rails--rails/activejob
Étienne Barrié 142ae54e54 Allow jobs to rescue all exceptions
Before this commit, only StandardError exceptions can be handled by
rescue_from handlers.

This changes the rescue clause to catch all Exception objects, allowing
rescue handlers to be defined for Exception classes not inheriting from
StandardError.

This means that rescue handlers that are rescuing Exceptions outside of
StandardError exceptions may rescue exceptions that were not being
rescued before this change.

Co-authored-by: Adrianna Chang <adrianna.chang@shopify.com>
2021-01-23 08:35:51 -05:00
..
bin Use frozen-string-literal in ActiveJob 2017-07-09 20:50:52 +03:00
lib Allow jobs to rescue all exceptions 2021-01-23 08:35:51 -05:00
test Allow jobs to rescue all exceptions 2021-01-23 08:35:51 -05:00
CHANGELOG.md Allow jobs to rescue all exceptions 2021-01-23 08:35:51 -05:00
MIT-LICENSE Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
README.md Rename master to main in all code references 2021-01-19 20:46:33 +00:00
Rakefile Tidy up the build output for Active Job adapters 2019-10-23 20:47:50 +10:30
activejob.gemspec Update the Rails mailing list URLs to new discuss discourse URL [ci skip] 2020-04-02 22:00:28 +05:30

README.md

Active Job Make work happen later

Active Job is a framework for declaring jobs and making them run on a variety of queuing backends. These jobs can be everything from regularly scheduled clean-ups, to billing charges, to mailings. Anything that can be chopped up into small units of work and run in parallel, really.

It also serves as the backend for Action Mailer's #deliver_later functionality that makes it easy to turn any mailing into a job for running later. That's one of the most common jobs in a modern web application: sending emails outside of the request-response cycle, so the user doesn't have to wait on it.

The main point is to ensure that all Rails apps will have a job infrastructure in place, even if it's in the form of an "immediate runner". We can then have framework features and other gems build on top of that, without having to worry about API differences between Delayed Job and Resque. Picking your queuing backend becomes more of an operational concern, then. And you'll be able to switch between them without having to rewrite your jobs.

You can read more about Active Job in the Active Job Basics guide.

Usage

To learn how to use your preferred queuing backend see its adapter documentation at ActiveJob::QueueAdapters.

Declare a job like so:

class MyJob < ActiveJob::Base
  queue_as :my_jobs

  def perform(record)
    record.do_work
  end
end

Enqueue a job like so:

MyJob.perform_later record  # Enqueue a job to be performed as soon as the queuing system is free.
MyJob.set(wait_until: Date.tomorrow.noon).perform_later(record)  # Enqueue a job to be performed tomorrow at noon.
MyJob.set(wait: 1.week).perform_later(record) # Enqueue a job to be performed 1 week from now.

That's it!

GlobalID support

Active Job supports GlobalID serialization for parameters. This makes it possible to pass live Active Record objects to your job instead of class/id pairs, which you then have to manually deserialize. Before, jobs would look like this:

class TrashableCleanupJob
  def perform(trashable_class, trashable_id, depth)
    trashable = trashable_class.constantize.find(trashable_id)
    trashable.cleanup(depth)
  end
end

Now you can simply do:

class TrashableCleanupJob
  def perform(trashable, depth)
    trashable.cleanup(depth)
  end
end

This works with any class that mixes in GlobalID::Identification, which by default has been mixed into Active Record classes.

Supported queuing systems

Active Job has built-in adapters for multiple queuing backends (Sidekiq, Resque, Delayed Job and others). To get an up-to-date list of the adapters see the API Documentation for ActiveJob::QueueAdapters.

Please note: We are not accepting pull requests for new adapters. We encourage library authors to provide an ActiveJob adapter as part of their gem, or as a stand-alone gem. For discussion about this see the following PRs: 23311, 21406, and #32285.

Download and installation

The latest version of Active Job can be installed with RubyGems:

  $ gem install activejob

Source code can be downloaded as part of the Rails project on GitHub:

License

Active Job is released under the MIT license:

Support

API documentation is at:

Bug reports for the Ruby on Rails project can be filed here:

Feature requests should be discussed on the rails-core mailing list here: