sqlxmq

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A job queue built on sqlx and PostgreSQL.

This library allows a CRUD application to run background jobs without complicating its deployment. The only runtime dependency is PostgreSQL, so this is ideal for applications already using a PostgreSQL database.

Although using a SQL database as a job queue means compromising on latency of delivered jobs, there are several show-stopping issues present in ordinary job queues which are avoided altogether.

With most other job queues, in-flight jobs are state that is not covered by normal database backups. Even if jobs are backed up, there is no way to restore both a database and a job queue to a consistent point-in-time without manually resolving conflicts.

By storing jobs in the database, existing backup procedures will store a perfectly consistent state of both in-flight jobs and persistent data. Additionally, jobs can be spawned and completed as part of other transactions, making it easy to write correct application code.

Leveraging the power of PostgreSQL, this job queue offers several features not present in other job queues.

Features

Getting started

Database schema

This crate expects certain database tables and stored procedures to exist. You can copy the migration files from this crate into your own migrations folder.

All database items created by this crate are prefixed with mq, so as not to conflict with your own schema.

Defining jobs

The first step is to define a function to be run on the job queue.

```rust use sqlxmq::{job, CurrentJob};

// Arguments to the #[job] attribute allow setting default job options.

[job(channel_name = "foo")]

async fn examplejob( // The first argument should always be the current job. mut currentjob: CurrentJob, // Additional arguments are optional, but can be used to access context // provided via JobRegistry::set_context. message: &'static str, ) -> sqlx::Result<()> { // Decode a JSON payload let who: Option = current_job.json()?;

// Do some work
println!("{}, {}!", message, who.as_deref().unwrap_or("world"));

// Mark the job as complete
current_job.complete().await?;

Ok(())

} ```

Listening for jobs

Next we need to create a job runner: this is what listens for new jobs and executes them.

```rust use sqlxmq::JobRegistry;

[tokio::main]

async fn main() -> Result<(), Box> { // You'll need to provide a Postgres connection pool. let pool = connecttodb().await?;

// Construct a job registry from our single job.
let mut registry = JobRegistry::new(&[example_job]);
// Here is where you can configure the registry
// registry.set_error_handler(...)

// And add context
registry.set_context("Hello");

let runner = registry
    // Create a job runner using the connection pool.
    .runner(&pool)
    // Here is where you can configure the job runner
    // Aim to keep 10-20 jobs running at a time.
    .set_concurrency(10, 20)
    // Start the job runner in the background.
    .run()
    .await?;

// The job runner will continue listening and running
// jobs until `runner` is dropped.

} ```

Spawning a job

The final step is to actually run a job.

rust example_job.builder() // This is where we can override job configuration .set_channel_name("bar") .set_json("John") .spawn(&pool) .await?;