Resque UI has been renamed to Resque Manager to better reflect what this engine really does. It manages your resque workers...through the UI.

ResqueManager

Resque Manager is a Rails engine port of the Sinatra app that is included in Chris Wanstrath's resque gem. We love the gem and love the UI, but just didn't want to add Sinatra to our stack and wanted to be able to manage the queues from the UI.

Installation

sudo gem install resque_manager

Or just add it to your Gemfile

gem 'resque_manager'

If you have your default routes disabled, which you should if you have a RESTful API, then you'll need to add this to the bottom of your routes.rb file.

# Resque Manager
mount ResqueManager::Engine => 'resque'

Once installed, you now have a resque controller, so you can get to the ui with: http://your_domain/resque.

Dependencies

This engine now requires rails 3.2.0 or greater.

This engine now requires redis 2.0 or greater for the expiration of keys to work correctly.

This engine requires the redis 3.0 or higher gem

This engine requires the resque 1.24 or higher gem.

This engine now requires the resque-status 0.4.0 or higher gem.

This engine now requires the resque-cleaner 0.2 or higher gem.

These gems will all be installed for you automatically when you install resque_manager.

Configuration

There are a few things you need to configure, and a few more you can if you like. The easiest is to add an initializer:

ResqueManager.configure do |config| # configure redis config.redis_config = YAML.load(IO.read(Rails.root.join("config", "redis.yml")))["#Rails.env_resque"] resque_manager_config = YAML.load(IO.read(Rails.root.join('config', 'resque_manager.yml')))[Rails.env] # optional - set when you want your status keys to expire. Once expired, jobs will no longer show on the status page. config.key_expiration = resque_manager_config['key_expiration'] # optional - Tell whether to run jobs inline or not. config.inline = resque_manager_config['inline'] # optional - If you have workers in multiple applications that you want to control through a single app's UI, this this # to a hash where the keys are your application names, and the values are the paths where the app is deployed. config.applications = resque_manager_config['applications'] # optional - This is only used by resque_controller in the dev and test env. to manage workers # By default resque_controller will use bundle exec rake. # Set this if you need to define a custom path or add environment options. # ex. resque_worker_rake: 'bundle exec bin/rake' config.resque_worker_rake = resque_manager_config['resque_worker_rake'] # optional - This is only used by resque_controller in deployed env. to manage workers # By default resque_controller will use bundle exec rake. # Set this if you need to define a custom path or add environment options. # ex. resque_worker_cap: 'bundle exec bin/cap' config.resque_worker_cap = resque_manager_config['resque_worker_cap'] end

See the sample .yml files in config.

Capistrano Configuration

Added the ability to stop, start, and restart workers from the workers page. This requires capistrano, and capistrano-ext to be installed on all deployed servers.

Manage Workers

The controller calls cap tasks to manage the workers. To include the recipes in your application, add this line to your deploy.rb file:

require 'resque_manager/recipes'

You will also need to define the :resque role in your deploy/.rb file with the servers that will run your workers.

role :resque, 'server1', 'server2'

You will also need to make sure you have your rake path set in the deploy.rb file.

set :rake, "/opt/ruby-enterprise-1.8.6-20090421/bin/rake"

...using your own path of course.

The cap tasks included are:

cap resque:work                         # start a resque worker.
cap resque:workers                      # start multiple resque workers.
cap resque:quit_worker                  # Gracefully kill a worker.  If the worker is working, it will finish before shutting down.
cap resque:quit_workers                 # Gracefully kill all workers on all servers.  If the worker is working, it will finish before shutting down.
cap resque:kill_worker_with_impunity    # Kill a rogue worker.  If the worker is working, it will not finish and the job will go to the Failed queue as a DirtyExit. arg: host=ip pid=pid
cap resque:kill_workera_with_impunity   # Kill all rogue workers on all servers.  If the worker is working, it will not finish and the job will go to the Failed queue as a DirtyExit.
cap resque:restart_workers              # Restart all workers on all servers

Times Fixed

The displaying of times is fixed. Some browsers displayed "Nan days ago" for all process times in the original Sinatra app. Fixed the stats/keys page. The page wasn't showing the keys' types, size or values.

Display Process Status

Added the ability to display process status in the worker "Processing" column on the overview, workers and working pages. To do this, set the overview_status to the status message in your perform method.

Class YourClass

  def perform(arg)
  ...your code here
  overview_status =  "Your status message"
  ...more code
  overview_status = "Another status message"
  ...more code
  end
end

This is really handy for those long running jobs to give you assurance the the job is really running or not.

Status Messages

Restart Failed Jobs

Added the Resque Cleaner gem to manage the failed queue. Have complete control over the failed queue now with the Cleaner tab by querying and restarting failed jobs.

See what all you can do on the github page: https://github.com/ono/resque-cleaner

Remove Items from the Queue

Added the ability to remove jobs, from a queue

Remove Items from the Queue

View Processed Job Info

Job Status

resque_manager now incorporates the resque-status gem and replaced the Processed tab with the Status tab. You can read about what you can do with resque-status here.

I've added some additional functionality to the resque-status gem. Namely, I've added a Resque::Plugins::ChainedStatus module. We process a lot of data files. Each part of the file's process is handled by a different worker. One worker may convert a file into a different format, then another will parse that file and peel each record off the file and put each individual record on a separate queue. A separate worker may then do any post processing when the file is complete.

I wanted all of that to show under a single status. So to do that, the very first worker class includes Resque::Plugins::Status, and everything after that includes from Resque::Plugins::ChainedStatus. When you call #create on the chained job from the preceding job, you just need to pass => uuid as one of the hash arguments.

class DataContributionFile
    include Resque::Plugins::Status

    @queue = :data_contribution

    def perform
        ...your code here
        tick "Retrieving file."
        ...more code
        tick "Peeling #{file_path}"
        SingleRecordLoader.create({'uuid' => uuid, 'row_data' => hash_of_row_data, 'rows_in_file' => total_rows})
    end
end

class SingleRecordLoader
    include Resque::Plugins::ChainedStatus
    @queue = :single_record_loader

    def completed(*messages)
        if counter(:processed) >= options[:rows_in_file].to_i
        super("#{options[:rows_in_file]} records processed: Started(#{status.time.to_s(:eastern_time_zone_long)}) Finished(#{Time.now.to_s(:eastern_time_zone_long)})")
        post_process
    end

    def perform
        ...your code here

        incr_counter(:processed)
        at((self.processed), options[:rows_in_file], "#{(self.processed)} of #{options[:rows_in_file]} completed.")
    end
end

So now, the data_contribution worker and the single_record_loader workers will update the same status on the status page. You can call #tick or #set_status to add messages along the way too. Note: These statuses are shown in the Messages column of the status page. When you set the overview_status, those messages appear in the Processing column of the Overview, Workers, and Working pages.

You will want to override the completed method so that it isn't called until the very end of the entire process.

I've also added two more methods, #incr_counter(:counter) and #count(:counter). We have dozens of single_record_loader workers processing records at a time. You encounter a race condition when they are all calling #at at the same time to update the :num attribute. So I created these two methods to atomically increment a dedicated counter. Just call #incr_counter and pass in a symbol for what you want to call the counter. You can create any number of different counters for different purposes. We keep track of different validation issues for each record. Use #counter and pass it the same symbol to read the integer back. The redis entries created by these methods all get cleaned up with a call to Resque::Plugins::Status::Hash.clear(uuid)

When you kill a job on the UI, it will kill all the workers in the chain.

Pause a Worker

The workers page now has a button for every worker to pause that worker.

Regular Workers

For workers that do not include Resque::Plugins::Status, this will pause the worker, but not the job. So if the worker is in the middle of a job when it is paused, it will finish it's process, but then will not pick anything else up off the queue.

You can manually pause the processing though using the worker object.

Class YourClass

  def perform(arg)
  ...your code here

  if worker && worker.paused?
      loop do
        break unless worker.paused?
        sleep 60
      end
    end
  end

  ...continue
end

Resque::Plugins::Status Workers

For workers that do include Resque::Plugins::Status or Resque::Plugins::ChainedStatus, this will pause the worker, and will automatically pause the job it is processing on the next call to #tick. The worker is also available to the class that includes Resque::Plugins::Status so you can manually check it's status as well.

Class YourClass

Resque::Plugins::Status

def perform
  ...your code here
  tick "Retrieving file."  #You're process will pause here automatically and the status on the Status tab will be set to paused if the worker is paused.

  #Alternatively, you have access to the worker, so you can pause the process yourself too.
  if worker && worker.paused?
      # There could be workers in a chained job still doing work.
      loop do
        pause! unless status.paused?
        break unless worker.paused?
        sleep 60
      end
      tick("Job resumed at #{Time.now}")
    end

  ...continue
end

This will only pause the work being processed by the worker that was paused.  If the job is paused by the call to #tick,
the job will sleep for 60 seconds before checking the status again.

You may have a series of classes that include Resque::Plugins::ChainedStatus and you want all processing in the chain stopped.

Class YourClass

Resque::Plugins::ChainedStatus

def perform
  ...your code here
  tick "Retrieving file."  #You're process will pause here automatically and the status on the Status tab will be set to paused if the worker is paused.

  #Alternatively, you have access to the worker, so you can pause the process yourself too.
  if (worker && worker.paused?) || status.paused?
      # There could be workers in a chained job still doing work.
      loop do
        pause! unless status.paused?
        break unless worker.paused?
        sleep 60
      end
      tick("Job resumed at #{Time.now}")
    end

  ...continue
end

By looking at the status.paused? method too, this process will stop, even if it's worker has not been paused.
But be aware, if this worker does other jobs, it will not process anything else and it's queue could get backed up.
This is where pausing one worker, could affect other, unrelated workers and jobs from getting backed up as well.

Throttle a Queue

A throttle method has been added. This is useful if you have a queue that tends to have very high volume, for example, the queue that process all the individual records of a file. You don't want to load that queue up with 1 million entries, possibly blowing out the memory of your Redis server.

CSV.foreach(self.file_path, :headers => true, :quote_char => '"') do |row|
    Resque.throttle(:single_record_loader, 10000, 30)
    SingleRecordLoader.create({'uuid' => uuid, 'row_data' => row.to_hash, 'rows_in_file' => total_rows})
end

Putting the throttle before enqueing the SingleRecordLoader will check the single_record_loader queue to make sure it has less than 10000 entries in it before proceeding. If is has 10000 or more entries, it will sleep for 30 seconds before checking again.

Multi-Threaded Workers

With Jruby, you have to specify the amount of memory to allocate when you start up the jvm. This has proven inefficient for us because different workers require different amounts of memory. We have standardized our jvm configuration for the workers, which means we have to start each worker with the maximum amount of memory needed by the most memory intensive worker. This means we are wasting a lot of resources for the workers that don't require as much memory.

Our answer was to make the workers multi-threaded. Now you can pass multiple workers and queues into the rake task, each worker will be started in separate threads within the same process.

NOTE: The convention to identify which queues are monitored by which worker is to prefix each worker with a '#' in the rake task argument.

rake QUEUE=#file_loader#file_loader,email resque:work

This will start up 2 workers, 1 will work the file_loader queue, and one will work the file_loader and email queue.

Be aware that when you stop a worker, it will stop all the workers within that process.

Workers in Multiple Applications

You now have the ability to manage workers in multiple applications from a single app's UI. In other words, the workers can be in a different app than the UI itself. I did this becase our app had become very large. I did not want to have to load up our huge monolithic app just to run a small worker. So by splitting the workers out into a separate application, I save server resources, but only our main app mounts resque_manager in the routes.rb file and manages all the workers.

To do this, you'll need to add resque_manager to the Gemfile of all apps containing workers as well as the app with the UI.

You will also need to tell the app that mounts resque_manager UI what applications contain workers and the paths where they are deployed to.

ResqueManager.applications = {application1: '/Users/ktyll/rails_sites/git/application1',
                              application2: '/Users/ktyll/rails_sites/git/application2'}

See the sample initializer above.

By setting the applications hash, a select box will display on the workers page so you can select the application where the worker is you want to start.

Multiple Apps

You do not need to include the application that has mounted the resque_manager UI in this hash. If you do not select an application from the drop down, it will assume the worker is in the same app.

After Deploy Hooks

The resque:restart_workers cap task can be added as an after deploy task to refresh your workers. Without this, your workers will continue to run your old code base after a deployment.

To make it work add the callbacks in your deploy.rb file:

after "deploy", "resque:restart_workers"
after "deploy:migrations", "resque:restart_workers"

Resque Scheduler

If resque-scheduler is installed, the Schedule and Delayed tabs will display.

Be sure you add the resque_scheduler gem before the resque_manager gem in your Gemfile:

gem 'resque-scheduler', :require => 'resque_scheduler'
gem 'resque_manager'

The Schedule tab functionality has been enhanced to be able to add jobs to the scheduler from the UI. This means you don't need to edit a static file that gets loaded on initialization. This also means you don't have to deploy that file every time you edit your schedule.

You can also create different schedules on different servers in your farm. You specify the IP address you want to schedule a job to run on, and it will add the job to the schedule on that server. You can also start and stop the scheduler on each server from the Schedule tab.

Resque Scheduler

The caveat to this is the Arguments value must be entered in the text box as JSON in order for the arguments to get parsed and stored in the schedule correctly. I find the easiest thing to do is to perform a Resque.encode on my parameters list in script/console. If we have a method that takes 3 parameters:

>> Resque.encode([['300'],1,{"start_date"=>"2010-02-01","end_date"=>"2010-02-28"}])
=> "[["300"],1,{"end_date":"2010-02-28","start_date":"2010-02-01"}]"

The first parameter is an array of strings, the second parameter is an integer, and the third parameter is a hash. Remembering that the arguments are stored in an array, all the parameters need to be in an array when there is more than one.

Any string arguments need to be quoted in the text box:

>> Resque.encode("Hello World")
=> ""Hello World""

Additional cap tasks added:

cap resque:quit_scheduler   # Gracefully kill the scheduler on a server.
cap resque:scheduler        # start a resque worker.
cap resque:scheduler_status # Determine if the scheduler is running or not

Delayed Tab

I have not tested or added any functionality to the Delayed tab. I get a RuntimeError: -ERR invalid bulk write count any time I try to do a Resque.enqueue_at. I've spent some time researching, and assume it's something with my version combinations. I believe it's a Redis issue and not a Resque-Scheduler issue. But since I'm not using it, I haven't put a great deal of time into resolving it.

Copyright (c) 2009 Chris Wanstrath Copyright (c) 2010 Ben VandenBos Copyright (c) 2010 Aaron Quint Copyright (c) 2011 Tatsuya Ono Copyright (c) 2013 Kevin Tyll, released under the MIT license

Thanks to Karl Baum for doing the original heavy lifting for converting this to a rails engine for rails 3.

Much thanks goes to Brian Ketelsen for the ideas for the improved functionality for the UI.