Sidetiq

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Recurring jobs for Sidekiq.

Table Of Contents

Overview

Sidetiq provides a simple API for defining recurring workers for Sidekiq.

  • Flexible DSL based on ice_cube

  • Sidetiq uses a locking mechanism (based on setnx and pexpire) internally so Sidetiq clocks can run in each Sidekiq process without interfering with each other (tested with sub-second polling of scheduled jobs by Sidekiq and Sidetiq clock rates above 100hz).

Detailed API documentation is available on rubydoc.info.

Dependencies

Installation

The best way to install Sidetiq is with RubyGems:

$ [sudo] gem install sidetiq

If you're installing from source, you can use Bundler to pick up all the gems (more info):

$ bundle install

Introduction

Defining recurring jobs is simple:

class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidetiq::Schedulable

  # Daily at midnight
  recurrence { daily }

  def perform
    # do stuff ...
  end
end

It also is possible to define multiple scheduling rules for a worker:

class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidetiq::Schedulable

  recurrence do
    # Every third year in March
    yearly(3).month_of_year(:march)

    # Every second year in February
    yearly(2).month_of_year(:february)
  end

  def perform
    # do stuff ...
  end
end

Or complex schedules:

class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidetiq::Schedulable

  # Every other month on the first monday and last tuesday at 12 o'clock.
  recurrence { monthly(2).day_of_week(1 => [1], 2 => [-1]).hour_of_day(12) }

  def perform
    # do stuff ...
  end
end

Additionally, the last and current occurrence time (as a Float) can be passed to the worker simply by adding arguments to #perform. Sidetiq will check the method arity before enqueuing the job:

class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidetiq::Schedulable

  recurrence { daily }

  # Receive last and current occurrence times.
  def perform(last_occurrence, current_occurrence)
    # do stuff ...
  end
end

To start Sidetiq, simply call Sidetiq::Clock.start! in a server specific configuration block:

Sidekiq.configure_server do |config|
  Sidetiq::Clock.start!
end

Additionally, Sidetiq includes a middleware that will check if the clock thread is still alive and restart it if necessary.

Backfills

In certain cases it is desirable that missed jobs will be enqueued retroactively, for example when a critical, hourly job isn't run due to server downtime. To solve this, #recurrence takes a backfill option. If missing job occurrences have been detected, Sidetiq will then enqueue the jobs automatically. It will also ensure that the timestamps passed to #perform are as expected:

class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidetiq::Schedulable

  recurrence backfill: true do
    hourly
  end

  def perform(last_occurrence, current_occurrence)
    # do stuff ...
  end
end

Configuration

Sidetiq.configure do |config|
  # Thread priority of the clock thread (default: Thread.main.priority as
  # defined when Sidetiq is loaded).
  config.priority = 2

  # Clock tick resolution in seconds (default: 1).
  config.resolution = 0.5

  # Clock locking key expiration in ms (default: 1000).
  config.lock_expire = 100

  # When `true` uses UTC instead of local times (default: false)
  config.utc = false
end

Logging

By default Sidetiq uses Sidekiq's logger. However, this is configuration:

Sidetiq.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)

The logger should implement Ruby's Logger API.

API

Sidetiq implements a simple API to support reflection of recurring jobs at runtime:

Sidetiq.schedules returns a Hash with the Sidekiq::Worker class as the key and the Sidetiq::Schedule object as the value:

Sidetiq.schedules
# => { MyWorker => #<Sidetiq::Schedule> }

Sidetiq.workers returns an Array of all workers currently tracked by Sidetiq (workers which include Sidetiq::Schedulable and a .recurrence call):

Sidetiq.workers
# => [MyWorker, AnotherWorker]

Sidetiq.scheduled returns an Array of currently scheduled Sidetiq jobs as Sidekiq::SortedEntry (Sidekiq::Job) objects. Optionally, it is possible to pass a block to which each job will be yielded:

Sidetiq.scheduled do |job|
  # do stuff ...
end

This list can further be filtered by passing the worker class to #scheduled, either as a String or the constant itself:

Sidetiq.scheduled(MyWorker) do |job|
  # do stuff ...
end

The same can be done for recurring jobs currently scheduled for retries (.retries wraps Sidekiq::RetrySet instead of Sidekiq::ScheduledSet):

Sidetiq.retries(MyWorker) do |job|
  # do stuff ...
end

Polling

By default Sidekiq uses a 15 second polling interval to check if scheduled jobs are due. If a recurring job has to run more often than that you should lower this value.

Sidekiq.options[:poll_interval] = 1

More information about this can be found in the Sidekiq Wiki.

Known Issues

Unfortunately, using ice_cube's interval methods is terribly slow on start-up (it tends to eat up 100% CPU for quite a while). This is due to it calculating every possible occurrence since the schedule's start time. The way around is to avoid using them.

For example, instead of defining a job that should run every 15 minutes like this:

class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidetiq::Schedulable

  recurrence { minutely(15) }
end

It is better to use the more explicit way:

class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidetiq::Schedulable

  recurrence { hourly.minute_of_hour(0, 15, 30, 45) }
end

Web Extension

Sidetiq includes an extension for Sidekiq's web interface. It will not be loaded by default, so it will have to be required manually:

require 'sidetiq/web'

SCREENSHOT

Screenshot

Contribute

If you'd like to contribute to Sidetiq, start by forking my repo on GitHub:

http://github.com/tobiassvn/sidetiq

To get all of the dependencies, install the gem first. The best way to get your changes merged back into core is as follows:

  1. Clone down your fork
  2. Create a thoughtfully named topic branch to contain your change
  3. Write some code
  4. Add tests and make sure everything still passes by running rake
  5. If you are adding new functionality, document it in the README
  6. Do not change the version number, I will do that on my end
  7. If necessary, rebase your commits into logical chunks, without errors
  8. Push the branch up to GitHub
  9. Send a pull request to the tobiassvn/sidetiq project.

License

Sidetiq is released under the 3-clause BSD. See LICENSE for further details.

Author

Tobias Svensson, @tobiassvn, http://github.com/tobiassvn