of your task in seconds. No task can exceed 3600 seconds (60 minutes). The default is 3600 but can be set to a shorter duration.
  • delay: The number of seconds to delay before actually queuing the task. Default is 0.
  • label: Optional text label for your task.
  • cluster: cluster name ex: "high-mem" or "dedicated". This is a premium feature for customers to have access to more powerful or custom built worker solutions. Dedicated worker clusters exist for users who want to reserve a set number of workers just for their queued tasks. If not set default is set to "default" which is the public IronWorker cluster.

Scheduling a Worker

postScheduleAdvanced($name, $payload, $start_at, $label = null, $run_every = null, $end_at = null, $run_times = null, $priority = null, $cluster = null)

If you want to run worker tasks in specific time intervals, once at a particular time, or n number of things starting at a specific time you should schedule it:

<?php
$options = array('label' => 'label_name', 'cluster' => 'default');
$task_id = $worker->postSchedule('HelloWorkerRuby', $options);

scheduling options

  • run_every: The amount of time, in seconds, between runs. By default, the task will only run once. run_every will return a 400 error if it is set to less than 60.
  • end_at: The time tasks will stop being queued. Should be a time or datetime.
  • run_times: The number of times a task will run.
  • priority: The priority queue to run the job in. Valid values are 0, 1, and 2. The default is 0. Higher values means
  • tasks spend less time in the queue once they come off the schedule.
  • start_at: The time the scheduled task should first be run.
  • label: Optional label for adding custom labels to scheduled tasks.
  • cluster: cluster name ex: "high-mem" or "dedicated". If not set default is set to "default" which is the public IronWorker cluster.

Status of a Worker

To get the status of a worker, you can use the getTaskDetails() method.

<?php
$task_id = $worker->postTask('HelloWorld');
$details = $worker->getTaskDetails($task_id);

echo $details->status; # prints 'queued', 'complete', 'error' etc.

Get Worker Log

Use any function that print text inside your worker to put messages to log.

<?php
$task_id = $worker->postTask('HelloWorld');
sleep(10);
$details = $worker->getTaskDetails($task_id);
# Check log only if task is finished.
if ($details->status != 'queued') {
    $log = $worker->getLog($task_id);
    echo $log; # prints "Hello PHP World!"
}

Loading the Task Data Payload

To provide Payload to your worker simply put an array with any content you want.

<?php
$payload = array(
    'key_one' => 'Helpful text',
    'key_two' => 2,
    'options' => array(
        'option 1',
        'option 2'
    )
);

$worker->postTask('HelloWorld', $payload);

$worker->postScheduleSimple('HelloWorld', $payload, 10)

$worker->postScheduleAdvanced('HelloWorld', $payload, time()+3*60, 2*60, null, 5);

When your code is executed, it will be passed four program arguments:

  • -id - The task id.
  • -payload - the filename containing the data payload for this particular task.
  • -d - the user writable directory that can be used while running your job.
  • -config - the filename containing config data (if available) for particular code.

IronWorker provide functions getArgs(), getPayload(), getConfig() in your worker to help you using payload:

<?php
$args = getArgs();

echo "Hello PHP World!\n";

print_r($args);

Setting Task Priority

You can specify priority of the task by setting the corresponding parameter.

$options = array('priority' => 1);
# Run task with medium priority
$worker->postTask('HelloWorld', $payload, $options);

Value of priority parameter means the priority queue to run the task in. Valid values are 0, 1, and 2. 0 is the default.

Setting progress status

To set current task progress, just call setProgress($percent, $message) inside your worker.

  • percent - A percentage value that can be set to show how much progress a task is making
  • msg - A human readable message string that can be used when showing the status of a task

To retrieve this data on client side, use $worker->getTaskDetails($task_id);

Troubleshooting

http error: 0

If you see Uncaught exception 'Http_Exception' with message 'http error: 0 | ' it most likely caused by misconfigured cURL https certificates. There are two ways to fix this error:

  1. Disable SSL certificate verification - add this line after IronWorker initialization: $worker->ssl_verifypeer = false;
  2. Switch to http protocol - add this to configuration options: protocol = http and port = 80
  3. Fix the error! Recommended solution: download actual certificates - cacert.pem and add them to php.ini:
[PHP]

curl.cainfo = "path\to\cacert.pem"

Full Documentation

You can find more documentation here:

Note for Developers

You can test this library by modifying it and setting up a symbolic link to your local code after you run composer install on the Dockerworker example. See http://blog.grossi.io/2013/testing-your-packagistcomposer-package-locally/ for a detailed description on the Composer file layout and the symlinking strategy.