Skip to main content

Postgres-native background job queue — Python SDK with async/sync workers, transactional enqueue, progress tracking, and web UI

Project description

Awa

Postgres-native background job queue for Rust and Python.

Awa (Māori: river) provides durable, transactional job enqueueing with typed handlers in both Rust and Python. All queue state lives in Postgres — no Redis, no RabbitMQ. The Rust runtime handles polling, heartbeating, crash recovery, and dispatch. Python workers run on that same runtime via PyO3, getting Rust-grade reliability with Python-native ergonomics.

AWA Web UI — Dashboard (dark mode)

Features

  • Postgres-only — one dependency you already have.
  • Transactional enqueue — insert jobs inside your business transaction. Commit = visible. Rollback = gone.
  • Cancel by unique key — cancel scheduled jobs by their insert-time components (kind + args) without storing job IDs.
  • Rust and Python workers — same queues, identical semantics, mixed deployments.
  • Crash recovery — heartbeat + hard deadline rescue. Stale jobs recovered automatically.
  • Web UI — dashboard, job inspector, queue management, cron controls.
  • Structured progress — handlers report percent, message, and checkpoint metadata; persisted across retries.
  • Periodic/cron jobs — leader-elected scheduler with timezone support and atomic enqueue.
  • Webhook callbacks — park jobs for external completion with optional CEL expression filtering.
  • Sequential callbackswait_for_callback() suspends a handler mid-execution; resume_external() wakes it with a payload. Enables multi-step orchestration within a single handler.
  • HTTP Worker — feature-gated Worker that dispatches jobs to serverless functions (Lambda, Cloud Run) via HTTP with HMAC-blake3 callback auth.
  • LISTEN/NOTIFY wakeup — sub-10ms pickup latency.
  • Production alerting metrics — queue depth, lag, and wait-duration histogram via OpenTelemetry.
  • OpenTelemetry — 20+ built-in metrics (counters, histograms, gauges) for Prometheus/Grafana.
  • Hot/cold storage — runnable work in a hot table, deferred work in a cold table.
  • Rate limiting — per-queue token bucket.
  • Weighted concurrency — global worker pool with per-queue guarantees.

Local benchmarks show ~5.6k jobs/sec sustained throughput (Rust workers, with OTel metrics enabled), ~3.1k jobs/sec (Python workers), and sub-10ms p50 pickup latency. Enqueue throughput reaches ~30k/s single-producer, ~100k/s multi-producer. See benchmarking notes for methodology and caveats.

Core concurrency invariants (no duplicate processing after rescue, stale completions rejected, shutdown drain ordering) are checked with TLA+ models covering single and multi-instance deployments.

Getting Started

# 1. Install
pip install awa-pg awa-cli     # Python
# or: cargo add awa             # Rust

# 2. Start Postgres and run migrations
awa --database-url $DATABASE_URL migrate

# 3. Write a worker and start processing (see examples below)

# 4. Monitor
awa --database-url $DATABASE_URL serve   # → http://127.0.0.1:3000

Language-specific guides:

Python Example

import awa
import asyncio
from dataclasses import dataclass

@dataclass
class SendEmail:
    to: str
    subject: str

async def main():
    client = awa.AsyncClient("postgres://localhost/mydb")
    await client.migrate()

    @client.task(SendEmail, queue="email")
    async def handle_email(job):
        print(f"Sending to {job.args.to}: {job.args.subject}")

    await client.insert(
        SendEmail(to="alice@example.com", subject="Welcome"),
        queue="email",
    )

    client.start([("email", 2)])
    await asyncio.sleep(1)
    await client.shutdown()

asyncio.run(main())

Progress tracking — checkpoint and resume on retry:

@client.task(BatchImport, queue="etl")
async def handle_import(job):
    last_id = (job.progress or {}).get("metadata", {}).get("last_id", 0)
    for item in fetch_items(after=last_id):
        process(item)
        job.set_progress(50, "halfway")
        job.update_metadata({"last_id": item.id})
    await job.flush_progress()

Transactional enqueue — atomic with your business logic:

async with await client.transaction() as tx:
    await tx.execute("INSERT INTO orders (id) VALUES ($1)", order_id)
    await tx.insert(SendEmail(to="alice@example.com", subject="Order confirmed"))

Sync API for Django/Flask — use awa.Client for sync frameworks; all methods are plain (no suffix):

client = awa.Client("postgres://localhost/mydb")
client.migrate()
job = client.insert(SendEmail(to="bob@example.com", subject="Hello"))

Sequential callbacks — suspend a handler, wait for an external system, then resume:

@client.task(ProcessPayment, queue="payments")
async def handle_payment(job):
    token = await job.register_callback(timeout_seconds=3600)
    send_to_payment_gateway(token.id, job.args.amount)
    result = await job.wait_for_callback(token)
    # result contains the payload from resume_external()
    await record_payment(job.args.order_id, result)

The external system calls await client.resume_external(callback_id, {"status": "paid"}) to wake the handler.

Periodic jobs — leader-elected cron scheduling with timezone support:

client.periodic(
    "daily_report", "0 9 * * *",
    GenerateReport, GenerateReport(format="pdf"),
    timezone="Pacific/Auckland",
)

6-field expressions with seconds precision are also supported: "*/15 * * * * *" fires every 15 seconds.

See examples/python/ for complete runnable scripts tested in CI.

Rust Example

use awa::{Client, QueueConfig, JobArgs, JobResult, JobError, JobContext, Worker};
use serde::{Serialize, Deserialize};

#[derive(Debug, Serialize, Deserialize, JobArgs)]
struct SendEmail {
    to: String,
    subject: String,
}

struct SendEmailWorker;

#[async_trait::async_trait]
impl Worker for SendEmailWorker {
    fn kind(&self) -> &'static str { "send_email" }

    async fn perform(&self, ctx: &JobContext) -> Result<JobResult, JobError> {
        let args: SendEmail = serde_json::from_value(ctx.job.args.clone())
            .map_err(|e| JobError::terminal(e.to_string()))?;
        send_email(&args.to, &args.subject).await
            .map_err(JobError::retryable)?;
        Ok(JobResult::Completed)
    }
}

// Insert a job (with uniqueness)
awa::insert_with(&pool, &SendEmail { to: "alice@example.com".into(), subject: "Welcome".into() },
    awa::InsertOpts { unique: Some(awa::UniqueOpts { by_args: true, ..Default::default() }), ..Default::default() },
).await?;

// Cancel by unique key (e.g., when the triggering condition is resolved)
awa::admin::cancel_by_unique_key(&pool, "send_email", None, Some(&serde_json::json!({"to": "alice@example.com", "subject": "Welcome"})), None).await?;

// Start workers with a typed lifecycle hook
let client = Client::builder(pool)
    .queue("default", QueueConfig::default())
    .register_worker(SendEmailWorker)
    .on_event::<SendEmail, _, _>(|event| async move {
        if let awa::JobEvent::Exhausted { args, error, .. } = event {
            tracing::error!(to = %args.to, error = %error, "email job exhausted retries");
        }
    })
    .build()?;
client.start().await?;

Installation

Python

pip install awa-pg       # SDK: insert, worker, admin, progress
pip install awa-cli      # CLI: migrations, queue admin, web UI

Rust

[dependencies]
awa = "0.5"

CLI

Available via pip (no Rust toolchain needed) or cargo:

pip install awa-cli
# or: cargo install awa-cli

awa --database-url $DATABASE_URL migrate
awa --database-url $DATABASE_URL serve
awa --database-url $DATABASE_URL queue stats
awa --database-url $DATABASE_URL job list --state failed

Architecture

 ┌────────────────┐  ┌────────────────┐
 │ Rust producer  │  │  Python (pip)  │
 └───────┬────────┘  └────────┬───────┘
         └────────┬───────────┘
                  ▼
       ┌────────────────────┐
       │     PostgreSQL     │
       │     jobs_hot       │
       │     scheduled_jobs │
       └─────────┬──────────┘
                 │
       ┌─────────┼─────────┐
       ▼         ▼         ▼
   ┌────────┐┌────────┐┌────────┐
   │ Worker ││ Worker ││ Worker │
   │ (Rust) ││ (PyO3) ││ (PyO3) │
   └────────┘└────────┘└────────┘

All coordination through Postgres. The Rust runtime owns polling, heartbeats, shutdown, and crash recovery for both languages. Mixed Rust and Python workers coexist on the same queues. See architecture overview for full details.

Workspace

Crate Purpose
awa Main crate — re-exports awa-model + awa-worker
awa-model Types, queries, migrations, admin ops
awa-macros #[derive(JobArgs)] proc macro
awa-worker Runtime: dispatch, heartbeat, maintenance
awa-ui Web UI (axum API + embedded React frontend)
awa-cli CLI binary (migrations, admin, serve)
awa-python PyO3 extension module (pip install awa-pg)
awa-testing Test helpers (TestClient)

Documentation

Doc Description
Rust getting started From cargo add to a job reaching completed
Python getting started From pip install to a job reaching completed
Deployment guide Docker, Kubernetes, pool sizing, graceful shutdown
Migration guide Fresh installs, upgrades, extracted SQL, rollback strategy
Configuration reference QueueConfig, ClientBuilder, Python start(), env vars
Security & Postgres roles Minimum-privilege roles, callback auth, operational guidance
Troubleshooting Stuck running jobs, leader delays, heartbeat timeouts
Architecture overview System design, data flow, state machine, crash recovery
Web UI design API endpoints, pages, component library
Benchmarking notes Methodology, headline numbers, how to run
Validation test plan Full test matrix with 100+ test cases
TLA+ correctness models Formal verification of core invariants
Grafana dashboards Pre-built Prometheus dashboards for monitoring
Architecture Decision Records (ADRs)

License

MIT OR Apache-2.0

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distributions

No source distribution files available for this release.See tutorial on generating distribution archives.

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (5.6 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12macOS 11.0+ ARM64

awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (5.8 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12macOS 10.12+ x86-64

awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl (6.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.8manylinux: glibc 2.17+ x86-64

awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl (6.3 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.8manylinux: glibc 2.17+ ARM64

File details

Details for the file awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 532492ceb18bb869ec655f2d330218d66824f5d249f3cfb6ad0eb1eccb471801
MD5 90a6ab9f218aaf1da1c4321308940e8a
BLAKE2b-256 1d0088515f92051add7a4c36efb92b016a2c053f4d089713a20febadfac0c8d6

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on hardbyte/awa

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 97c83ef9511e9e66c51350085885a4a0b9eaad763ba6521c4e517c389d6ccd60
MD5 e1de8d0ac0e42aa61fa548cd7e7c04e9
BLAKE2b-256 0b7ff1bd2aea372e05f1dd82aa4287d4cf1f7f3ed1191bb62f8c1464b2b78ac7

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on hardbyte/awa

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 57963830a409e9356a8c0aa5d6a82cc0171ee59c65c6f3f702aaf4d9b0a29d4b
MD5 965e381ab9c790beb9fd54392adbbb8f
BLAKE2b-256 33ce74d9e3775bd928affafded4c1e24331016f89177f8c9b48567b4fedb5402

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on hardbyte/awa

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f9752d3d324a39e530c27c065359be04e5602212e78f676980732d64ba87740d
MD5 40477db00b9d7efa1e02dc771ce9db6d
BLAKE2b-256 d2a3d153a7a02c2ca4d82f5886745cc8d027f7dcb3ab6b443c0239b2713ac719

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for awa_pg-0.5.1a1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on hardbyte/awa

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page