Skip to content

A fast background processing framework for Ruby and RabbitMQ

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

maeglindeveloper/sneakers

 
 

Repository files navigation

Sneakers

Build Status

      __
  ,--'  >  
  `=====   

A high-performance RabbitMQ background processing framework for Ruby.

Sneakers is being used in production for both I/O and CPU intensive workloads, and have achieved the goals of high-performance and 0-maintenance, as designed.

Visit the wiki for documentation and GitHub releases for release notes.

Build Status

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'sneakers'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install sneakers

Quick start

Set up a Gemfile

source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'sneakers'
gem 'json'
gem 'redis'

How do we add a worker? Firstly create a file and name it as boot.rb then create a worker named as Processor.

touch boot.rb

require 'sneakers'
require 'redis'
require 'json'

$redis = Redis.new

class Processor
  include Sneakers::Worker
  from_queue :logs


  def work(msg)
    err = JSON.parse(msg)
    if err["type"] == "error"
      $redis.incr "processor:#{err["error"]}"
    end

    ack!
  end
end

Let's test it out quickly from the command line:

$ sneakers work Processor --require boot.rb

We just told Sneakers to spawn a worker named Processor, but first --require a file that we dedicate to setting up environment, including workers and what-not.

If you go to your RabbitMQ admin now, you'll see a new queue named logs was created. Push a couple messages like below:

{
   "type": "error",
   "message": "HALP!",
   "error": "CODE001"
}

And this is the output you should see at your terminal.

2013-10-11T19:26:36Z p-4718 t-ovqgyb31o DEBUG: [worker-logs:1:213mmy][#<Thread:0x007fae6b05cc58>][logs][{:prefetch=>10, :durable=>true, :ack=>true, :heartbeat_interval=>2, :exchange=>"sneakers"}] Working off: log log
2013-10-11T19:26:36Z p-4718 t-ovqgyrxu4 INFO: log log
2013-10-11T19:26:40Z p-4719 t-ovqgyb364 DEBUG: [worker-logs:1:h23iit][#<Thread:0x007fae6b05cd98>][logs][{:prefetch=>10, :durable=>true, :ack=>true, :heartbeat_interval=>2, :exchange=>"sneakers"}] Working off: log log
2013-10-11T19:26:40Z p-4719 t-ovqgyrx8g INFO: log log

We'll count errors and error types with Redis.

$ redis-cli monitor
1381520329.888581 [0 127.0.0.1:49182] "incr" "processor:CODE001"

We're basically done with the ceremonies and all is left is to do some real work.

Looking at metrics

Let's use the logging_metrics provider just for the sake of fun of seeing the metrics as they happen.

# boot.rb
require 'sneakers'
require 'redis'
require 'json'
require 'sneakers/metrics/logging_metrics'
Sneakers.configure :metrics => Sneakers::Metrics::LoggingMetrics.new

# ... rest of code

Now push a message again and you'll see:

2013-10-11T19:44:37Z p-9219 t-oxh8owywg INFO: INC: work.Processor.started
2013-10-11T19:44:37Z p-9219 t-oxh8owywg INFO: TIME: work.Processor.time 0.00242
2013-10-11T19:44:37Z p-9219 t-oxh8owywg INFO: INC: work.Processor.handled.ack

Which increments started and handled.ack, and times the work unit.

From here, you can continue over to the Wiki

Docker

If you use Docker, there's some benefits to be had and you can use both docker and docker-compose with this project, in order to run tests, integration tests or a sample worker without setting up RabbitMQ or the environment needed locally on your development box.

  • To build a container run docker build .
  • To run non-integration tests within a docker container, run docker run --rm sneakers_sneakers:latest
  • To run full integration tests within a docker topology including RabbitMQ, Redis (for integration worker) run scripts/local_integration, which will use docker-compose to orchestrate the topology and the sneakers Docker image to run the tests
  • To run a sample worker within Docker, try the TitleScraper example by running script/local_worker. This will use docker-compose as well. It will also help you get a feeling for how to run Sneakers in a Docker based production environment
  • User Dockerfile.slim instead of Dockerfile for production docker builds. It generates a more compact image, while the "regular" Dockerfile generates a fatter image - yet faster to iterate when developing

Compatibility

  • Sneakers 1.1.x and up (using the new generation Bunny 2.x) - Ruby 2.x.x
  • Sneakers 1.x.x and down - Ruby 1.9.x, 2.x.x

Contributing

Fork, implement, add tests, pull request, get my everlasting thanks and a respectable place here :).

Thanks:

To all Sneakers Contributors - you make this happen, thanks!

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2015 Dotan Nahum @jondot. See LICENSE for further details.

About

A fast background processing framework for Ruby and RabbitMQ

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 99.5%
  • Other 0.5%