Basic tasks for putting some Resque in your Cap. This should be fully compatible with both Capistrano 2.x and 3.x, but if you run into any issues please report them.
At this time, we are only targeting Resque 1.x; the 2.0/master branch is still a work-in-progress without a published gem.
gem "capistrano-resque", "~> 0.2.2", require: false
You'll need to make sure your app is set to include Resque's rake tasks. Per the
Resque 1.x README,
you'll need to add require 'resque/tasks'
somewhere under the lib/tasks
directory (e.g. in a lib/tasks/resque.rake
file).
Put this line after any of capistrano's own require
/load
statements (specifically load 'deploy'
for Cap v2):
require "capistrano-resque"
Note: You must tell Bundler not to automatically require the file (by using require: false
),
otherwise the gem will try to load the Capistrano tasks outside of the context of running
the cap
command (e.g. running rails console
).
# Specify the server that Resque will be deployed on. If you are using Cap v3
# and have multiple stages with different Resque requirements for each, then
# these __must__ be set inside of the applicable config/deploy/... stage files
# instead of config/deploy.rb:
role :resque_worker, "app_domain"
role :resque_scheduler, "app_domain"
set :workers, { "my_queue_name" => 2 }
# We default to storing PID files in a tmp/pids folder in your shared path, but
# you can customize it here (make sure to use a full path). The path will be
# created before starting workers if it doesn't already exist.
# set :resque_pid_path, -> { File.join(shared_path, 'tmp', 'pids') }
# Uncomment this line if your workers need access to the Rails environment:
# set :resque_environment_task, true
You can also specify multiple queues and the number of workers for each queue:
set :workers, { "archive" => 1, "mailing" => 3, "search_index, cache_warming" => 1 }
The above will start five workers in total:
- one listening on the
archive
queue - one listening on the
search_index, cache_warming
queue - three listening on the
mailing
queue
If you need to pass arbitrary data (like other non-standard environment variables) to the "start" command, you can specify:
set :resque_extra_env, "SEARCH_SERVER=172.18.0.52"
This can be useful for customizing Resque tasks in complex server environments.
You can also start up workers on multiple servers/roles:
role :worker_server_A, <server-ip-A>
role :worker_servers_B_and_C, [<server-ip-B>, <server-ip-C>]
set :workers, {
worker_server_A: {
"archive" => 1,
"mailing" => 1
},
worker_servers_B_and_C: {
"search_index" => 1,
}
}
The above will start four workers in total:
- one
archive
on Server A - one
mailing
on Server A - one
search_index
on Server B - one
search_index
on Server C
With Rails, Resque requires loading the Rails environment task to have access to your models, etc. (e.g. QUEUE=* rake environment resque:work
). However, Resque is often used without Rails (and even if you are using Rails, you may not need/want to load the Rails environment). As such, the environment
task is not automatically included.
If you would like to load the environment
task automatically, add this to your deploy.rb
:
set :resque_environment_task, true
If you would like your workers to use a different Rails environment than your actual Rails app:
set :resque_rails_env, "my_resque_env"
Running cap -vT | grep resque should give you...
➔ cap -vT | grep resque
cap resque:status # Check workers status
cap resque:start # Start Resque workers
cap resque:stop # Quit running Resque workers
cap resque:restart # Restart running Resque workers
cap resque:scheduler:restart #
cap resque:scheduler:start # Starts Resque Scheduler with default configs
cap resque:scheduler:stop # Stops Resque Scheduler
To restart you workers automatically when cap deploy:restart
is executed
add the following line to your deploy.rb
:
after "deploy:restart", "resque:restart"
Backgrounding and logging are current sticking points. I'm using the HEAD of resque's 1-x-stable branch for the 0.0.8 release because it has some new logging functions not yet slated for a resque release.
In your Gemfile, you will need to specify:
gem 'resque', :git => 'git://github.com/resque/resque.git', :branch => '1-x-stable'
Also, you will need to include:
Resque.logger = Logger.new("new_resque_log_file")
...somewhere sensible, such as in your resque.rake, to achieve logging.
The chatter on: https://github.com/defunkt/resque/pull/450 gives more information. If using HEAD of this resque branch doesn't work for you, then pin to v0.0.7 of this project.
Due to issues in the way Resque 1.x handles background processes, we automatically redirect stderr and stdout to /dev/null
.
If you'd like to capture this output instead, just specify a log file:
set :resque_log_file, "log/resque.log"
You can also disable the VERBOSE
option to reduce the amount of log output:
set :resque_verbose, false
Starting workers is done concurrently via Capistrano and you are limited by ssh connections limit on your server (default limit is 10)
To to use more workers, please change your sshd configuration (/etc/ssh/sshd_config)
MaxStartups 100
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - If possible, make sure your changes apply to both the Capistrano v2 and v3 code (
capistrano_integration.rb
is v2,capistrano-resque.rake
is v3) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Please see the included LICENSE file.