Is there any library for the queueing mechanism?

What’s used by the most - Cron? But a task or rather script executed by Cron won’t access to the context of an application. Meaning, a task will have be an independent unit. Whereas I want is a library to use inside a project such that it’ll have access to everything.

Anything similar to Sidekiq exist in Rust?

    • @SuddenlyBlowGreen
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      1 year ago
      let mut scheduler = Scheduler::with_tz(chrono::Utc);
      
      scheduler.every(10.minutes()).plus(30.seconds()).run(|| println!("Periodic task"));
      
      scheduler.every(1.day()).at("3:20 pm").run(|| println!("Daily task")); 
      
      scheduler.every(Tuesday).at("14:20:17").and_every(Thursday).at("15:00").run(|| println!("Biweekly task")); 
      

      Damn, that a really ingenious and intuitive use of the builder pattern.

      Kudos to the devs!

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    For my project I just run them. I’m using async so it is just spawning a task in the background, but you can do the same with threads. Don’t underestimate the number of threads that you can run on a modern computer.

    If you want some sort of throttling you can stuff tasks into a queue and just run N background threads pulling them off an processing them.

    If you need durability then you start to have more trouble. This is where I would start looking at a library. IDK if there are any libraries that handle logging, retries and similar, but if not you can probably get the basics down pretty easily.

    • @nothingnessOP
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      1 year ago

      For my project I just run them.

      How would you “just run” a task every 30 minutes? Every 5 hours? Once a day?

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago
        std::thread::spawn(|| {
            loop {
                std::thread::sleep(std::time::Duration::from_secs(30*60));
                do_job();
            }
        });
        

        Works pretty well. Maybe add a bit of code to crash the whole process on panic or some other logging. Wastes a few KiB of memory per loop but probably not a major issue. Doing this with async will waste only the tiniest amount of memory.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            It depends. Sometimes you can just put an exit call at the end of main to kill the thread. If you want to attempt graceful shutdown then usually I just use a boolean shutdown flag. Then the loop becomes while !shutdown.get() {

        • @nothingnessOP
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          1 year ago

          what if one of the calls crashes? how would you re-run it?

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Best option is probably to add a wrapper around the thread that re-spawns it. But you can also just catch panics in the loop.

            • @nothingnessOP
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              1 year ago

              How would you re-run it multiple times then? An internal should be progressively greater. How would you terminate it if it continues to produce an exception?

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    I looked into this last week for recurring tasks in an actix-web project and ended up picking fang, but haven’t really battle tested it… But seems to do what I need. I’m using cron tasks with Postgres as the backend to run a recurring task every minute.

  • vaalla
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    11 year ago

    Can you use async in your project?

    If Yes, you can spawn a task that will listen on a channel. If you need to run them in parallel probably you can find a mpmc channel.

    If you need for them to run at a specific time, spawn task ,tokio::time::sleep , run job, loop.

    Don’t know any crate just for this.

    • @nothingnessOP
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      01 year ago

      If you need for them to run at a specific time, spawn task ,tokio::time::sleep , run job, loop.

      How would you do it every 30 minutes? Every 5 hours? Once a day?