GoodJob is a multithreaded, Postgres-based, ActiveJob backend for Ruby on Rails.
Inspired by Delayed::Job and Que, GoodJob is designed for maximum compatibility with Ruby on Rails, ActiveJob, and Postgres to be simple and performant for most workloads.
- Designed for ActiveJob. Complete support for async, queues, delays, priorities, timeouts, and retries with near-zero configuration.
- Built for Rails. Fully adopts Ruby on Rails threading and code execution guidelines with Concurrent::Ruby.
- Backed by Postgres. Relies upon Postgres integrity, session-level Advisory Locks to provide run-once safety and stay within the limits of
schema.rb
, and LISTEN/NOTIFY to reduce queuing latency. - For most workloads. Targets full-stack teams, economy-minded solo developers, and applications that enqueue 1-million jobs/day and more.
For more of the story of GoodJob, read the introductory blog post.
📊 Comparison of GoodJob with other job queue backends (click to expand)
Queues, priority, retries | Database | Concurrency | Reliability/Integrity | Latency | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GoodJob | ✅ Yes | ✅ Postgres | ✅ Multithreaded | ✅ ACID, Advisory Locks | ✅ Postgres LISTEN/NOTIFY |
Que | ✅ Yes | 🔶️ Postgres, requires structure.sql |
✅ Multithreaded | ✅ ACID, Advisory Locks | ✅ Postgres LISTEN/NOTIFY |
Delayed Job | ✅ Yes | ✅ Postgres | 🔴 Single-threaded | ✅ ACID, record-based | 🔶 Polling |
Sidekiq | ✅ Yes | 🔴 Redis | ✅ Multithreaded | 🔴 Crashes lose jobs | ✅ Redis BRPOP |
Sidekiq Pro | ✅ Yes | 🔴 Redis | ✅ Multithreaded | ✅ Redis RPOPLPUSH | ✅ Redis RPOPLPUSH |
-
Add
good_job
to your application's Gemfile:gem 'good_job'
-
Install the gem:
$ bundle install
-
Run the GoodJob install generator. This will generate a database migration to create a table for GoodJob's job records:
$ bin/rails g good_job:install
Run the migration:
$ bin/rails db:migrate
Optional: If using Rails' multiple databases with the
migrations_paths
configuration option, use the--database
option:bin/rails g good_job:install --database animals bin/rails db:migrate:animals
-
Configure the ActiveJob adapter:
# config/application.rb config.active_job.queue_adapter = :good_job
-
Inside of your application, queue your job 🎉:
YourJob.perform_later
GoodJob supports all ActiveJob features:
YourJob.set(queue: :some_queue, wait: 5.minutes, priority: 10).perform_later
-
In development, GoodJob executes jobs immediately. In production, GoodJob provides different options:
-
By default, GoodJob separates job enqueuing from job execution so that jobs can be scaled independently of the web server. Use the GoodJob command-line tool to execute jobs:
$ bundle exec good_job start
Ideally the command-line tool should be run on a separate machine or container from the web process. For example, on Heroku:
web: rails server worker: bundle exec good_job start
The command-line tool supports a variety of options, see the reference below for command-line configuration.
-
GoodJob can also be configured to execute jobs within the web server process to save on resources. This is useful for low-workloads when economy is paramount.
$ GOOD_JOB_EXECUTION_MODE=async rails server
Additional configuration is likely necessary, see the reference below for configuration.
-
- Ruby on Rails: 5.2+
- Ruby: MRI 2.5+. JRuby 9.2.13+ (JRuby's
activerecord-jdbcpostgresql-adapter
gem does not support Postgres LISTEN/NOTIFY). - Postgres: 9.6+
There several top-level commands available through the good_job
command-line tool.
Configuration options are available with help
.
good_job start
executes queued jobs.
$ bundle exec good_job help start
Usage:
good_job start
Options:
[--max-threads=COUNT] # Maximum number of threads to use for working jobs. (env var: GOOD_JOB_MAX_THREADS, default: 5)
[--queues=QUEUE_LIST] # Queues to work from. (env var: GOOD_JOB_QUEUES, default: *)
[--poll-interval=SECONDS] # Interval between polls for available jobs in seconds (env var: GOOD_JOB_POLL_INTERVAL, default: 1)
[--max-cache=COUNT] # Maximum number of scheduled jobs to cache in memory (env var: GOOD_JOB_MAX_CACHE, default: 10000)
[--shutdown-timeout=SECONDS] # Number of seconds to wait for jobs to finish when shutting down before stopping the thread. (env var: GOOD_JOB_SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT, default: -1 (forever))
[--enable-cron] # Whether to run cron process (default: false)
[--daemonize] # Run as a background daemon (default: false)
[--pidfile=PIDFILE] # Path to write daemonized Process ID (env var: GOOD_JOB_PIDFILE, default: tmp/pids/good_job.pid)
Executes queued jobs.
All options can be configured with environment variables.
See option descriptions for the matching environment variable name.
== Configuring queues
Separate multiple queues with commas; exclude queues with a leading minus;
separate isolated execution pools with semicolons and threads with colons.
good_job cleanup_preserved_jobs
deletes preserved job records. See GoodJob.preserve_job_records
for when this command is useful.
$ bundle exec good_job help cleanup_preserved_jobs
Usage:
good_job cleanup_preserved_jobs
Options:
[--before-seconds-ago=SECONDS] # Delete records finished more than this many seconds ago (env var: GOOD_JOB_CLEANUP_PRESERVED_JOBS_BEFORE_SECONDS_AGO, default: 86400)
Deletes preserved job records.
By default, GoodJob deletes job records when the job is performed and this
command is not necessary.
However, when `GoodJob.preserve_job_records = true`, the jobs will be
preserved in the database. This is useful when wanting to analyze or
inspect job performance.
If you are preserving job records this way, use this command regularly
to delete old records and preserve space in your database.
To use GoodJob, you can set config.active_job.queue_adapter
to a :good_job
.
Additional configuration can be provided via config.good_job.OPTION = ...
for example:
# config/application.rb
config.active_job.queue_adapter = :good_job
# Configure options individually...
config.good_job.execution_mode = :async
config.good_job.max_threads = 5
config.good_job.poll_interval = 30 # seconds
config.good_job.shutdown_timeout = 25 # seconds
config.good_job.enable_cron = true
config.good_job.cron = { example: { cron: '0 * * * *', class: 'ExampleJob' } }
config.good_job.queues = '*'
# ...or all at once.
config.good_job = {
execution_mode: :async,
max_threads: 5,
poll_interval: 30,
shutdown_timeout: 25,
enable_cron: true,
cron: {
example: {
cron: '0 * * * *',
class: 'ExampleJob'
},
},
queues: '*',
}
Available configuration options are:
execution_mode
(symbol) specifies how and where jobs should be executed. You can also set this with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_EXECUTION_MODE
. It can be any one of::inline
executes jobs immediately in whatever process queued them (usually the web server process). This should only be used in test and development environments.:external
causes the adapter to enqueue jobs, but not execute them. When using this option (the default for production environments), you’ll need to use the command-line tool to actually execute your jobs.:async
(or:async_server
) executes jobs in separate threads within the Rails web server process (bundle exec rails server
). It can be more economical for small workloads because you don’t need a separate machine or environment for running your jobs, but if your web server is under heavy load or your jobs require a lot of resources, you should choose:external
instead. When not in the Rails web server, jobs will execute in:external
mode to ensure jobs are not executed withinrails console
,rails db:migrate
,rails assets:prepare
, etc.:async_all
executes jobs in separate threads in any Rails process.
max_threads
(integer) sets the maximum number of threads to use whenexecution_mode
is set to:async
. You can also set this with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_MAX_THREADS
.queues
(string) determines which queues to execute jobs from whenexecution_mode
is set to:async
. See the description ofgood_job start
for more details on the format of this string. You can also set this with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_QUEUES
.poll_interval
(integer) sets the number of seconds between polls for jobs whenexecution_mode
is set to:async
. You can also set this with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_POLL_INTERVAL
. A poll interval of-1
disables polling completely.max_cache
(integer) sets the maximum number of scheduled jobs that will be stored in memory to reduce execution latency when also polling for scheduled jobs. Caching 10,000 scheduled jobs uses approximately 20MB of memory. You can also set this with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_MAX_CACHE
.shutdown_timeout
(float) number of seconds to wait for jobs to finish when shutting down before stopping the thread. Defaults to forever:-1
. You can also set this with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT
.enable_cron
(boolean) whether to run cron process. Defaults tofalse
. You can also set this with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_ENABLE_CRON
.cron
(hash) cron configuration. Defaults to{}
. You can also set this as a JSON string with the environment variableGOOD_JOB_CRON
By default, GoodJob configures the following execution modes per environment:
# config/environments/development.rb
config.active_job.queue_adapter = :good_job
config.good_job.execution_mode = :async
# config/environments/test.rb
config.active_job.queue_adapter = :good_job
config.good_job.execution_mode = :inline
# config/environments/production.rb
config.active_job.queue_adapter = :good_job
config.good_job.execution_mode = :external
Good Job’s general behavior can also be configured via several attributes directly on the GoodJob
module:
GoodJob.active_record_parent_class
(string) The ActiveRecord parent class inherited by GoodJob's ActiveRecord modelGoodJob::Job
(defaults to"ActiveRecord::Base"
). Configure this when using multiple databases with ActiveRecord or when other custom configuration is necessary for the ActiveRecord model to connect to the Postgres database. The value must be a String to avoid premature initialization of ActiveRecord.GoodJob.logger
(Rails Logger) lets you set a custom logger for GoodJob. It should be an instance of a RailsLogger
.GoodJob.preserve_job_records
(boolean) keeps job records in your database even after jobs are completed. (Default:false
)GoodJob.retry_on_unhandled_error
(boolean) causes jobs to be re-queued and retried if they raise an instance ofStandardError
. Instances ofException
, like SIGINT, will always be retried, regardless of this attribute’s value. (Default:true
)GoodJob.on_thread_error
(proc, lambda, or callable) will be called when an Exception. It can be useful for logging errors to bug tracking services, like Sentry or Airbrake.
You’ll generally want to configure these in config/initializers/good_job.rb
, like so:
# config/initializers/good_job.rb
GoodJob.active_record_parent_class = "ApplicationRecord"
GoodJob.preserve_job_records = true
GoodJob.retry_on_unhandled_error = false
GoodJob.on_thread_error = -> (exception) { Raven.capture_exception(exception) }
🚧 GoodJob's dashboard is a work in progress. Please contribute ideas and code on Github.
GoodJob includes a Dashboard as a mountable Rails::Engine
.
-
Explicitly require the Engine code at the top of your
config/application.rb
file, immediately after Rails is required. This is necessary because the mountable engine is an optional feature of GoodJob.# config/application.rb require_relative 'boot' require 'rails/all' require 'good_job/engine' # <= Add this line # ...
-
Mount the engine in your
config/routes.rb
file. The following will mount it athttp://example.com/good_job
.# config/routes.rb # ... mount GoodJob::Engine => 'good_job'
Because jobs can potentially contain sensitive information, you should authorize access. For example, using Devise's
authenticate
helper, that might look like:# config/routes.rb # ... authenticate :user, ->(user) { user.admin? } do mount GoodJob::Engine => 'good_job' end
Another option is using basic auth like this:
# config/initializers/good_job.rb GoodJob::Engine.middleware.use(Rack::Auth::Basic) do |username, password| ActiveSupport::SecurityUtils.secure_compare(Rails.application.credentials.good_job_username, username) && ActiveSupport::SecurityUtils.secure_compare(Rails.application.credentials.good_job_password, password) end
GoodJob can extend ActiveJob to provide limits on concurrently running jobs, either at time of enqueue or at perform. Limiting concurrency can help prevent duplicate, double or unecessary jobs from being enqueued, or race conditions when performing, for example when interacting with 3rd-party APIs.
Note: Limiting concurrency at enqueue requires Rails 6.0+ because Rails 5.2 cannot halt ActiveJob callbacks.
class MyJob < ApplicationJob
include GoodJob::ActiveJobExtensions::Concurrency
good_job_control_concurrency_with(
# Maximum number of unfinished jobs to allow with the concurrency key
total_limit: 1,
# Or, if more control is needed:
# Maximum number of jobs with the concurrency key to be concurrently enqueued (excludes performing jobs)
enqueue_limit: 2,
# Maximum number of jobs with the concurrency key to be concurrently performed (excludes enqueued jobs)
perform_limit: 1,
# A unique key to be globally locked against.
# Can be String or Lambda/Proc that is invoked in the context of the job.
# Note: Arguments passed to #perform_later must be accessed through `arguments` method.
key: -> { "Unique-#{arguments.first}" } # MyJob.perform_later("Alice") => "Unique-Alice"
)
def perform(first_name)
# do work
end
end
When testing, the resulting concurrency key value can be inspected:
job = MyJob.perform_later("Alice")
job.good_job_concurrency_key #=> "Unique-Alice"
GoodJob can enqueue jobs on a recurring basis that can be used as a replacement for cron.
Cron-style jobs are run on every GoodJob process (e.g. CLI or async
execution mode) when config.good_job.enable_cron = true
; use GoodJob's ActiveJob concurrency extension to limit the number of jobs that are enqueued.
Cron-format is parsed by the fugit
gem, which has support for seconds-level resolution (e.g. * * * * * *
).
# config/environments/application.rb or a specific environment e.g. production.rb
# Enable cron in this process; e.g. only run on the first Heroku worker process
config.good_job.enable_cron = ENV['DYNO'] == 'worker.1' # or `true` or via $GOOD_JOB_ENABLE_CRON
# Configure cron with a hash that has a unique key for each recurring job
config.good_job.cron = {
# Every 15 minutes, enqueue `ExampleJob.set(priority: -10).perform_later(42, name: "Alice")`
frequent_task: { # each recurring job must have a unique key
cron: "*/15 * * * *", # cron-style scheduling format by fugit gem
class: "ExampleJob", # reference the Job class with a string
args: [42, { name: "Alice" }], # arguments to pass; can also be a proc e.g. `-> { { when: Time.now } }`
set: { priority: -10 }, # additional ActiveJob properties; can also be a lambda/proc e.g. `-> { { priority: [1,2].sample } }`
description: "Something helpful", # optional description that appears in Dashboard (coming soon!)
},
another_task: {
cron: "0 0,12 * * *",
class: "AnotherJob",
},
# etc.
}
GoodJob follows semantic versioning, though updates may be encouraged through deprecation warnings in minor versions.
Upgrading between minor versions (e.g. v1.4 to v1.5) should not introduce breaking changes, but can introduce new deprecation warnings and database migration notices.
To perform upgrades to the GoodJob database tables:
-
Generate new database migration files:
bin/rails g good_job:update
Optional: If using Rails' multiple databases with the
migrations_paths
configuration option, use the--database
option:$ bin/rails g good_job:update --database animals
-
Run the database migration locally
bin/rails db:migrate
-
Commit the migration files and resulting
db/schema.rb
changes. -
Deploy the code, run the migrations against the production database, and restart server/worker processes.
GoodJob v2 introduces a new Advisory Lock key format that is different than the v1 advisory lock key format; it's therefore necessary to perform a simple, but staged production upgrade. If you are already using >= v1.12+
no other changes are necessary.
- Upgrade your production environment to
v1.99.x
following the minor version upgrade process, including database migrations.v1.99
is a transitional release that is safely compatible with bothv1.x
andv2.0.0
because it uses bothv1
- andv2
-formatted advisory locks. - Address any deprecation warnings generated by
v1.99
. - Upgrade your production environment to
v1.99.x
tov2.0.x
again following the minor upgrade process.
Notable changes:
- Renames
:async_server
execution mode to:async
; renames prior:async
execution mode to:async_all
. - Sets default Development environment's execution mode to
:async
with disabled polling. - Excludes performing jobs from
enqueue_limit
's count inGoodJob::ActiveJobExtensions::Concurrency
. - Triggers
GoodJob.on_thread_error
for unhandled ActiveJob exceptions. - Renames
GoodJob.reperform_jobs_on_standard_error
accessor toGoodJob.retry_on_unhandled_error
. - Renames
GoodJob::Adapter.shutdown(wait:)
argument toGoodJob::Adapter.shutdown(timeout:)
. - Changes Advisory Lock key format from
good_jobs[ROW_ID]
togood_jobs-[ACTIVE_JOB_ID]
. - Expects presence of columns
good_jobs.active_job_id
,good_jobs.concurrency_key
,good_jobs.concurrency_key
, andgood_jobs.retried_good_job_id
.
GoodJob guarantees that a completely-performed job will run once and only once. GoodJob fully supports ActiveJob's built-in functionality for error handling, retries and timeouts.
ActiveJob provides tools for rescuing and retrying exceptions, including retry_on
, discard_on
, rescue_from
that will rescue exceptions before they get to GoodJob.
If errors do reach GoodJob, you can assign a callable to GoodJob.on_thread_error
to be notified. For example, to log errors to an exception monitoring service like Sentry (or Bugsnag, Airbrake, Honeybadger, etc.):
# config/initializers/good_job.rb
GoodJob.on_thread_error = -> (exception) { Raven.capture_exception(exception) }
By default, GoodJob will automatically and immediately retry a job when an exception is raised to GoodJob.
However, ActiveJob can be configured to retry an infinite number of times, with an exponential backoff. Using ActiveJob's retry_on
prevents exceptions from reaching GoodJob:
class ApplicationJob < ActiveJob::Base
retry_on StandardError, wait: :exponentially_longer, attempts: Float::INFINITY
# ...
end
When using retry_on
with a limited number of retries, the final exception will not be rescued and will raise to GoodJob. GoodJob can be configured to discard un-handled exceptions instead of retrying them:
# config/initializers/good_job.rb
GoodJob.retry_on_unhandled_error = false
Alternatively, pass a block to retry_on
to handle the final exception instead of raising it to GoodJob:
class ApplicationJob < ActiveJob::Base
retry_on StandardError, attempts: 5 do |_job, _exception|
# Log error, do nothing, etc.
end
# ...
end
When using retry_on
with an infinite number of retries, exceptions will never be raised to GoodJob, which means GoodJob.on_thread_error
will never be called. To report log or report exceptions to an exception monitoring service (e.g. Sentry, Bugsnag, Airbrake, Honeybadger, etc), create an explicit exception wrapper. For example:
class ApplicationJob < ActiveJob::Base
retry_on StandardError, wait: :exponentially_longer, attempts: Float::INFINITY
retry_on SpecialError, attempts: 5 do |_job, exception|
Raven.capture_exception(exception)
end
around_perform do |_job, block|
block.call
rescue StandardError => e
Raven.capture_exception(e)
raise
end
# ...
end
Any configuration in ApplicationJob
will have to be duplicated on ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob
(ActionMailer::DeliveryJob
in Rails 5.2 or earlier) because ActionMailer uses a custom class, ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob
, which inherits from ActiveJob::Base
, rather than your applications ApplicationJob
.
You can use an initializer to configure ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob
, for example:
# config/initializers/good_job.rb
ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob.retry_on StandardError, wait: :exponentially_longer, attempts: Float::INFINITY
# With Sentry (or Bugsnag, Airbrake, Honeybadger, etc.)
ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob.around_perform do |_job, block|
block.call
rescue StandardError => e
Raven.capture_exception(e)
raise
end
Note, that ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob
is a default since Rails 6.0. Be sure that your app is using that class, as it
might also be configured to use (deprecated now) ActionMailer::DeliveryJob
.
Job timeouts can be configured with an around_perform
:
class ApplicationJob < ActiveJob::Base
JobTimeoutError = Class.new(StandardError)
around_perform do |_job, block|
# Timeout jobs after 10 minutes
Timeout.timeout(10.minutes, JobTimeoutError) do
block.call
end
end
end
By default, GoodJob creates a single thread execution pool that will execute jobs from any queue. Depending on your application's workload, job types, and service level objectives, you may wish to optimize execution resources. For example, providing dedicated execution resources for transactional emails so they are not delayed by long-running batch jobs. Some options:
-
Multiple isolated execution pools within a single process:
For moderate workloads, multiple isolated thread execution pools offers a good balance between congestion management and economy.
A pool is configured with the following syntax
<participating_queues>:<thread_count>
:<participating_queues>
: eitherqueue1,queue2
(only those queues),*
(all) or-queue1,queue2
(all except those queues).<thread_count>
: a count overriding for this specific pool the globalmax-threads
.
Pool configurations are separated with a semicolon (;) in the
queues
configuration$ bundle exec good_job \ --queues="transactional_messages:2;batch_processing:1;-transactional_messages,batch_processing:2;*" \ --max-threads=5
This configuration will result in a single process with 4 isolated thread execution pools.
transactional_messages:2
: execute jobs enqueued ontransactional_messages
, with up to 2 threads.batch_processing:1
execute jobs enqueued onbatch_processing
, with a single thread.-transactional_messages,batch_processing
: execute jobs enqueued on any queue excludingtransactional_messages
orbatch_processing
, with up to 2 threads.*
: execute jobs on any queue, with up to 5 threads (as configured by--max-threads=5
).
Configuration can be injected by environment variables too:
$ GOOD_JOB_QUEUES="transactional_messages:2;batch_processing:1;-transactional_messages,batch_processing:2;*" \ GOOD_JOB_MAX_THREADS=5 \ bundle exec good_job
-
Multiple processes:
While multiple isolated thread execution pools offer a way to provide dedicated execution resources, those resources are bound to a single machine. To scale them independently, define several processes.
For example, this configuration on Heroku allows to customize the dyno count (instances), or type (CPU/RAM), per process type:
# Procfile # Separate process types worker: bundle exec good_job --max-threads=5 transactional_worker: bundle exec good_job --queues="transactional_messages" --max-threads=2 batch_worker: bundle exec good_job --queues="batch_processing" --max-threads=1
To optimize for CPU performance at the expense of greater memory and system resource usage, while keeping a single process type (and thus a single dyno), combine several processes and wait for them:
# Procfile # Combined multi-process combined_worker: bundle exec good_job --max-threads=5 & bundle exec good_job --queues="transactional_messages" --max-threads=2 & bundle exec good_job --queues="batch_processing" --max-threads=1 & wait -n
Keep in mind, queue operations and management is an advanced discipline. This stuff is complex, especially for heavy workloads and unique processing requirements. Good job 👍
Each GoodJob execution thread requires its own database connection that is automatically checked out from Rails’ connection pool. Allowing GoodJob to create more threads than available database connections can lead to timeouts and is not recommended. For example:
# config/database.yml
pool: <%= [ENV.fetch("RAILS_MAX_THREADS", 5).to_i, ENV.fetch("GOOD_JOB_MAX_THREADS", 4).to_i].max %>
GoodJob can execute jobs "async" in the same process as the web server (e.g. bin/rails s
). GoodJob's async execution mode offers benefits of economy by not requiring a separate job worker process, but with the tradeoff of increased complexity. Async mode can be configured in two ways:
-
Via Rails configuration:
# config/environments/production.rb config.active_job.queue_adapter = :good_job # To change the execution mode config.good_job.execution_mode = :async # Or with more configuration config.good_job = { execution_mode: :async, max_threads: 4, poll_interval: 30 }
-
Or, with environment variables:
$ GOOD_JOB_EXECUTION_MODE=async GOOD_JOB_MAX_THREADS=4 GOOD_JOB_POLL_INTERVAL=30 bin/rails server
Depending on your application configuration, you may need to take additional steps:
-
Ensure that you have enough database connections for both web and job execution threads:
# config/database.yml pool: <%= ENV.fetch("RAILS_MAX_THREADS", 5).to_i + ENV.fetch("GOOD_JOB_MAX_THREADS", 4).to_i %>
-
When running Puma with workers (
WEB_CONCURRENCY > 0
) or another process-forking web server, GoodJob's threadpool schedulers should be stopped before forking, restarted after fork, and cleanly shut down on exit. Stopping GoodJob's scheduler pre-fork is recommended to ensure that GoodJob does not continue executing jobs in the parent/controller process. For example, with Puma:# config/puma.rb before_fork do GoodJob.shutdown end on_worker_boot do GoodJob.restart end on_worker_shutdown do GoodJob.shutdown end MAIN_PID = Process.pid at_exit do GoodJob.shutdown if Process.pid == MAIN_PID end
GoodJob is compatible with Puma's
preload_app!
method.For Passenger:
if defined? PhusionPassenger PhusionPassenger.on_event :starting_worker_process do |forked| # If `forked` is true, we're in smart spawning mode. # https://www.phusionpassenger.com/docs/advanced_guides/in_depth/ruby/spawn_methods.html#smart-spawning-hooks if forked GoodJob.logger.info { 'Starting Passenger worker process.' } GoodJob.restart end end PhusionPassenger.on_event :stopping_worker_process do GoodJob.logger.info { 'Stopping Passenger worker process.' } GoodJob.shutdown end end # GoodJob also starts in the Passenger preloader process. This one does not # trigger the above events, thus we catch it with `Kernel#at_exit`. PRELOADER_PID = Process.pid at_exit do if Process.pid == PRELOADER_PID GoodJob.logger.info { 'Passenger AppPreloader shutting down.' } GoodJob.shutdown end end
If you are using cron-style jobs, you might also want to look at your Passenger configuration, especially at
passenger_pool_idle_time
andpassenger_min_instances
to make sure there's always at least once process running that can execute cron-style scheduled jobs. See also Passenger's optimization guide for more information.
If your application is already using an ActiveJob backend, you will need to install GoodJob to enqueue and perform newly created jobs and finish performing pre-existing jobs on the previous backend.
-
Enqueue newly created jobs on GoodJob either entirely by setting
ActiveJob::Base.queue_adapter = :good_job
or progressively via individual job classes:# jobs/specific_job.rb class SpecificJob < ApplicationJob self.queue_adapter = :good_job # ... end
-
Continue running executors for both backends. For example, on Heroku it's possible to run two processes within the same dyno:
# Procfile # ... worker: bundle exec que ./config/environment.rb & bundle exec good_job & wait -n
-
Once you are confident that no unperformed jobs remain in the previous ActiveJob backend, code and configuration for that backend can be completely removed.
GoodJob is fully instrumented with ActiveSupport::Notifications
.
By default, GoodJob will delete job records after they are run, regardless of whether they succeed or not (raising a kind of StandardError
), unless they are interrupted (raising a kind of Exception
).
To preserve job records for later inspection, set an initializer:
# config/initializers/good_job.rb
GoodJob.preserve_job_records = true
It is also necessary to delete these preserved jobs from the database after a certain time period:
-
For example, in a Rake task:
GoodJob.cleanup_preserved_jobs # Will keep 1 day of job records by default. GoodJob.cleanup_preserved_jobs(older_than: 7.days) # It also takes custom arguments.
-
For example, using the
good_job
command-line utility:$ bundle exec good_job cleanup_preserved_jobs --before-seconds-ago=86400
GoodJob is not compatible with PgBouncer in transaction mode, but is compatible with PgBouncer's connection mode. GoodJob uses connection-based advisory locks and LISTEN/NOTIFY, both of which require full database connections.
A workaround to this limitation is to make a direct database connection available to GoodJob. With Rails 6.0's support for multiple databases, a direct connection to the database can be configured:
-
Define a direct connection to your database that is not proxied through PgBouncer, for example:
# config/database.yml production: primary: url: postgres://pgbouncer_host/my_database primary_direct: url: postgres://database_host/my_database
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Create a new ActiveRecord base class that uses the direct database connection
# app/models/application_direct_record.rb class ApplicationDirectRecord < ActiveRecord::Base self.abstract_class = true connects_to database: :primary_direct end
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Configure GoodJob to use the newly created ActiveRecord base class:
# config/initializers/good_job.rb GoodJob.active_record_parent_class = "ApplicationDirectRecord"
Contributions are welcomed and appreciated 🙏
- Review the Prioritized Project Backlog.
- Open a new Issue or contribute to an existing Issue. Questions or suggestions are fantastic.
- Participate according to our Code of Conduct.
To run tests:
# Clone the repository locally
$ git clone git@github.com:bensheldon/good_job.git
# Set up the local environment
$ bin/setup
# Run the tests
$ bin/rspec
This gem uses Appraisal to run tests against multiple versions of Rails:
# Install Appraisal(s) gemfiles
$ bundle exec appraisal
# Run tests
$ bundle exec appraisal bin/rspec
For developing locally within another Ruby on Rails project:
# Within Ruby on Rails directory...
$ bundle config local.good_job /path/to/local/git/repository
# Confirm that the local copy is used
$ bundle install
# => Using good_job 0.1.0 from https://github.com/bensheldon/good_job.git (at /Users/You/Projects/good_job@dc57fb0)
Package maintainers can release this gem by running:
# Sign into rubygems
$ gem signin
# Add a .env file with the following:
# CHANGELOG_GITHUB_TOKEN= # Github Personal Access Token
# Update version number, changelog, and create git commit:
$ bundle exec rake release[minor] # major,minor,patch
# ..and follow subsequent directions.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.