# frozen_string_literal: true require 'sidekiq' module Sidekiq class BasicFetch # We want the fetch operation to timeout every few seconds so the thread # can check if the process is shutting down. TIMEOUT = 2 UnitOfWork = Struct.new(:queue, :job) do def acknowledge # nothing to do end def queue_name queue.sub(/.*queue:/, ''.freeze) end def requeue Sidekiq.redis do |conn| conn.rpush("queue:#{queue_name}", job) end end end def initialize(options) @strictly_ordered_queues = !!options[:strict] @queues = options[:queues].map { |q| "queue:#{q}" } if @strictly_ordered_queues @queues = @queues.uniq @queues << TIMEOUT end end def retrieve_work work = Sidekiq.redis { |conn| conn.brpop(*queues_cmd) } UnitOfWork.new(*work) if work end # Creating the Redis#brpop command takes into account any # configured queue weights. By default Redis#brpop returns # data from the first queue that has pending elements. We # recreate the queue command each time we invoke Redis#brpop # to honor weights and avoid queue starvation. def queues_cmd if @strictly_ordered_queues @queues else queues = @queues.shuffle.uniq queues << TIMEOUT queues end end # By leaving this as a class method, it can be pluggable and used by the Manager actor. Making it # an instance method will make it async to the Fetcher actor def self.bulk_requeue(inprogress, options) return if inprogress.empty? Sidekiq.logger.debug { "Re-queueing terminated jobs" } jobs_to_requeue = {} inprogress.each do |unit_of_work| jobs_to_requeue[unit_of_work.queue_name] ||= [] jobs_to_requeue[unit_of_work.queue_name] << unit_of_work.job end Sidekiq.redis do |conn| conn.pipelined do jobs_to_requeue.each do |queue, jobs| conn.rpush("queue:#{queue}", jobs) end end end Sidekiq.logger.info("Pushed #{inprogress.size} jobs back to Redis") rescue => ex Sidekiq.logger.warn("Failed to requeue #{inprogress.size} jobs: #{ex.message}") end end end