Fast and simple queue workers
Project description
Eventide
A fast, simple, and extensible queue worker framework for Python.
Overview
Eventide is a modern, lightweight framework for building robust queue-based worker systems in Python. It provides a clean, modular, and provider-agnostic architecture for consuming and processing messages from a variety of queue backends (SQS, Cloudflare, and more to come).
Key Features:
- Multiprocess architecture for high throughput and resilience
- Provider-agnostic queue abstraction with built-in and custom queue support
- Declarative, decorator-based message handler registration
- Robust retry/backoff logic
- Graceful startup and shutdown with signal handling
- Type-safe configuration using Pydantic models
- Extensible handler matching and routing
Architecture
Eventide orchestrates the lifecycle of your queue worker system:
- Main Process: Manages configuration, queue instantiation, worker process lifecycle, and graceful shutdown.
- Queue: Continuously pull messages from external queues (SQS, Cloudflare, etc.) into internal buffers.
- Worker Processes: Each worker consumes messages from the buffer and routes them to user-defined handlers that run within the Worker's process.
- Handlers: User functions decorated with
@app.handlerthat process messages matching specific patterns.
All configuration is done via Pydantic models, ensuring type safety and validation.
Installation
pip install eventide
# With SQS support:
pip install eventide[sqs]
# With Cloudflare Queues support:
pip install eventide[cloudflare]
Quick Start
from eventide import Eventide, EventideConfig, Message, SQSQueueConfig
# Instantiate the eventide app
app = Eventide(
config=EventideConfig(
queue=SQSQueueConfig(
region="us-east-1",
url="https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/123456789012/my-queue",
),
),
)
# Define a handler
@app.handler("body.type == 'greeting'")
def handle_greeting(message: Message) -> None:
print(f"Received greeting: {message.body.get('content')}")
Configuration
All configuration is via Pydantic models:
EventideConfig: Main config (queue, concurrency, handler paths, timeouts, retry policies, etc)SQSQueueConfig,CloudflareQueueConfig, ...: Provider-specific queue configs
Example:
from eventide import EventideConfig, SQSQueueConfig
config = EventideConfig(
queue=SQSQueueConfig(
region="us-east-1",
url="https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/123456789012/my-queue",
),
concurrency=4,
timeout=30.0, # Handler timeout (seconds)
retry_for=[ValueError], # Retry for specific exceptions
retry_limit=5, # Max retries per message
retry_min_backoff=1.0, # Min backoff in seconds
retry_max_backoff=60.0, # Max backoff in seconds
handler_paths=["myapp/handlers"], # Auto-discover handler modules
)
Message Handlers
Handlers are registered using the @app.handler decorator.
You can match on message attributes, set retry/backoff policies, and more.
from eventide import Eventide, EventideConfig
app = Eventide(EventideConfig(...))
@app.handler("body.type == 'email'", retry_limit=3, retry_for=[ValueError])
def process_email(message):
print(f"Processing email: {message.body}")
Advanced matching (multiple matchers, logical operators):
from eventide import Eventide, EventideConfig
app = Eventide(EventideConfig(...))
@app.handler(
"body.type == 'notification'",
"body.priority == 'high'",
operator=all, # or any
)
def process_notification(_message):
...
Advanced Usage
- Graceful Shutdown: Eventide handles SIGINT/SIGTERM for clean shutdown.
- Retries & Backoff: Handlers can specify retry policies and backoff intervals.
- Extensible Matching: Handler matcher logic can be customized for advanced routing.
SQS Queue
from eventide import SQSQueueConfig
sqs_config = SQSQueueConfig(
region="us-east-1",
url="https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/123456789012/my-queue",
visibility_timeout=30, # seconds
max_number_of_messages=10, # max messages to fetch
buffer_size=100, # internal buffer size
)
Cloudflare Queue
from eventide import CloudflareQueueConfig
cf_config = CloudflareQueueConfig(
account_id="my-account-id",
queue_id="my-queue-id",
buffer_size=100, # internal buffer size
batch_size=10, # max messages to fetch
visibility_timeout_ms=30000, # milliseconds
)
Message Routing with JMESPath
Eventide uses JMESPath expressions to route messages to the appropriate handlers. This provides a powerful and flexible way to match messages based on their content.
What is JMESPath?
JMESPath is a query language for JSON that allows you to extract and transform elements from a JSON document. In Eventide, it's used to match messages to handlers based on their content.
Examples of JMESPath Expressions
# Match messages with a specific type
"body.type == 'email'"
# Match messages with a specific attribute value
"body.customer_id == '12345'"
# Match messages with a specific attribute in an array
"contains(body.tags, 'urgent')"
# Match messages with a numeric comparison
"body.priority > 5"
# Match messages with a specific structure
"body.user.verified == true"
# Complex condition with multiple operators
"body.type == 'order' && body.total > 100"
Combining Multiple Expressions
You can combine multiple JMESPath expressions with logical operators:
from eventide import Eventide, EventideConfig
app = Eventide(EventideConfig(...))
# Match messages that satisfy ALL conditions
@app.handler(
"body.type == 'notification'",
"body.priority == 'high'",
operator=all
)
def priority_notifications_handler(_message):
pass
# Match messages that satisfy ANY condition
@app.handler(
"body.type == 'email'",
"body.type == 'sms'",
operator=any
)
def email_or_sms_handler(_message):
pass
This approach gives you fine-grained control over which messages are routed to which handlers, allowing for clean separation of concerns in your application.
Practical Example: Order Processing System
Here's a complete example of using Eventide to build an order processing system:
# app.py
from eventide import Eventide, EventideConfig, SQSQueueConfig
app = Eventide(
config=EventideConfig(
queue=SQSQueueConfig(
region="us-east-1",
url="https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/123456789012/orders-queue",
# Increase visibility timeout for longer processing tasks
visibility_timeout=120,
),
# Use multiple workers for better throughput
concurrency=4,
),
)
# Define handlers for different message types
@app.handler("body.type == 'new_order'")
def process_new_order(message):
order = message.body.get('order', {})
order_id = order.get('id')
print(f"Processing new order: {order_id}")
# Your order processing logic here
return True
@app.handler("body.type == 'payment_confirmed'")
def process_payment(message):
order_id = message.body.get('order_id')
amount = message.body.get('amount')
print(f"Payment of ${amount} confirmed for order: {order_id}")
# Update order status, trigger shipping, etc.
return True
@app.handler(
"body.type == 'order_status_update'",
"body.status == 'shipped'"
)
def handle_shipped_order(message):
order_id = message.body.get('order_id')
tracking_number = message.body.get('tracking_number')
print(f"Order {order_id} shipped with tracking number: {tracking_number}")
# Send confirmation email to customer, update database, etc.
return True
To run this application:
# Install dependencies
pip install eventide[sqs]
# Run the application
eventide run -a app:app
This example demonstrates how to:
- Define multiple handlers for different types of messages
- Use JMESPath expressions to route messages to the appropriate handlers
- Configure the application with the appropriate queue settings
- Run multiple workers for better throughput
Roadmap
- Lifecycle hooks
- Comprehensive test suite
- Message scheduling (cron and one-off)
License
This project is licensed under the Apache License 2.0 - see the LICENSE file for details.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
Filter files by name, interpreter, ABI, and platform.
If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.
Copy a direct link to the current filters
File details
Details for the file eventide-0.0.0a8.tar.gz.
File metadata
- Download URL: eventide-0.0.0a8.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 63.0 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: uv/0.6.14
File hashes
| Algorithm | Hash digest | |
|---|---|---|
| SHA256 |
85b43977fa1649b13635b33af3e2a9c6cb99d615816a4d7a1011c701fe926843
|
|
| MD5 |
d373f0b0fcd7fe195fece79d097683d6
|
|
| BLAKE2b-256 |
14a2d7aeff48ce13a94e02378c533735bcbd7cb000f8d44f92e65aaa0ebe3ef6
|
File details
Details for the file eventide-0.0.0a8-py3-none-any.whl.
File metadata
- Download URL: eventide-0.0.0a8-py3-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 23.8 kB
- Tags: Python 3
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: uv/0.6.14
File hashes
| Algorithm | Hash digest | |
|---|---|---|
| SHA256 |
0a380256f67f5ec3f647cf36f88cd19b0a2217b9488a1cb3a93d90ec78ab796e
|
|
| MD5 |
90e985e2bfe6175ec426d8c4ce49e958
|
|
| BLAKE2b-256 |
9bae38f2f7c449ce75a94fe0a2d098285129fd9b578896d47ee0dfebe0eb0339
|