This repository provides a Faktory worker process for Go apps. This worker process fetches background jobs from the Faktory server and processes them.
How is this different from all the other Go background worker libraries? They all use Redis or another "dumb" datastore. This library is far simpler because the Faktory server implements most of the data storage, retry logic, Web UI, etc.
You must install Faktory first. Then:
go get -u github.com/contribsys/faktory_worker_go
To process background jobs, follow these steps:
- Register your job types and their associated funcs
- Set a few optional parameters
- Start the processing
There are a couple ways to stop the process. In this example, send the TERM or INT signal.
package main
import (
"context"
"log"
worker "github.com/contribsys/faktory_worker_go"
)
func someFunc(ctx context.Context, args ...interface{}) error {
help := worker.HelperFor(ctx)
log.Printf("Working on job %s\n", help.Jid())
return nil
}
func main() {
mgr := worker.NewManager()
// register job types and the function to execute them
mgr.Register("SomeJob", someFunc)
//mgr.Register("AnotherJob", anotherFunc)
// use up to N goroutines to execute jobs
mgr.Concurrency = 20
// pull jobs from these queues, in this order of precedence
mgr.ProcessStrictPriorityQueues("critical", "default", "bulk")
// alternatively you can use weights to avoid starvation
//mgr.ProcessWeightedPriorityQueues(map[string]int{"critical":3, "default":2, "bulk":1})
// Start processing jobs, this method does not return.
mgr.Run()
}
Alternatively you can control the stopping of the Manager using
RunWithContext
. You must process any signals yourself.
package main
import (
"context"
"log"
"os"
"os/signal"
"syscall"
worker "github.com/contribsys/faktory_worker_go"
)
func someFunc(ctx context.Context, args ...interface{}) error {
help := worker.HelperFor(ctx)
log.Printf("Working on job %s\n", help.Jid())
return nil
}
func main() {
ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(context.Background())
mgr := worker.NewManager()
// register job types and the function to execute them
mgr.Register("SomeJob", someFunc)
//mgr.Register("AnotherJob", anotherFunc)
// use up to N goroutines to execute jobs
mgr.Concurrency = 20
// pull jobs from these queues, in this order of precedence
mgr.ProcessStrictPriorityQueues("critical", "default", "bulk")
// alternatively you can use weights to avoid starvation
//mgr.ProcessWeightedPriorityQueues(map[string]int{"critical":3, "default":2, "bulk":1})
go func(){
// Start processing jobs in background routine, this method does not return
// unless an error is returned or cancel() is called
mgr.RunWithContext(ctx)
}()
go func() {
stopSignals := []os.Signal{
syscall.SIGTERM,
syscall.SIGINT,
}
stop := make(chan os.Signal, len(stopSignals))
for _, s := range stopSignals {
signal.Notify(stop, s)
}
for {
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
return
case <-stop:
cancel()
}
}
}()
<-ctx.Done()
}
See test/main.go
for a working example.
- How do I specify the Faktory server location?
By default, it will use localhost:7419 which is sufficient for local development.
Use FAKTORY_URL to specify the URL, e.g. tcp://faktory.example.com:12345
or
use FAKTORY_PROVIDER to specify the environment variable which does
contain the URL: FAKTORY_PROVIDER=FAKTORYTOGO_URL. This level of
indirection is useful for SaaSes, Heroku Addons, etc.
- How do I push new jobs to Faktory?
- Inside a job, you can check out a connection from the Pool of Faktory
connections using the job helper's
With
method:
func someFunc(ctx context.Context, args ...interface{}) error {
help := worker.HelperFor(ctx)
return help.With(func(cl *faktory.Client) error {
job := faktory.NewJob("SomeJob", 1, 2, 3)
return cl.Push(job)
})
}
- You can always open a client connection to Faktory directly but this won't perform as well:
import (
faktory "github.com/contribsys/faktory/client"
)
client, err := faktory.Open()
job := faktory.NewJob("SomeJob", 1, 2, 3)
err = client.Push(job)
NB: Client instances are not safe to share, you can use a Pool of Clients which is thread-safe.
See the Faktory Client API for Go or Ruby. You can implement a Faktory client in any programming language. See the wiki for details.
Mike Perham, @getajobmike, @contribsys
This codebase is licensed via the Mozilla Public License, v2.0. https://choosealicense.com/licenses/mpl-2.0/