Code Monkey home page Code Monkey logo

mrq's Introduction

MRQ

Build Status MIT License

MRQ is a distributed task queue for python built on top of mongo, redis and gevent.

Full documentation is available on readthedocs

Why?

MRQ is an opinionated task queue. It aims to be simple and beautiful like RQ while having performances close to Celery

MRQ was first developed at Pricing Assistant and its initial feature set matches the needs of worker queues with heterogenous jobs (IO-bound & CPU-bound, lots of small tasks & a few large ones).

Main Features

  • Simple code: We originally switched from Celery to RQ because Celery's code was incredibly complex and obscure (Slides). MRQ should be as easy to understand as RQ and even easier to extend.
  • Great dashboard: Have visibility and control on everything: queued jobs, current jobs, worker status, ...
  • Per-job logs: Get the log output of each task separately in the dashboard
  • Gevent worker: IO-bound tasks can be done in parallel in the same UNIX process for maximum throughput
  • Supervisord integration: CPU-bound tasks can be split across several UNIX processes with a single command-line flag
  • Job management: You can retry, requeue, cancel jobs from the code or the dashboard.
  • Performance: Bulk job queueing, easy job profiling
  • Easy configuration: Every aspect of MRQ is configurable through command-line flags or a configuration file
  • Job routing: Like Celery, jobs can have default queues, timeout and ttl values.
  • Builtin scheduler: Schedule tasks by interval or by time of the day
  • Strategies: Sequential or parallel dequeue order, also a burst mode for one-time or periodic batch jobs.
  • Subqueues: Simple command-line pattern for dequeuing multiple sub queues, using auto discovery from worker side.
  • Thorough testing: Edge-cases like worker interrupts, Redis failures, ... are tested inside a Docker container.
  • Greenlet tracing: See how much time was spent in each greenlet to debug CPU-intensive jobs.
  • Integrated memory leak debugger: Track down jobs leaking memory and find the leaks with objgraph.

Dashboard Screenshots

Job view

Worker view

Get Started

This 5-minute tutorial will show you how to run your first jobs with MRQ.

Installation

  • Make sure you have installed the dependencies : Redis and MongoDB
  • Install MRQ with pip install mrq
  • Start a mongo server with mongod &
  • Start a redis server with redis-server &

Write your first task

Create a new directory and write a simple task in a file called tasks.py :

$ mkdir test-mrq && cd test-mrq
$ touch __init__.py
$ vim tasks.py
from mrq.task import Task
import urllib2


class Fetch(Task):

    def run(self, params):

        with urllib2.urlopen(params["url"]) as f:
          t = f.read()
          return len(t)

Run it synchronously

You can now run it from the command line using mrq-run:

$ mrq-run tasks.Fetch url http://www.google.com

2014-12-18 15:44:37.869029 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: Connecting to MongoDB at 127.0.0.1:27017/mrq...
2014-12-18 15:44:37.880115 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: ... connected.
2014-12-18 15:44:37.880305 [DEBUG] Starting tasks.Fetch({'url': 'http://www.google.com'})
2014-12-18 15:44:38.158572 [DEBUG] Job None success: 0.278229s total
17655

Run it asynchronously

Let's schedule the same task 3 times with different parameters:

$ mrq-run --queue fetches tasks.Fetch url http://www.google.com &&
  mrq-run --queue fetches tasks.Fetch url http://www.yahoo.com &&
  mrq-run --queue fetches tasks.Fetch url http://www.wordpress.com

2014-12-18 15:49:05.688627 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: Connecting to MongoDB at 127.0.0.1:27017/mrq...
2014-12-18 15:49:05.705400 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: ... connected.
2014-12-18 15:49:05.729364 [INFO] redis: Connecting to Redis at 127.0.0.1...
5492f771520d1887bfdf4b0f
2014-12-18 15:49:05.957912 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: Connecting to MongoDB at 127.0.0.1:27017/mrq...
2014-12-18 15:49:05.967419 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: ... connected.
2014-12-18 15:49:05.983925 [INFO] redis: Connecting to Redis at 127.0.0.1...
5492f771520d1887c2d7d2db
2014-12-18 15:49:06.182351 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: Connecting to MongoDB at 127.0.0.1:27017/mrq...
2014-12-18 15:49:06.193314 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: ... connected.
2014-12-18 15:49:06.209336 [INFO] redis: Connecting to Redis at 127.0.0.1...
5492f772520d1887c5b32881

You can see that instead of executing the tasks and returning their results right away, mrq-run has added them to the queue named fetches and printed their IDs.

Now start MRQ's dasbhoard with mrq-dashboard & and go check your newly created queue and jobs on localhost:5555

They are ready to be dequeued by a worker. Start one with mrq-worker and follow it on the dashboard as it executes the queued jobs in parallel.

$ mrq-worker fetches

2014-12-18 15:52:57.362209 [INFO] Starting Gevent pool with 10 worker greenlets (+ report, logs, adminhttp)
2014-12-18 15:52:57.388033 [INFO] redis: Connecting to Redis at 127.0.0.1...
2014-12-18 15:52:57.389488 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: Connecting to MongoDB at 127.0.0.1:27017/mrq...
2014-12-18 15:52:57.390996 [DEBUG] mongodb_jobs: ... connected.
2014-12-18 15:52:57.391336 [DEBUG] mongodb_logs: Connecting to MongoDB at 127.0.0.1:27017/mrq...
2014-12-18 15:52:57.392430 [DEBUG] mongodb_logs: ... connected.
2014-12-18 15:52:57.523329 [INFO] Fetching 1 jobs from ['fetches']
2014-12-18 15:52:57.567311 [DEBUG] Starting tasks.Fetch({u'url': u'http://www.google.com'})
2014-12-18 15:52:58.670492 [DEBUG] Job 5492f771520d1887bfdf4b0f success: 1.135268s total
2014-12-18 15:52:57.523329 [INFO] Fetching 1 jobs from ['fetches']
2014-12-18 15:52:57.567747 [DEBUG] Starting tasks.Fetch({u'url': u'http://www.yahoo.com'})
2014-12-18 15:53:01.897873 [DEBUG] Job 5492f771520d1887c2d7d2db success: 4.361895s total
2014-12-18 15:52:57.523329 [INFO] Fetching 1 jobs from ['fetches']
2014-12-18 15:52:57.568080 [DEBUG] Starting tasks.Fetch({u'url': u'http://www.wordpress.com'})
2014-12-18 15:53:00.685727 [DEBUG] Job 5492f772520d1887c5b32881 success: 3.149119s total
2014-12-18 15:52:57.523329 [INFO] Fetching 1 jobs from ['fetches']
2014-12-18 15:52:57.523329 [INFO] Fetching 1 jobs from ['fetches']

You can interrupt the worker with Ctrl-C once it is finished.

Going further

This was a preview on the very basic features of MRQ. What makes it actually useful is that:

  • You can run multiple workers in parallel. Each worker can also run multiple greenlets in parallel.
  • Workers can dequeue from multiple queues
  • You can queue jobs from your Python code to avoid using mrq-run from the command-line.

These features will be demonstrated in a future example of a simple web crawler.

More

Full documentation is available on readthedocs

mrq's People

Contributors

sylvinus avatar adipasquale avatar ggueret avatar antoine-collet avatar thomas-b avatar pauleuh avatar ialwaysbecoding avatar tume avatar mehdigmira avatar ecebuzz avatar chenull avatar benjisg avatar florianludwig avatar msabramo avatar

Watchers

Michel Velázquez Mariño avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.