A scheduling add-on for Sidekiq
🎬 Introduction video about Sidekiq-Cron by Drifting Ruby
Sidekiq-Cron runs a thread alongside Sidekiq workers to schedule jobs at specified times (using cron notation * * * * *
parsed by Fugit).
Checks for new jobs to schedule every 30 seconds and doesn't schedule the same job multiple times when more than one Sidekiq worker is running.
Scheduling jobs are added only when at least one Sidekiq process is running, but it is safe to use Sidekiq-Cron in environments where multiple Sidekiq processes or nodes are running.
If you want to know how scheduling work, check out under the hood.
Works with ActiveJob (Rails 4.2+).
You don't need Sidekiq PRO, you can use this gem with plain Sidekiq.
Please be aware that Sidekiq-Cron < 1.0 was relying on rufus-scheduler < 3.5. Using those older versions with rufus-scheduler >= 3.5 ends up with jobs failing on creation. Sidekiq-Cron 1.0 includes a patch that switches from rufus-scheduler to rufus-scheduler's core dependency, fugit.
Before upgrading to a new version, please read our Changelog.
- Redis 2.8 or greater is required (Redis 3.0.3 or greater is recommended for large scale use)
- Sidekiq 4.2 or greater is required (for Sidekiq < 4 use version sidekiq-cron 0.3.1)
Install the gem:
$ gem install sidekiq-cron
Or add to your Gemfile
and run bundle install
:
gem "sidekiq-cron", "~> 1.3"
NOTE If you are not using Rails, you need to add require 'sidekiq-cron'
somewhere after require 'sidekiq'
.
Job properties:
{
'name' => 'name_of_job', # must be uniq!
'cron' => '1 * * * *', # execute at 1 minute of every hour, ex: 12:01, 13:01, 14:01, 15:01, ... (HH:MM)
'class' => 'MyClass',
# OPTIONAL
'queue' => 'name of queue',
'args' => '[Array or Hash] of arguments which will be passed to perform method',
'date_as_argument' => true, # add the time of execution as last argument of the perform method
'active_job' => true, # enqueue job through rails 4.2+ active job interface
'queue_name_prefix' => 'prefix', # rails 4.2+ active job queue with prefix
'queue_name_delimiter' => '.', # rails 4.2+ active job queue with custom delimiter
'description' => 'A sentence describing what work this job performs.'
'status' => 'disabled' # default: enabled
}
For testing your cron notation you can use crontab.guru.
Sidekiq-Cron uses Fugit to parse the cronline. So please, check Fugit documentation for further information about allowed formats.
If using Rails, this is evaluated against the timezone configured in Rails, otherwise the default is UTC.
If you want to have your jobs enqueued based on a different time zone you can specify a timezone in the cronline,
like this '0 22 * * 1-5 America/Chicago'
.
In addition to the standard 5-parameter cronline format, sidekiq-cron supports scheduling jobs with second-precision using a modified 6-parameter cronline format:
Seconds Minutes Hours Days Months DayOfWeek
For example: "*/30 * * * * *"
would schedule a job to run every 30 seconds.
Note that if you plan to schedule jobs with second precision you may need to override the default schedule poll interval so it is lower than the interval of your jobs:
Sidekiq.options[:average_scheduled_poll_interval] = 10
The default value at time of writing is 30 seconds. See under the hood for more details.
In this example, we are using HardWorker
which looks like:
class HardWorker
include Sidekiq::Worker
def perform(*args)
# do something
end
end
You can schedule ExampleJob
which looks like:
class ExampleJob < ActiveJob::Base
queue_as :default
def perform(*args)
# Do something
end
end
For Active jobs you can use symbolize_args: true
in Sidekiq::Cron::Job.create
or in Hash configuration,
which will ensure that arguments you are passing to it will be symbolized when passed back to perform
method in worker.
class HardWorker
include Sidekiq::Worker
def perform(name, count)
# do something
end
end
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.create(name: 'Hard worker - every 5min', cron: '*/5 * * * *', class: 'HardWorker') # execute at every 5 minutes, ex: 12:05, 12:10, 12:15...etc
# => true
create
method will return only true/false if job was saved or not.
job = Sidekiq::Cron::Job.new(name: 'Hard worker - every 5min', cron: '*/5 * * * *', class: 'HardWorker')
if job.valid?
job.save
else
puts job.errors
end
# or simple
unless job.save
puts job.errors # will return array of errors
end
Load more jobs from hash:
hash = {
'name_of_job' => {
'class' => 'MyClass',
'cron' => '1 * * * *',
'args' => '(OPTIONAL) [Array or Hash]'
},
'My super iber cool job' => {
'class' => 'SecondClass',
'cron' => '*/5 * * * *'
}
}
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.load_from_hash hash
Load more jobs from array:
array = [
{
'name' => 'name_of_job',
'class' => 'MyClass',
'cron' => '1 * * * *',
'args' => '(OPTIONAL) [Array or Hash]'
},
{
'name' => 'Cool Job for Second Class',
'class' => 'SecondClass',
'cron' => '*/5 * * * *'
}
]
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.load_from_array array
Bang-suffixed methods will remove jobs that are not present in the given hash/array, update jobs that have the same names, and create new ones when the names are previously unknown.
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.load_from_hash! hash
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.load_from_array! array
Or from YAML (same notation as Resque-scheduler):
# config/schedule.yml
my_first_job:
cron: "*/5 * * * *"
class: "HardWorker"
queue: hard_worker
second_job:
cron: "*/30 * * * *" # execute at every 30 minutes
class: "HardWorker"
queue: hard_worker_long
args:
hard: "stuff"
# config/initializers/sidekiq.rb
schedule_file = "config/schedule.yml"
if File.exist?(schedule_file) && Sidekiq.server?
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.load_from_hash YAML.load_file(schedule_file)
end
From version 3.x it is better not to use separate initializer of schedule instead add config.on(:startup)
to your Sidekiq configuration:
Sidekiq.configure_server do |config|
config.on(:startup) do
schedule_file = "config/schedule.yml"
if File.exist?(schedule_file)
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.load_from_hash YAML.load_file(schedule_file)
end
end
end
Or you can use for loading jobs from yml file sidekiq-cron-tasks which will add rake task bundle exec rake sidekiq_cron:load
to your rails application.
# return array of all jobs
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.all
# return one job by its unique name - case sensitive
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.find "Job Name"
# return one job by its unique name - you can use hash with 'name' key
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.find name: "Job Name"
# if job can't be found nil is returned
# destroy all jobs
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.destroy_all!
# destroy job by its name
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.destroy "Job Name"
# destroy found job
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.find('Job name').destroy
job = Sidekiq::Cron::Job.find('Job name')
# disable cron scheduling
job.disable!
# enable cron scheduling
job.enable!
# get status of job:
job.status
# => enabled/disabled
# enqueue job right now!
job.enque!
Just start Sidekiq workers by running:
$ sidekiq
If you are using Sidekiq's web UI and you would like to add cron jobs too to this web UI,
add require 'sidekiq/cron/web'
after require 'sidekiq/web'
.
With this, you will get:
If you're using a forking web server like Unicorn you may run into an issue where the Redis connection is used before the process forks, causing the following exception to occur:
Redis::InheritedError: Tried to use a connection from a child process without reconnecting. You need to reconnect to Redis after forking.
To avoid this, wrap your job creation in the call to Sidekiq.configure_server
:
Sidekiq.configure_server do |config|
config.on(:startup) do
schedule_file = "config/schedule.yml"
if File.exist?(schedule_file)
Sidekiq::Cron::Job.load_from_hash YAML.load_file(schedule_file)
end
end
end
NOTE This API is only available in Sidekiq 3.x.
When you start the Sidekiq process, it starts one thread with Sidekiq::Poller
instance, which perform the adding of scheduled jobs to queues, retries etc.
Sidekiq-Cron adds itself into this start procedure and starts another thread with Sidekiq::Cron::Poller
which checks all enabled Sidekiq cron jobs every 30 seconds, if they should be added to queue (their cronline matches time of check).
Sidekiq-Cron is checking jobs to be enqueued every 30s by default, you can change it by setting:
Sidekiq.options[:average_scheduled_poll_interval] = 10
Sidekiq-Cron is safe to use with multiple Sidekiq processes or nodes. It uses a Redis sorted set to determine that only the first process who asks can enqueue scheduled jobs into the queue.
Thanks to all contributors, you’re awesome and this wouldn’t be possible without you!
- Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet.
- Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it.
- Fork the project.
- Start a feature/bugfix branch.
- Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution.
- Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so we don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
You can execute the test suite by running:
$ bundle exec rake test
Copyright (c) 2013 Ondrej Bartas. See LICENSE for further details.