neoq
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Queue-agnostic background job library for Go, with a pleasant API and powerful features.
Neoq
Queue-agnostic background job library for Go, with a pleasant API and powerful features.
Getting Started
See the Getting Started wiki to get started.
About
Neoq is a queue-agnostic background job library for Go, with a pleasant API and powerful features.
Queue-agnostic means that whether you're using an in-memory queue for developing and testing, or Postgres or Redis queue in production -- your job processing code doesn't change. Job handlers are agnostic to the queue providing jobs. It also means that you can mix queue types within a single application. If you have ephemeral or periodic tasks, you may want to process them in an in-memory queue, and use Postgres or Redis queues for jobs requiring queue durability.
Neoq aims to be simple, reliable, easy to integrate, and demand a minimal infrastructure footprint by providing queue backends that match your existing tech stack.
What it does
- Multiple Backends: In-memory, Postgres, Redis, or user-supplied custom backends.
- Retries: Jobs may be retried a configurable number of times with exponential backoff and jitter to prevent thundering herds
- Job uniqueness: jobs are fingerprinted based on their payload and status to prevent job duplication (multiple jobs with the same payload are not re-queued)
- Job Timeouts: Queue handlers can be configured with per-job timeouts with millisecond accuracy
- Periodic Jobs: Jobs can be scheduled periodically using standard cron syntax
- Future Jobs: Jobs can be scheduled in the future
- Concurrency: Concurrency is configurable for every queue
-
Job Deadlines: If a job doesn't complete before a specific
time.Time
, the job expires
Getting Started
Getting started is as simple as declaring queue handlers and adding jobs. You can create multiple neoq instances with different backends to meet your application's needs. E.g. an in-memory backend instance for ephemeral jobs and a Postgres backend instance for queue durability between application restarts.
Additional documentation can be found in the wiki: https://github.com/acaloiaro/neoq/wiki
Error handling in this section is excluded for simplicity.
Add queue handlers
Queue handlers listen for Jobs on queues. Jobs may consist of any payload that is JSON-serializable.
Queue Handlers are simple Go functions that accept a Context
parameter.
Example: Add a listener on the greetings
queue using the default in-memory backend
ctx := context.Background()
nq, _ := neoq.New(ctx, neoq.WithBackend(memory.Backend))
nq.Start(ctx, handler.New("greetings", func(ctx context.Context) (err error) {
j, _ := jobs.FromContext(ctx)
log.Println("got job id:", j.ID, "messsage:", j.Payload["message"])
return
}))
Enqueue jobs
Enqueuing adds jobs to the specified queue to be processed asynchronously.
Example: Add a "Hello World" job to the greetings
queue using the default in-memory backend.
ctx := context.Background()
nq, _ := neoq.New(ctx, neoq.WithBackend(memory.Backend))
nq.Enqueue(ctx, &jobs.Job{
Queue: "greetings",
Payload: map[string]any{
"message": "hello world",
},
})
Redis
Example: Process jobs on the "greetings" queue and add a job to it using the redis backend
ctx := context.Background()
nq, _ := neoq.New(ctx,
neoq.WithBackend(redis.Backend),
redis.WithAddr("localhost:6379"),
redis.WithPassword(""))
nq.Start(ctx, handler.New("greetings", func(ctx context.Context) (err error) {
j, _ := jobs.FromContext(ctx)
log.Println("got job id:", j.ID, "messsage:", j.Payload["message"])
return
}))
nq.Enqueue(ctx, &jobs.Job{
Queue: "greetings",
Payload: map[string]interface{}{
"message": "hello world",
},
})
Postgres
Example: Process jobs on the "greetings" queue and add a job to it using the postgres backend
ctx := context.Background()
nq, _ := neoq.New(ctx,
neoq.WithBackend(postgres.Backend),
postgres.WithConnectionString("postgres://postgres:[email protected]:5432/neoq"),
)
nq.Start(ctx, handler.New("greetings", func(ctx context.Context) (err error) {
j, _ := jobs.FromContext(ctx)
log.Println("got job id:", j.ID, "messsage:", j.Payload["message"])
return
}))
nq.Enqueue(ctx, &jobs.Job{
Queue: "greetings",
Payload: map[string]interface{}{
"message": "hello world",
},
})
Example Code
Additional example integration code can be found at https://github.com/acaloiaro/neoq/tree/main/examples
Developing
Neoq development is largely based on Nix and devenv
.
After installing nix, this repository contains everything else you will need to develop and run tests.
Automatic setup and teardown
See installing direnv if you want the dev environment setup to be automated.
direnv allow
allows direnv
to automatically setup all tooling and dependencies in a development shell upon entering
the neoq directory.
Manual setup and teardown
Neoq uses devenv
to manage development environments and services.
To enter the development shell, run nix develop --impure
. If devenv
is installed, this step is not necessary; simply
enter the neoq directory after having run direnv allow
.
Running services for tests
The neoq development shell gives you the devenv
executable.
To run postgres and redis for tests and development, run
devenv up
This runs Postgres and Redis in the foreground. In a separate terminal, run make test
to run the test suite.
Running tests
Before submitting pull requests, always run tests locally with after having run devenv up
.
Run make test
to run the test suite.
Status
This project is currently pre-1.0. Future releases may change the API.