Job queue for PostgreSQL running on Node.js - allows you to run jobs (e.g. sending emails, performing calculations, generating PDFs, etc) "in the background" so that your HTTP response/application code is not held up. Can be used with any PostgreSQL-backed application. Pairs beautifully with PostGraphile or PostgREST.
To help us develop this software sustainably under the MIT license, we ask all individuals and businesses that use it to help support its ongoing maintenance and development via sponsorship.
And please give some love to our featured sponsors 🤩:
Story.ai * |
Surge * |
Chad Furman * |
Postlight * |
Openbase * |
Qwick |
* Sponsors the entire Graphile suite
In your existing Node.js project:
yarn add graphile-worker
# or: npm install --save graphile-worker
Create a tasks/
folder, and place in it JS files containing your task specs.
The names of these files will be the task identifiers, e.g. hello
below:
// tasks/hello.js
module.exports = async (payload, helpers) => {
const { name } = payload;
helpers.logger.info(`Hello, ${name}`);
};
(Make sure you're in the folder that contains the tasks/
folder.)
npx graphile-worker -c "my_db"
# or, if you have a remote database, something like:
# npx graphile-worker -c "postgres://user:pass@host:port/db?ssl=true"
# or, if you prefer envvars
# DATABASE_URL="..." npx graphile-worker
(Note: npx
runs the local copy of an npm module if it is installed, when
you're ready, switch to using the package.json
"scripts"
entry instead.)
Connect to your database and run the following SQL:
SELECT graphile_worker.add_job('hello', json_build_object('name', 'Bobby Tables'));
You should see the worker output Hello, Bobby Tables
. Gosh, that was fast!
Instead of running graphile-worker
via the CLI, you may use it directly in
your Node.js code. The following is equivalent to the CLI example above:
const { run, quickAddJob } = require("graphile-worker");
async function main() {
// Run a worker to execute jobs:
const runner = await run({
connectionString: "postgres:///my_db",
concurrency: 5,
// Install signal handlers for graceful shutdown on SIGINT, SIGTERM, etc
noHandleSignals: false,
pollInterval: 1000,
// you can set the taskList or taskDirectory but not both
taskList: {
hello: async (payload, helpers) => {
const { name } = payload;
helpers.logger.info(`Hello, ${name}`);
},
},
// or:
// taskDirectory: `${__dirname}/tasks`,
});
// Or add a job to be executed:
await quickAddJob(
// makeWorkerUtils options
{ connectionString: "postgres:///my_db" },
// Task identifier
"hello",
// Payload
{ name: "Bobby Tables" },
);
// If the worker exits (whether through fatal error or otherwise), this
// promise will resolve/reject:
await runner.promise;
}
main().catch((err) => {
console.error(err);
process.exit(1);
});
Running this example should output something like:
[core] INFO: Worker connected and looking for jobs... (task names: 'hello')
[job(worker-7327280603017288: hello{1})] INFO: Hello, Bobby Tables
[worker(worker-7327280603017288)] INFO: Completed task 1 (hello) with success (0.16ms)
You can ask for help on Discord at http://discord.gg/graphile
Please support development of this project via sponsorship. With your support we can improve performance, usability and documentation at a greater rate, leading to reduced running and engineering costs for your organisation, leading to a net ROI.
Professional support contracts are also available; for more information see: https://graphile.org/support/
- Standalone and embedded modes
- Designed to be used both from JavaScript or directly in the database
- Easy to test (recommended:
runTaskListOnce
util) - Low latency (typically under 3ms from task schedule to execution, uses
LISTEN
/NOTIFY
to be informed of jobs as they're inserted) - High performance (uses
SKIP LOCKED
to find jobs to execute, resulting in faster fetches) - Small tasks (uses explicit task names / payloads resulting in minimal serialisation/deserialisation overhead)
- Parallel by default
- Adding jobs to same named queue runs them in series
- Automatically re-attempts failed jobs with exponential back-off
- Customisable retry count (default: 25 attempts over ~3 days)
- Crontab-like scheduling feature for recurring tasks (with optional backfill)
- Task de-duplication via unique
job_key
- Flexible runtime controls that can be used for complex rate limiting (e.g. via graphile-worker-rate-limiter)
- Open source; liberal MIT license
- Executes tasks written in Node.js (these can call out to any other language or networked service)
- Modern JS with 100% async/await API (no callbacks)
- Written natively in TypeScript
- Watch mode for development (experimental - iterate your jobs without restarting worker)
- If you're running really lean, you can run Graphile Worker in the same Node process as your server to keep costs and devops complexity down.
Production ready (and used in production).
We're still enhancing/iterating the library rapidly, hence the 0.x numbering; updating to a new "minor" version (0.y) may require some small code modifications, particularly to TypeScript type names; these are documented in the changelog.
This specific codebase is fairly young, but it's based on years of implementing similar job queues for Postgres.
To give feedback please raise an issue or reach out on discord: http://discord.gg/graphile
PostgreSQL 10+* and Node 10+*.
If your database doesn't already include the pgcrypto
extension we'll
automatically install it into the public schema for you. If the extension is
installed in a different schema (unlikely) you may face issues. Making alias
functions in the public schema, should solve this issue (see issue
#43 for an example).
* Might work with older versions, but has not been tested.
yarn add graphile-worker
# or: npm install --save graphile-worker
graphile-worker
manages its own database schema (graphile_worker
). Just
point graphile-worker at your database and we handle our own migrations:
npx graphile-worker -c "postgres:///my_db"
(npx
looks for the graphile-worker
binary locally; it's often better to use
the "scripts"
entry in package.json
instead.)
The following CLI options are available:
Options:
--help Show help [boolean]
--version Show version number [boolean]
-c, --connection Database connection string, defaults to the
'DATABASE_URL' envvar [string]
-s, --schema The database schema in which Graphile Worker is
(to be) located
[string] [default: "graphile_worker"]
--schema-only Just install (or update) the database schema,
then exit [boolean] [default: false]
--once Run until there are no runnable jobs left, then
exit [boolean] [default: false]
-w, --watch [EXPERIMENTAL] Watch task files for changes,
automatically reloading the task code without
restarting worker [boolean] [default: false]
--crontab override path to crontab file [string]
-j, --jobs number of jobs to run concurrently
[number] [default: 1]
-m, --max-pool-size maximum size of the PostgreSQL pool
[number] [default: 10]
--poll-interval how long to wait between polling for jobs in
milliseconds (for jobs scheduled in the
future/retries) [number] [default: 2000]
--no-prepared-statements set this flag if you want to disable prepared
statements, e.g. for compatibility with
pgBouncer [boolean] [default: false]
graphile-worker
can be used as a library inside your Node.js application.
There are two main use cases for this: running jobs, and queueing jobs. Here are
the APIs for running jobs.
Runs until either stopped by a signal event like SIGINT
or by calling the
stop()
method on the resolved object.
The resolved 'Runner' object has a number of helpers on it, see Runner object for more information.
Equivalent to running the CLI with the --once
flag. The function will run
until there are no runnable jobs left, and then resolve.
Equivalent to running the CLI with the --schema-only
option. Runs the
migrations and then resolves.
The following options for these methods are available.
concurrency
: The equivalent of the CLI--jobs
option with the same default value.noHandleSignals
: If set true, we won't install signal handlers and it'll be up to you to handle graceful shutdown of the worker if the process receives a signal.pollInterval
: The equivalent of the CLI--poll-interval
option with the same default value.logger
: To change how log messages are output you may provide a custom logger; seeLogger
below- the database is identified through one of these options:
connectionString
: A PostgreSQL connection string to the database containing the job queue, orpgPool
: Apg.Pool
instance to use
- the tasks to execute are identified through one of these options:
taskDirectory
: A path string to a directory containing the task handlers.taskList
: An object with the task names as keys and a corresponding task handler functions as values
schema
can be used to change the defaultgraphile_worker
schema to something else (equivalent to--schema
on the CLI)forbiddenFlags
see Forbidden flags belowevents
: pass your ownnew EventEmitter()
if you want to customize the options, get earlier events (before the runner object resolves), or want to get events from alternative Graphile Worker entrypoints.noPreparedStatements
: Set true if you want to prevent the use of prepared statements, for example if you wish to use Graphile Worker with an external PostgreSQL connection pool. Enabling this setting may have a small performance impact.
Exactly one of either taskDirectory
or taskList
must be provided (except for
runMigrations
which doesn't require a task list).
One of these must be provided (in order of priority):
pgPool
pg.Pool instanceconnectionString
settingDATABASE_URL
envvar- PostgreSQL environmental variables,
including at least
PGDATABASE
(NOTE: not all envvars are supported)
The run
method above resolves to a 'Runner' object that has the following
methods and properties:
stop(): Promise<void>
- stops the runner from accepting new jobs, and returns a promise that resolves when all the in progress tasks (if any) are complete.addJob: AddJobFunction
- seeaddJob
.promise: Promise<void>
- a promise that resolves once the runner has completed.events: WorkerEvents
- a Node.jsEventEmitter
that exposes certain events within the runner (seeWorkerEvents
).
See addJob
for more details.
await runner.addJob("testTask", {
thisIsThePayload: true,
});
See WorkerEvents
for more details.
runner.events.on("job:success", ({ worker, job }) => {
console.log(`Hooray! Worker ${worker.workerId} completed job ${job.id}`);
});
We support a large number of events via an EventEmitter. You can either retrieve
the event emitter via the events
property on the Runner
object, or you can
create your own event emitter and pass it to Graphile Worker via the
WorkerOptions.events
option (this is primarily useful for getting events from
the other Graphile Worker entrypoints).
Details of what events we support and what data is available on the event payload is detailed below in TypeScript syntax:
export type WorkerEvents = TypedEventEmitter<{
/**
* When a worker pool is created
*/
"pool:create": { workerPool: WorkerPool };
/**
* When a worker pool attempts to connect to PG ready to issue a LISTEN
* statement
*/
"pool:listen:connecting": { workerPool: WorkerPool };
/**
* When a worker pool starts listening for jobs via PG LISTEN
*/
"pool:listen:success": { workerPool: WorkerPool; client: PoolClient };
/**
* When a worker pool faces an error on their PG LISTEN client
*/
"pool:listen:error": {
workerPool: WorkerPool;
error: any;
client: PoolClient;
};
/**
* When a worker pool is released
*/
"pool:release": { pool: WorkerPool };
/**
* When a worker pool starts a graceful shutdown
*/
"pool:gracefulShutdown": { pool: WorkerPool; message: string };
/**
* When a worker pool graceful shutdown throws an error
*/
"pool:gracefulShutdown:error": { pool: WorkerPool; error: any };
/**
* When a worker is created
*/
"worker:create": { worker: Worker; tasks: TaskList };
/**
* When a worker release is requested
*/
"worker:release": { worker: Worker };
/**
* When a worker stops (normally after a release)
*/
"worker:stop": { worker: Worker; error?: any };
/**
* When a worker is about to ask the database for a job to execute
*/
"worker:getJob:start": { worker: Worker };
/**
* When a worker calls get_job but there are no available jobs
*/
"worker:getJob:error": { worker: Worker; error: any };
/**
* When a worker calls get_job but there are no available jobs
*/
"worker:getJob:empty": { worker: Worker };
/**
* When a worker is created
*/
"worker:fatalError": { worker: Worker; error: any; jobError: any | null };
/**
* When a job is retrieved by get_job
*/
"job:start": { worker: Worker; job: Job };
/**
* When a job completes successfully
*/
"job:success": { worker: Worker; job: Job };
/**
* When a job throws an error
*/
"job:error": { worker: Worker; job: Job; error: any };
/**
* When a job fails permanently (emitted after job:error when appropriate)
*/
"job:failed": { worker: Worker; job: Job; error: any };
/**
* When a job has finished executing and the result (success or failure) has
* been written back to the database
*/
"job:complete": { worker: Worker; job: Job; error: any };
/**
* When the runner is terminated by a signal
*/
gracefulShutdown: { signal: Signal };
/**
* When the runner is stopped
*/
stop: {};
}>;
You can also use the graphile-worker
library to queue jobs using one of the
following APIs.
NOTE: although running the worker will automatically install its schema, the same is not true for queuing jobs. You must ensure that the worker database schema is installed before you attempt to enqueue a job; you can install the database schema into your database with the following command:
yarn graphile-worker -c "postgres:///my_db" --schema-only
Alternatively you can use the WorkerUtils
migrate method:
await workerUtils.migrate();
Useful for adding jobs from within JavaScript in an efficient way.
Runnable example:
const { makeWorkerUtils } = require("graphile-worker");
async function main() {
const workerUtils = await makeWorkerUtils({
connectionString: "postgres:///my_db",
});
try {
await workerUtils.migrate();
await workerUtils.addJob(
// Task identifier
"calculate-life-meaning",
// Payload
{ value: 42 },
// Optionally, add further task spec details here
);
// await workerUtils.addJob(...);
// await workerUtils.addJob(...);
// await workerUtils.addJob(...);
} finally {
await workerUtils.release();
}
}
main().catch((err) => {
console.error(err);
process.exit(1);
});
We recommend building one instance of WorkerUtils and sharing it as a singleton throughout your code.
- exactly one of these keys must be present to determine how to connect to the
database:
connectionString
: A PostgreSQL connection string to the database containing the job queue, orpgPool
: Apg.Pool
instance to use
schema
can be used to change the defaultgraphile_worker
schema to something else (equivalent to--schema
on the CLI)
A WorkerUtils
instance has the following methods:
addJob(name: string, payload: JSON, spec: TaskSpec)
- a method you can call to enqueue a job, see addJob.migrate()
- a method you can call to update the graphile-worker database schema; returns a promise.release()
- call this to release theWorkerUtils
instance. It's typically best to useWorkerUtils
as a singleton, so you often won't need this, but it's useful for tests or processes where you want Node to exit cleanly when it's done.
If you want to quickly add a job and you don't mind the cost of opening a DB
connection pool and then cleaning it up right away for every job added,
there's the quickAddJob
convenience function. It takes the same options as
makeWorkerUtils
as the first argument; the remaining arguments are for
addJob
.
NOTE: you are recommended to use makeWorkerUtils
instead where possible, but
in one-off scripts this convenience method may be enough.
Runnable example:
const { quickAddJob } = require("graphile-worker");
async function main() {
await quickAddJob(
// makeWorkerUtils options
{ connectionString: "postgres:///my_db" },
// Task identifier
"calculate-life-meaning",
// Payload
{ value: 42 },
// Optionally, add further task spec details here
);
}
main().catch((err) => {
console.error(err);
process.exit(1);
});
The addJob
API exists in many places in graphile-worker, but all the instances
have exactly the same call signature. The API is used to add a job to the queue
for immediate or delayed execution. With jobKey
and jobKeyMode
it can also
be used to replace existing jobs.
NOTE: quickAddJob
is similar to addJob
, but accepts an additional initial
parameter describing how to connect to the database).
The addJob
arguments are as follows:
identifier
: the name of the task to be executedpayload
: an optional JSON-compatible object to give the task more context on what it is doingoptions
: an optional object specifying:queueName
: the queue to run this task underrunAt
: a Date to schedule this task to run in the futuremaxAttempts
: how many retries should this task get? (Default: 25)jobKey
: unique identifier for the job, used to replace, update or remove it later if needed (see Replacing, updating and removing jobs); can be used for de-duplication (i.e. throttling or debouncing)jobKeyMode
: controls the behavior ofjobKey
when a matching job is found (see Replacing, updating and removing jobs)
Example:
await addJob("task_2", { foo: "bar" });
Definitions:
export type AddJobFunction = (
/**
* The name of the task that will be executed for this job.
*/
identifier: string,
/**
* The payload (typically a JSON object) that will be passed to the task executor.
*/
payload?: any,
/**
* Additional details about how the job should be handled.
*/
spec?: TaskSpec,
) => Promise<Job>;
export interface TaskSpec {
/**
* The queue to run this task under (only specify if you want jobs in this
* queue to run serially). (Default: null)
*/
queueName?: string;
/**
* A Date to schedule this task to run in the future. (Default: now)
*/
runAt?: Date;
/**
* Jobs are executed in numerically ascending order of priority (jobs with a
* numerically smaller priority are run first). (Default: 0)
*/
priority?: number;
/**
* How many retries should this task get? (Default: 25)
*/
maxAttempts?: number;
/**
* Unique identifier for the job, can be used to update or remove it later if
* needed. (Default: null)
*/
jobKey?: string;
/**
* Modifies the behavior of `jobKey`; when 'replace' all attributes will be
* updated, when 'preserve_run_at' all attributes except 'run_at' will be
* updated, when 'unsafe_dedupe' a new job will only be added if no existing
* job (including locked jobs and permanently failed jobs) with matching job
* key exists. (Default: 'replace')
*/
jobKeyMode?: "replace" | "preserve_run_at" | "unsafe_dedupe";
/**
* Flags for the job, can be used to dynamically filter which jobs can and
* cannot run at runtime. (Default: null)
*/
flags?: string[];
}
We use @graphile/logger
as a log
abstraction so that you can log to whatever logging facilities you like. By
default this will log to console
, and debug-level messages are not output
unless you have the environmental variable GRAPHILE_LOGGER_DEBUG=1
. You can
override this by passing a custom logger
.
It's recommended that your tasks always use the methods on helpers.logger
for
logging so that you can later route your messages to a different log store if
you want to. There are 4 methods, one for each level of severity (error
,
warn
, info
, debug
), and each accept a string as the first argument and
optionally an arbitrary object as the second argument:
helpers.logger.error(message: string, meta?: LogMeta)
helpers.logger.warn(message: string, meta?: LogMeta)
helpers.logger.info(message: string, meta?: LogMeta)
helpers.logger.debug(message: string, meta?: LogMeta)
You may customise where log messages from graphile-worker
(and your tasks) go
by supplying a custom Logger
instance using your own logFactory
.
const { Logger, run } = require("graphile-worker");
/* Replace this function with your own implementation */
function logFactory(scope) {
return (level, message, meta) => {
console.log(level, message, scope, meta);
};
}
const logger = new Logger(logFactory);
// Pass the logger to the 'run' method as part of options:
run({
logger,
/* pgPool, taskList, etc... */
});
Your logFactory
function will be passed a scope object which may contain the
following keys (all optional):
label
(string): a rough description of the type of action ('watch', 'worker' and 'job' are the currently used values).workerId
(string): the ID of the worker instancetaskIdentifier
(string): the task name (identifier) of the running jobjobId
(number): the id of the running job
And it should return a logger function which will receive these three arguments:
level
('error', 'warning', 'info' or 'debug') - severity of the log messagemessage
(string) - the log message itselfmeta
(optional object) - may contain other useful metadata, useful in structured logging systems
The return result of the logger function is currently ignored; but we strongly recommend that for future compatibility you do not return anything from your logger function.
See the @graphile/logger
documentation
for more information.
NOTE: you do not need to (and should not) customise, inherit or extend the
Logger
class at all.
A task executor is a simple async JS function which receives as input the job payload and a collection of helpers. It does the work and then returns. If it returns then the job is deemed a success and is deleted from the queue. If it throws an error then the job is deemed a failure and the task is rescheduled using an exponential-backoff algorithm.
IMPORTANT: your jobs should wait for all asynchronous work to be completed before returning, otherwise we might mistakenly think they were successful.
IMPORTANT: we automatically retry the job if it fails, so it's often sensible to split large jobs into smaller jobs, this also allows them to run in parallel resulting in faster execution. This is particularly important for tasks that are not idempotent (i.e. running them a second time will have extra side effects) - for example sending emails.
Tasks are created in the tasks
folder in the directory from which you run
graphile-worker
; the name of the file (less the .js
suffix) is used as the
task identifier. Currently only .js
files that can be directly loaded by
Node.js are supported; if you are using Babel, TypeScript or similar you will
need to compile your tasks into the tasks
folder.
current directory
├── package.json
├── node_modules
└── tasks
├── task_1.js
└── task_2.js
// tasks/task_1.js
module.exports = async (payload) => {
await doMyLogicWith(payload);
};
// tasks/task_2.js
module.exports = async (payload, helpers) => {
// async is optional, but best practice
helpers.logger.debug(`Received ${JSON.stringify(payload)}`);
};
Each task function is passed two arguments:
payload
- the payload you passed when callingadd_job
helpers
- an object containing:logger
- a scoped Logger instance, to aid tracing/debuggingjob
- the whole job (includinguuid
,attempts
, etc) - you shouldn't need thiswithPgClient
- a helper to use to get a database clientquery(sql, values)
- a convenience wrapper forwithPgClient(pgClient => pgClient.query(sql, values))
addJob
- a helper to schedule a job
So that you may redirect logs to your preferred logging provider, we have enabled you to supply your own logging provider. Overriding this is currently only available in library mode (see Logger). We then wrap this logging provider with a helper class to ease debugging; the helper class has the following methods:
error(message, meta?)
: for logging errors, similar toconsole.error
warn(message, meta?)
: for logging warnings, similar toconsole.warn
info(message, meta?)
: for logging informational messages, similar toconsole.info
debug(message, meta?)
: to aid with debugging, similar toconsole.log
scope(additionalScope)
: returns a newLogger
instance with additional scope information
withPgClient
gets a pgClient
from the pool, calls
await callback(pgClient)
, and finally releases the client and returns the
result of callback
. This workflow makes testing your tasks easier.
Example:
const {
rows: [row],
} = await withPgClient((pgClient) => pgClient.query("select 1 as one"));
See addJob
You can schedule jobs directly in the database, e.g. from a trigger or function,
or by calling SQL from your application code. You do this using the
graphile_worker.add_job
function.
NOTE: the addJob
JavaScript method simply defers to this underlying
add_job
SQL function.
add_job
accepts the following parameters (in this order):
identifier
- the only required field, indicates the name of the task executor to run (omit the.js
suffix!)payload
- a JSON object with information to tell the task executor what to do (defaults to an empty object)queue_name
- if you want certain tasks to run one at a time, add them to the same named queue (defaults tonull
)run_at
- a timestamp after which to run the job; defaults to now.max_attempts
- if this task fails, how many times should we retry it? Default: 25.job_key
- unique identifier for the job, used to replace, update or remove it later if needed (see Replacing, updating and removing jobs); can also be used for de-duplicationpriority
- an integer representing the jobs priority. Jobs are executed in numerically ascending order of priority (jobs with a numerically smaller priority are run first).flags
- an optional text array (text[]
) representing a flags to attach to the job. Can be used alongside theforbiddenFlags
option in library mode to implement complex rate limiting or other behaviors which requiring skipping jobs at runtime (see Forbidden flags).job_key_mode
- whenjob_key
is specified, this setting indicates what should happen when an existing job is found with the same job key:replace
(default) - all job parameters are updated to the new values, including therun_at
(inserts new job if matching job is locked)preserve_run_at
- all job parameters are updated to the new values, except forrun_at
which maintains the previous value (inserts new job if matching job is locked)unsafe_dedupe
- only inserts the job if no existing job (whether or not it is locked or has failed permanently) with matching key is found; does not update the existing job
Typically you'll want to set the identifier
and payload
:
SELECT graphile_worker.add_job(
'send_email',
json_build_object(
'to', 'someone@example.com',
'subject', 'graphile-worker test'
)
);
It's recommended that you use PostgreSQL's named parameters for the other parameters so that you only need specify the arguments you're using:
SELECT graphile_worker.add_job('reminder', run_at := NOW() + INTERVAL '2 days');
TIP: if you want to run a job after a variable number of seconds according
to the database time (rather than the application time), you can use interval
multiplication; see run_at
in this example:
SELECT graphile_worker.add_job(
$1,
payload := $2,
queue_name := $3,
max_attempts := $4,
run_at := NOW() + ($5 * INTERVAL '1 second')
);
NOTE: graphile_worker.add_job(...)
requires database owner privileges to
execute. To allow lower-privileged users to call it, wrap it inside a PostgreSQL
function marked as SECURITY DEFINER
so that it will run with the same
privileges as the more powerful user that defined it. (Be sure that this
function performs any access checks that are necessary.)
This snippet creates a trigger function which adds a job to execute
task_identifier_here
when a new row is inserted into my_table
.
CREATE FUNCTION my_table_created() RETURNS trigger AS $$
BEGIN
PERFORM graphile_worker.add_job('task_identifier_here', json_build_object('id', NEW.id));
RETURN NEW;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql VOLATILE;
CREATE TRIGGER trigger_name AFTER INSERT ON my_table FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE my_table_created();
If your tables are all defined with a single primary key named id
then you can
define a more convenient dynamic trigger function which can be called from
multiple triggers for multiple tables to quickly schedule jobs.
CREATE FUNCTION trigger_job() RETURNS trigger AS $$
BEGIN
PERFORM graphile_worker.add_job(TG_ARGV[0], json_build_object(
'schema', TG_TABLE_SCHEMA,
'table', TG_TABLE_NAME,
'op', TG_OP,
'id', (CASE WHEN TG_OP = 'DELETE' THEN OLD.id ELSE NEW.id END)
));
RETURN NEW;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql VOLATILE;
You might use this trigger like this:
CREATE TRIGGER send_verification_email
AFTER INSERT ON user_emails
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (NEW.verified is false)
EXECUTE PROCEDURE trigger_job('send_verification_email');
CREATE TRIGGER user_changed
AFTER INSERT OR UPDATE OR DELETE ON users
FOR EACH ROW
EXECUTE PROCEDURE trigger_job('user_changed');
CREATE TRIGGER generate_pdf
AFTER INSERT ON pdfs
FOR EACH ROW
EXECUTE PROCEDURE trigger_job('generate_pdf');
CREATE TRIGGER generate_pdf_update
AFTER UPDATE ON pdfs
FOR EACH ROW
WHEN (NEW.title IS DISTINCT FROM OLD.title)
EXECUTE PROCEDURE trigger_job('generate_pdf');
Jobs scheduled with a job_key
parameter may be replaced/updated by calling
add_job
again with the same job_key
value. This can be used for rescheduling
jobs, to ensure only one of a given job is scheduled at a time, or to update
other settings for the job.
For example after the below SQL transaction, the send_email
job will run only
once, with the payload '{"count": 2}'
:
BEGIN;
SELECT graphile_worker.add_job('send_email', '{"count": 1}', job_key := 'abc');
SELECT graphile_worker.add_job('send_email', '{"count": 2}', job_key := 'abc');
COMMIT;
In all cases if no match is found then a new job will be created; behavior when
an existing job with the same job key is found is controlled by the
job_key_mode
setting:
replace
(default) - overwrites the unlocked job with the new values. This is primarily useful for rescheduling, updating, or debouncing (delaying execution until there have been no events for at least a certain time period). Locked jobs will cause a new job to be scheduled instead.preserve_run_at
- overwrites the unlocked job with the new values, but preservesrun_at
. This is primarily useful for throttling (executing at most once over a given time period). Locked jobs will cause a new job to be scheduled instead.unsafe_dedupe
- if an existing job is found, even if it is locked or permanently failed, then it won't be updated. This is very dangerous as it means that the event that triggered thisadd_job
call may not result in any action. It is strongly advised you do not use this mode unless you are certain you know what you are doing.
The full job_key_mode
algorithm is roughly as follows:
- If no existing job with the same job key is found:
- a new job will be created with the new attributes.
- Otherwise, if
job_key_mode
isunsafe_dedupe
:- stop and return the existing job.
- Otherwise, if the existing job is locked:
- it will have its
key
cleared - it will have its attempts set to
max_attempts
to avoid it running again - a new job will be created with the new attributes.
- it will have its
- Otherwise, if the existing job has previously failed:
- it will have its
attempts
reset to 0 (as if it were newly scheduled) - it will have its
last_error
cleared - it will have all other attributes updated to their new values, including
run_at
(even whenjob_key_mode
ispreserve_run_at
).
- it will have its
- Otherwise, if
job_key_mode
ispreserve_run_at
:- the job will have all its attributes except for
run_at
updated to their new values.
- the job will have all its attributes except for
- Otherwise:
- the job will have all its attributes updated to their new values.
Pending jobs may also be removed using job_key
:
SELECT graphile_worker.remove_job('abc');
IMPORTANT: jobs that complete successfully are deleted, there is no
permanent job_key
log, i.e. remove_job
on a completed job_key
is a no-op
as no row exists.
IMPORTANT: the job_key
is treated as universally unique (whilst the job is
pending/failed), so you can update a job to have a completely different
task_identifier
or payload
. You must be careful to ensure that your
job_key
is sufficiently unique to prevent you accidentally replacing or
deleting unrelated jobs by mistake; one way to approach this is to incorporate
the task_identifier
into the job_key
.
IMPORTANT: If a job is updated using add_job
when it is currently locked
(i.e. running), a second job will be scheduled separately (unless
job_key_mode = 'unsafe_dedupe'
), meaning both will run.
IMPORTANT: calling remove_job
for a locked (i.e. running) job will not
actually remove it, but will prevent it from running again on failure.
When implementing an administrative UI you may need more control over the jobs.
For this we have added a few administrative functions that can be called in SQL
or through the JS API. The JS API is exposed via a WorkerUtils
instance; see
makeWorkerUtils
above.
IMPORTANT: if you choose to run UPDATE
or DELETE
commands against the
underlying tables, be sure to NOT manipulate jobs that are locked as this
could have unintended consequences. The following administrative functions will
automatically ensure that the jobs are not locked before applying any changes.
SQL: SELECT * FROM graphile_worker.complete_jobs(ARRAY[7, 99, 38674, ...])
;
JS: const deletedJobs = await workerUtils.completeJobs([7, 99, 38674, ...]);
Marks the specified jobs (by their ids) as if they were completed, assuming they are not locked. Note that completing a job deletes it. You may mark failed and permanently failed jobs as completed if you wish. The deleted jobs will be returned (note that this may be fewer jobs than you requested).
SQL:
SELECT * FROM graphile_worker.permanently_fail_jobs(ARRAY[7, 99, 38674, ...], 'Enter reason here')
;
JS:
const updatedJobs = await workerUtils.permanentlyFailJobs([7, 99, 38674, ...], 'Enter reason here');
Marks the specified jobs (by their ids) as failed permanently, assuming they are
not locked. This means setting their attempts
equal to their max_attempts
.
The updated jobs will be returned (note that this may be fewer jobs than you
requested).
SQL:
SELECT * FROM graphile_worker.reschedule_jobs(
ARRAY[7, 99, 38674, ...],
run_at := NOW() + interval '5 minutes',
priority := 5,
attempts := 5,
max_attempts := 25
);
JS:
const updatedJobs = await workerUtils.rescheduleJobs(
[7, 99, 38674, ...],
{
runAt: '2020-02-02T02:02:02Z',
priority: 5,
attempts: 5,
maxAttempts: 25
}
);
Updates the specified scheduling properties of the jobs (assuming they are not locked). All of the specified options are optional, omitted or null values will left unmodified.
This method can be used to postpone or advance job execution, or to schedule a previously failed or permanently failed job for execution. The updated jobs will be returned (note that this may be fewer jobs than you requested).
Stability: experimental; we may make breaking changes to this functionality in a minor release, so pay close attention to the changelog when upgrading.
Graphile Worker supports triggering recurring tasks according to a cron-like schedule. This is designed for recurring tasks such as sending a weekly email, running database maintenance tasks every day, performing data roll-ups hourly, downloading external data every 20 minutes, etc.
Graphile Worker's crontab support:
- guarantees (thanks to ACID-compliant transactions) that no duplicate task schedules will occur
- can backfill missed jobs if desired (e.g. if the Worker wasn't running when the job was due to be scheduled)
- schedules tasks using Graphile Worker's regular job queue, so you get all the regular features such as exponential back-off on failure.
- works reliably even if you're running multiple workers (see "Distributed crontab" below)
NOTE: It is not intended that you add recurring tasks for each of your individual application users, instead you should have relatively few recurring tasks, and those tasks can create additional jobs for the individual users (or process multiple users) if necessary.
Tasks are by default read from a crontab
file next to the tasks/
folder (but
this is configurable in library mode). Please note that our syntax is not 100%
compatible with cron's, and our task payload differs. We only handle timestamps
in UTC. The following diagram details the parts of a Graphile Worker crontab
schedule:
# ┌───────────── UTC minute (0 - 59)
# │ ┌───────────── UTC hour (0 - 23)
# │ │ ┌───────────── UTC day of the month (1 - 31)
# │ │ │ ┌───────────── UTC month (1 - 12)
# │ │ │ │ ┌───────────── UTC day of the week (0 - 6) (Sunday to Saturday)
# │ │ │ │ │ ┌───────────── task (identifier) to schedule
# │ │ │ │ │ │ ┌────────── optional scheduling options
# │ │ │ │ │ │ │ ┌────── optional payload to merge
# │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
# │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
# * * * * * task ?opts {payload}
Comment lines start with a #
.
For the first 5 fields we support an explicit numeric value, *
to represent
all valid values, */n
(where n
is a positive integer) to represent all valid
values divisible by n
, range syntax such as 1-5
, and any combination of
these separated by commas.
The task identifier should match the following regexp
/^[_a-zA-Z][_a-zA-Z0-9:_-]*$/
(namely it should start with an alphabetic
character and it should only contain alphanumeric characters, colon, underscore
and hyphen). It should be the name of one of your Graphile Worker tasks.
The opts
must always be prefixed with a ?
if provided and details
configuration for the task such as what should be done in the event that the
previous event was not scheduled (e.g. because the Worker wasn't running).
Options are specified using HTTP query string syntax (with &
separator).
Currently we support the following opts
:
id=UID
where UID is a unique alphanumeric case-sensitive identifier starting with a letter - specify an identifier for this crontab entry; by default this will use the task identifier, but if you want more than one schedule for the same task (e.g. with different payload, or different times) then you will need to supply a unique identifier explicitly.fill=t
wheret
is a "time phrase" (see below) - backfill any entries from the last time periodt
, for example if the worker was not running when they were due to be executed (by default, no backfilling).max=n
wheren
is a small positive integer - override themax_attempts
of the job.queue=name
wherename
is an alphanumeric queue name - add the job to a named queue so it executes serially.priority=n
wheren
is a relatively small integer - override the priority of the job.
NOTE: changing the identifier (e.g. via id
) can result in duplicate
executions, so we recommend that you explicitly set it and never change it.
NOTE: using fill
will not backfill new tasks, only tasks that were
previously known.
NOTE: the higher you set the fill
parameter, the longer the worker startup
time will be; when used you should set it to be slightly larger than the longest
period of downtime you expect for your worker.
Time phrases are comprised of a sequence of number-letter combinations, where
the number represents a quantity and the letter represents a time period, e.g.
5d
for five days
, or 3h
for three hours
; e.g. 4w3d2h1m
represents
4 weeks, 3 days, 2 hours and 1 minute
(i.e. a period of 44761 minutes). The
following time periods are supported:
s
- one second (1000 milliseconds)m
- one minute (60 seconds)h
- one hour (60 minutes)d
- one day (24 hours)w
- one week (7 days)
The payload
is a JSON5 object; it must start with a {
, must not contain
newlines or carriage returns (\n
or \r
), and must not contain trailing
whitespace. It will be merged into the default crontab payload properties.
Each crontab job will have a JSON object payload containing the key _cron
with
the value being an object with the following entries:
ts
- ISO8601 timestamp representing when this job was due to executebackfilled
- true if the task was "backfilled" (i.e. it wasn't scheduled on time), false otherwise
TL;DR: when running identical crontabs on multiple workers no special action is necessary - it Just Works ™️
When you run multiple workers with the same crontab files then the first worker
that attempts to queue a particular cron job will succeed and the other workers
will take no action - this is thanks to SQL ACID-compliant transactions and our
known_crontabs
lock table.
If your workers have different crontabs then you must be careful to ensure that
the cron items each have unique identifiers; the easiest way to do this is to
specify the identifiers yourself (see the id=
option above). Should you forget
to do this then for any overlapping timestamps for items that have the same
derived identifier one of the cron tasks will schedule but the others will not.
The following schedules the send_weekly_email
task at 4:30am (UTC) every
Monday:
30 4 * * 1 send_weekly_email
The following does similar, but also will backfill any tasks over the last two
days (2d
), sets max attempts to 10
and merges in {"onboarding": false}
into the task payload:
30 4 * * 1 send_weekly_email ?fill=2d&max=10 {onboarding:false}
The following triggers the rollup
task every 4 hours on the hour:
0 */4 * * * rollup
When you ask Graphile Worker to backfill jobs, it will do so for all jobs matching that specification that should have been scheduled over the backfill period. Other than the period itself, you cannot place limits on the backfilling (for example, you cannot say "backfill at most one job" or "only backfill if the next job isn't due within the next 3 hours"); this is because we've determined that there's many situations (back-off, overloaded worker, serially executed jobs, etc.) in which the result of this behaviour might result in outcomes that the user did not expect.
If you need these kinds of constraints on backfilled jobs, you should implement
them at runtime (rather than at scheduling time) in the task executor itself,
which could use the payload._cron.ts
property to determine whether execution
should continue or not.
You've three options for specifying cron tasks in library mode:
crontab
: a crontab string (like the contents of a crontab file)crontabFile
: the (string) path to a crontab file, from which to read the rulesparsedCronItems
: explicit parsed cron items (see below)
The Graphile Worker internal format for cron items lists all the matching minutes/hours/etc uniquely and in numerically ascending order. It also has other requirements and is to be treated as an opaque type, so you must not construct this value manually.
Instead, you may specify the parsedCronItems using one of the helper functions:
parseCrontab
: pass a crontab string and it will be converted into a list ofParsedCronItem
sparseCronItems
: pass a list ofCronItem
s and it will be converted into a list ofParsedCronItem
s
The CronItem
type is designed to be written by humans (and their scripts) and
has the following properties:
task
(required): the string identifier of the task that should be executed (same as the first argument toadd_job
)pattern
(required): a cron pattern (e.g.* * * * *
) describing when to run this taskoptions
: optional options influencing backfilling, etcbackfillPeriod
: how long (in milliseconds) to backfill (see above)maxAttempts
: the maximum number of attempts we'll give the jobqueueName
: if you want the job to run serially, you can add it to a named queuepriority
: optionally override the priority of the job
payload
: an optional payload object to merge into the generated payload for the jobidentifier
: an optional string to give this cron item a permanent identifier; if not given we will use thetask
. This is particularly useful if you want to schedule the same task multiple times, perhaps on different time patterns or with different payloads or other options (since every cron item must have a unique identifier).
When a job is created (or updated via job_key
), you may set its flags
to a
list of strings. When the worker is run in library mode, you may pass the
forbiddenFlags
option to indicate that jobs with any of the given flags should
not be executed.
await run({
// ...
forbiddenFlags: forbiddenFlags,
});
The forbiddenFlags
option can be:
- null
- an array of strings
- a function returning null or an array of strings
- an (async) function returning a promise that resolve to null or an array of strings
If forbiddenFlags
is a function, graphile-worker
will invoke it each time a
worker looks for a job to run, and will skip over any job that has any flag
returned by your function. You should ensure that forbiddenFlags
resolves
quickly; it's advised that you maintain a cache you update periodically (e.g.
once a second) rather than always calculating on the fly, or use pub/sub or a
similar technique to maintain the forbidden flags list.
For an example of how this can be used to achieve rate-limiting logic, see the graphile-worker-rate-limiter project and the discussion on issue #118.
We recommend that you limit queue_name
, task_identifier
and job_key
to
printable ASCII characters.
queue_name
can be at most 128 characters longtask_identifier
can be at most 128 characters longjob_key
can be at most 512 characters longschema
should be reasonable; max 32 characters is preferred. Defaults tographile_worker
(15 chars)
To delete the worker code and all the tasks from your database, just run this one SQL statement:
DROP SCHEMA graphile_worker CASCADE;
graphile-worker
is not intended to replace extremely high performance
dedicated job queues, it's intended to be a very easy way to get a reasonably
performant job queue up and running with Node.js and PostgreSQL. But this
doesn't mean it's a slouch by any means - it achieves an average latency from
triggering a job in one process to executing it in another of under 3ms, and a
12-core database server can process around 10,000 jobs per second.
graphile-worker
is horizontally scalable. Each instance has a customisable
worker pool, this pool defaults to size 1 (only one job at a time on this
worker) but depending on the nature of your tasks (i.e. assuming they're not
compute-heavy) you will likely want to set this higher to benefit from Node.js'
concurrency. If your tasks are compute heavy you may still wish to set it higher
and then using Node's child_process
(or Node v11's worker_threads
) to share
the compute load over multiple cores without significantly impacting the main
worker's runloop.
To test performance, you can run yarn perfTest
. This runs three tests:
- a startup/shutdown test to see how fast the worker can startup and exit if there's no jobs queued (this includes connecting to the database and ensuring the migrations are up to date)
- a load test - by default this will run 20,000
trivial jobs with a parallelism of 4 (i.e. 4
node processes) and a concurrency of 10 (i.e. 10 concurrent jobs running on
each node process), but you can configure this in
perfTest/run.js
. (These settings were optimised for a 12-core hyperthreading machine.) - a latency test - determining how long between issuing an
add_job
command and the task itself being executed.
The test was ran on a 12-core AMD Ryzen 3900 with an M.2 SSD, running both the workers and the database (and a tonne of Chrome tabs, electron apps, and what not). Jobs=20000, parallelism=4, concurrency=10.
Conclusion:
- Startup/shutdown: 66ms
- Jobs per second: 10,299
- Average latency: 2.62ms (min: 2.43ms, max: 11.90ms)
Timing startup/shutdown time...
... it took 66ms
Scheduling 20000 jobs
Timing 20000 job execution...
Found 999!
... it took 2008ms
Jobs per second: 10298.81
Testing latency...
[core] INFO: Worker connected and looking for jobs... (task names: 'latency')
Beginning latency test
Latencies - min: 2.43ms, max: 11.90ms, avg: 2.62ms
TODO: post perfTest results in a more reasonable configuration, e.g. using an RDS PostgreSQL server and a worker running on EC2.
We currently use the formula exp(least(10, attempt))
to determine the delays
between attempts (the job must fail before the next attempt is scheduled, so the
total time elapsed may be greater depending on how long the job runs for before
it fails). This seems to handle temporary issues well, after ~4 hours attempts
will be made every ~6 hours until the maximum number of attempts is achieved.
The specific delays can be seen below:
select
attempt,
exp(least(10, attempt)) * interval '1 second' as delay,
sum(exp(least(10, attempt)) * interval '1 second') over (order by attempt asc) total_delay
from generate_series(1, 24) as attempt;
attempt | delay | total_delay
---------+-----------------+-----------------
1 | 00:00:02.718282 | 00:00:02.718282
2 | 00:00:07.389056 | 00:00:10.107338
3 | 00:00:20.085537 | 00:00:30.192875
4 | 00:00:54.598150 | 00:01:24.791025
5 | 00:02:28.413159 | 00:03:53.204184
6 | 00:06:43.428793 | 00:10:36.632977
7 | 00:18:16.633158 | 00:28:53.266135
8 | 00:49:40.957987 | 01:18:34.224122
9 | 02:15:03.083928 | 03:33:37.308050
10 | 06:07:06.465795 | 09:40:43.773845
11 | 06:07:06.465795 | 15:47:50.239640
12 | 06:07:06.465795 | 21:54:56.705435
13 | 06:07:06.465795 | 28:02:03.171230
14 | 06:07:06.465795 | 34:09:09.637025
15 | 06:07:06.465795 | 40:16:16.102820
16 | 06:07:06.465795 | 46:23:22.568615
17 | 06:07:06.465795 | 52:30:29.034410
18 | 06:07:06.465795 | 58:37:35.500205
19 | 06:07:06.465795 | 64:44:41.966000
20 | 06:07:06.465795 | 70:51:48.431795
21 | 06:07:06.465795 | 76:58:54.897590
22 | 06:07:06.465795 | 83:06:01.363385
23 | 06:07:06.465795 | 89:13:07.829180
24 | 06:07:06.465795 | 95:20:14.294975
If a job throws an error, the job is failed and scheduled for retries with exponential back-off. We use async/await so assuming you write your task code well all errors should be cascaded down automatically.
If the worker is terminated (SIGTERM
, SIGINT
, etc), it
triggers a graceful shutdown -
i.e. it stops accepting new jobs, waits for the existing jobs to complete, and
then exits. If you need to restart your worker, you should do so using this
graceful process.
If the worker completely dies unexpectedly (e.g. process.exit()
, segfault,
SIGKILL
) then those jobs remain locked for 4 hours, after which point they're
available to be processed again automatically. You can free them up earlier than
this by clearing the locked_at
and locked_by
columns on the relevant tables.
If the worker schema has not yet been installed into your database, the following error may appear in your PostgreSQL server logs. This is completely harmless and should only appear once as the worker will create the schema for you.
ERROR: relation "graphile_worker.migrations" does not exist at character 16
STATEMENT: select id from "graphile_worker".migrations order by id desc limit 1;
GWBID
- Task identifier is too long (max length: 128).GWBQN
- Job queue name is too long (max length: 128).GWBJK
- Job key is too long (max length: 512).GWBMA
- Job maximum attempts must be at least 1.GWBKM
- Invalid job_key_mode value, expected 'replace', 'preserve_run_at' or 'unsafe_dedupe'.
yarn
yarn watch
In another terminal:
createdb graphile_worker_test
yarn test
docker pull graphile/worker
When using the Docker image you can pass any supported options to the command line or use the supported environment variables. For the current list of supported command line options you can run:
docker run --init --rm -it graphile/worker --help
Adding tasks to execute is done by mounting the tasks
directory as a volume
into the /worker
directory.
The following example has a tasks
directory in the current directory on the
Docker host. The PostgreSQL server is also running on the same host.
docker run \
--init \
--rm -it \
--network=host \
-v "$PWD/tasks":/worker/tasks \
graphile/worker \
-c "postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/postgres"
Start the dev db and app in the background
docker-compose up -d
Run the tests
docker-compose exec app yarn jest -i
Reset the test db
cat __tests__/reset-db.sql | docker-compose exec -T db psql -U postgres -v GRAPHILE_WORKER_SCHEMA=graphile_worker graphile_worker_test
Run the perf tests
docker-compose exec app node ./perfTest/run.js
monitor the container logs
docker-compose logs -f db
docker-compose logs -f app
New database migrations must be accompanied by an updated db dump. This can be
generated using the command yarn db:dump
, and requires a running postgres 11
server. Using docker:
docker run -e POSTGRES_HOST_AUTH_METHOD=trust -d -p 5432:5432 postgres:11
then run
PGUSER=postgres PGHOST=localhost yarn db:dump
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