zlacker

[return to "Do you really need Redis? How to get away with just PostgreSQL"]
1. _ugfj+z2[view] [source] 2021-06-12 07:29:54
>>hyzyla+(OP)
You really don't need anything fancy to implement a queue using SQL. You need a table with a primary id and a "status" field. An "expired" field can be used instead of the "status". We used the latter because it allows easy retries.

1. SELECT item_id WHERE expire = 0. If this is empty, no items are available.

2. UPDATE SET expire = some_future_time WHERE item_id = $selected_item_id AND expire = 0. Then check whether UPDATE affected any rows. If it did, item_id is yours. If not, loop. If the database has a sane optimizer it'll note at most one document needs locking as the primary id is given.

All this needs is a very weak property: document level atomic UPDATE which can return whether it changed anything. (How weak? MongoDB could do that in 2009.)

Source code at https://git.drupalcode.org/project/drupal/-/blob/9.2.x/core/... (We cooked this up for Drupal in 2009 but I am reasonably sure we didn't invent anything new.)

Of course, this is not the fastest job queue there is but it is quite often good enough.

◧◩
2. edwiny+fa[view] [source] 2021-06-12 08:52:50
>>_ugfj+z2
Great! So I learned this technique. But one thing that's not clear to me - how a "expired" datetime field can allow easy retries? Anyone give me an example? Thanks!
◧◩◪
3. chx+Sb[view] [source] 2021-06-12 09:14:17
>>edwiny+fa
Successful items are deleted from the queue before they expire. So an item with expired > current time needs to be retried because it failed processing. So, a cronjob resets these to expire 0 and the next worker can pick them up.
◧◩◪◨
4. ptx+5l[view] [source] 2021-06-12 10:59:23
>>chx+Sb
You mean expired < current time, right?
[go to top]