Integrate amqp into guillotina
Project description
guillotina_amqp Docs
Integrates aioamqp into guillotina, providing an execution framework for asyncio tasks:
Guillotina command to start a worker: amqp-worker
Workers consume tasks from rabbit-mq through the aioamqp integration
Redis state manager implementation to keep a global view of running tasks
Utilities and endpoints for adding new tasks and for task cancellation
Its distributed design - the absence of a central worker manager - makes it more robust. Task cancelation is signaled over the state manager, and workers will be responsible for stopping canceled tasks.
A watchdog on the asyncio loop can be launched with the auto-kill-timeout command argument, which will kill the worker if one of its tasks has captured the loop for too long.
When a task fails, the worker will send it to the delay queue, which has been configured to re-queue tasks to the main queue after a certain TTL. Failed tasks are retried a limited amount of times.
Configuration
Example docs:
{ "amqp": { "host": "localhost", "port": 5673, "login": "guest", "password": "guest", "vhost": "/", "heartbeat": 800, "queue": "guillotina", # Main consuming queue for workers "persistent_manager": "redis", "delayed_ttl_ms": 60 * 1000, "errored_ttl_ms": 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24 * 7, } }
host and port: should point to the rabbit-mq instance
login and password: should match the rabbit-mq access credentials
queue: main queue where tasks are consumed from
persistent_manager: named utility to use to keep tasks state.
delay_ttl_ms and errored_ttl_ms: can be used to configure queue delays. Default to 2 minutes and 1 week, correspondingly.
max_running_tasks: maximum number of simultaneous asyncio tasks hat workers are allowed to run.
Dependencies
Python >= 3.7
Installation
This example will use virtualenv:
virtualenv . ./bin/pip install .[test]
Running
Most simple way to get running:
./bin/guillotina
Queue tasks
code:
from guillotina_amqp import add_task await add_task(my_func, 'foobar', kw_arg='blah')
With decorators
code:
from guillotina_amqp import task @task async def my_func(foo): print(foo) await my_func('bar')
Run the worker
command:
g amqp-worker
You can use a couple of additional parameters:
–auto-kill-timeout: time of inactivity after which the worker will restart himself assuming it got stuck.
–max-running-tasks: max number of simultaneous asyncio tasks in the event loop. Overwrites configuraiton parameter.
Beacons
The aioamqp client can get stuck on a closed connection and the worker would be running forever without processing any message.
As a workaround, we implemented a beacon system independent for every worker. When getting a new connection to rabbitmq, we create a beacon queue and a beacon-delay queue. Both are exclusive queues, which means that will be removed after the connection from the worker is closed.
On the background of every connection, we publish a beacon message to the beacon-delay queue, which is expected to be read again after a certain TTL from the beacon queue. If a beacon message is not received after 3 times the TTL, the worker will exit.
API
GET /@amqp-tasks - get list of tasks
GET /@amqp-tasks/{task_id} - get task info
DELETE /@amqp-tasks/{task_id} - delete task
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