Coffeescript/Node.js port of Resque.
First, you'll want to queue some jobs in your app:
var resque = require('coffee-resque').connect({
host: redisHost,
port: redisPort
});
resque.enqueue('math', 'add', [1,2]);
Next, you'll want to setup a worker to handle these jobs.
Upon completion of the job, invoke the passed callback with a result
(if a result was produced by the job) or an Error
(if an error was
encountered). If an Error
is received, resque fails the
job. In all other cases resque assumes the job is successful.
The callback is important—it notifies resque that the worker has completed the current job and is ready for another. Neglecting to invoke the callback will result in worker starvation.
// implement your job functions.
var myJobs = {
add: function(a, b, callback) { callback(a + b); },
succeed: function(arg, callback) { callback(); },
fail: function(arg, callback) { callback(new Error('fail')); }
}
// setup a worker
var worker = require('coffee-resque').connect({
host: redisHost,
port: redisPort
}).worker('*', myJobs)
// some global event listeners
//
// Triggered every time the Worker polls.
worker.on('poll', function(worker, queue) {})
// Triggered before a Job is attempted.
worker.on('job', function(worker, queue, job) {})
// Triggered every time a Job errors.
worker.on('error', function(err, worker, queue, job) {})
// Triggered on every successful Job run.
worker.on('success', function(worker, queue, job, result) {})
worker.start()
All code is written in Coffee Script and converted to javascript as it's published to npm.
For normal development, all you need to be concerned about is testing:
$ make test
If you need to generate javascript for production purposes and don't want to use npm packages, you can use:
$ make generate-js
$ make remove-js
You can also have coffeescript watch the src
directory and generate Javascript files as they're updated.
$ make dev
- Generic failure handling
- Better polling