rybakit/phive-queue

$queue->push('I can be popped off after', '10 minutes');

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v0.12.0 2015-12-29 10:57 UTC

README

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Phive Queue is a time-based scheduling queue with multiple backend support.

Table of contents

Installation

The recommended way to install Phive Queue is through Composer:

$ composer require rybakit/phive-queue

Usage example

use Phive\Queue\InMemoryQueue;
use Phive\Queue\NoItemAvailableException;

$queue = new InMemoryQueue();

$queue->push('item1');
$queue->push('item2', new DateTime());
$queue->push('item3', time());
$queue->push('item4', '+5 seconds');
$queue->push('item5', 'next Monday');

// get the queue size
$count = $queue->count(); // 5

// pop items off the queue
// note that is not guaranteed that the items with the same scheduled time
// will be received in the same order in which they were added
$item123 = $queue->pop();
$item123 = $queue->pop();
$item123 = $queue->pop();

try {
    $item4 = $queue->pop();
} catch (NoItemAvailableException $e) {
    // item4 is not yet available
}

sleep(5);
$item4 = $queue->pop();

// clear the queue (will remove 'item5')
$queue->clear();

Queues

Currently, there are the following queues available:

MongoQueue

The MongoQueue requires the Mongo PECL extension (v1.3.0 or higher).

Tip: Before making use of the queue, it's highly recommended to create an index on a eta field:

$ mongo my_db --eval 'db.my_coll.ensureIndex({ eta: 1 })'
Constructor
public MongoQueue::__construct(MongoClient $mongoClient, string $dbName, string $collName)

Parameters:

mongoClient The MongoClient instance
dbName The database name
collName The collection name

Example
use Phive\Queue\MongoQueue;

$client = new MongoClient();
$queue = new MongoQueue($client, 'my_db', 'my_coll');

RedisQueue

For the RedisQueue you have to install the Redis PECL extension (v2.2.3 or higher).

Constructor
public RedisQueue::__construct(Redis $redis)

Parameters:

redis The Redis instance

Example
use Phive\Queue\RedisQueue;

$redis = new Redis();
$redis->connect('127.0.0.1');
$redis->setOption(Redis::OPT_PREFIX, 'my_prefix:');

// Since the Redis client v2.2.5 the RedisQueue has the ability to utilize serialization:
// $redis->setOption(Redis::OPT_SERIALIZER, Redis::SERIALIZER_PHP);

$queue = new RedisQueue($redis);

TarantoolQueue

To use the TarantoolQueue you have to install the Tarantool PECL extension and a Lua script for managing queues.

Constructor
public TarantoolQueue::__construct(Tarantool $tarantool, string $tubeName [, int $space = null ])

Parameters:

tarantool The Tarantool instance
tubeName The tube name
space Optional. The space number. Default to 0

Example
use Phive\Queue\TarantoolQueue;

$tarantool = new Tarantool('127.0.0.1', 33020);
$queue = new TarantoolQueue($tarantool, 'my_tube');

PheanstalkQueue

The PheanstalkQueue requires the Pheanstalk library (Beanstalk client) to be installed:

$ composer require pda/pheanstalk:~3.0
Constructor
public PheanstalkQueue::__construct(Pheanstalk\PheanstalkInterface $pheanstalk, string $tubeName)

Parameters:

pheanstalk The Pheanstalk\PheanstalkInterface instance
tubeName The tube name

Example
use Pheanstalk\Pheanstalk;
use Phive\Queue\PheanstalkQueue;

$pheanstalk = new Pheanstalk('127.0.0.1');
$queue = new PheanstalkQueue($pheanstalk, 'my_tube');

GenericPdoQueue

The GenericPdoQueue is intended for PDO drivers whose databases support stored procedures/functions (in fact all drivers except SQLite).

The GenericPdoQueue requires PDO and a PDO driver for a particular database be installed. On top of that PDO error mode must be set to throw exceptions (PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION).

SQL files to create the table and the stored routine can be found in the res directory.

Constructor
public GenericPdoQueue::__construct(PDO $pdo, string $tableName [, string $routineName = null ] )

Parameters:

pdo The PDO instance
tableName The table name
routineName Optional. The routine name. Default to tableName_pop

Example
use Phive\Queue\Pdo\GenericPdoQueue;

$pdo = new PDO('pgsql:host=127.0.0.1;port=5432;dbname=my_db', 'db_user', 'db_pass');
$pdo->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);

$queue = new GenericPdoQueue($pdo, 'my_table', 'my_routine');

SqlitePdoQueue

The SqlitePdoQueue requires PDO and SQLite PDO driver. On top of that PDO error mode must be set to throw exceptions (PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION).

SQL file to create the table can be found in the res/sqlite directory.

Tip: For performance reasons it's highly recommended to activate WAL mode:

$pdo->exec('PRAGMA journal_mode=WAL');
Constructor
public SqlitePdoQueue::__construct(PDO $pdo, string $tableName)

Parameters:

pdo The PDO instance
tableName The table name

Example
use Phive\Queue\Pdo\SqlitePdoQueue;

$pdo = new PDO('sqlite:/opt/databases/my_db.sq3');
$pdo->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
$pdo->exec('PRAGMA journal_mode=WAL');

$queue = new SqlitePdoQueue($pdo, 'my_table');

SysVQueue

The SysVQueue requires PHP to be compiled with the option --enable-sysvmsg.

Constructor
public SysVQueue::__construct(int $key [, bool $serialize = null [, int $perms = null ]] )

Parameters:

key The message queue numeric ID
serialize Optional. Whether to serialize an item or not. Default to false
perms Optional. The queue permissions. Default to 0666

Example
use Phive\Queue\SysVQueue;

$queue = new SysVQueue(123456);

InMemoryQueue

The InMemoryQueue can be useful in cases where the persistence is not needed. It exists only in RAM and therefore operates faster than other queues.

Constructor
public InMemoryQueue::__construct()
Example
use Phive\Queue\InMemoryQueue;

$queue = new InMemoryQueue();

Item types

The following table details the various item types supported across queues.

✓* — supported if the serializer is enabled.

To bypass the limitation of unsupported types for the particular queue you could convert an item to a non-binary string before pushing it and then back after popping. The library ships with the TypeSafeQueue decorator which does that for you:

use Phive\Queue\GenericPdoQueue;
use Phive\Queue\TypeSafeQueue;

$queue = new GenericPdoQueue(...);
$queue = new TypeSafeQueue($queue);

$queue->push(['foo' => 'bar']);
$array = $queue->pop(); // ['foo' => 'bar'];

Exceptions

Every queue method declared in the Queue interface will throw an exception if a run-time error occurs at the time the method is called.

For example, in the code below, the push() call will fail with a MongoConnectionException exception in a case a remote server unreachable:

use Phive\Queue\MongoQueue;

$queue = new MongoQueue(...);

// mongodb server goes down here

$queue->push('item'); // throws MongoConnectionException

But sometimes you may want to catch exceptions coming from a queue regardless of the underlying driver. To do this just wrap your queue object with the ExceptionalQueue decorator:

use Phive\Queue\ExceptionalQueue;
use Phive\Queue\MongoQueue;

$queue = new MongoQueue(...);
$queue = new ExceptionalQueue($queue);

// mongodb server goes down here

$queue->push('item'); // throws Phive\Queue\QueueException

And then, to catch queue level exceptions use the QueueException class:

use Phive\Queue\QueueException;

...

try {
    do_something_with_a_queue();
} catch (QueueException $e) {
    // handle queue exception
} catch (\Exception $e) {
    // handle base exception
}

Tests

Phive Queue uses PHPUnit for unit and integration testing. In order to run the tests, you'll first need to install the library dependencies using composer:

$ composer install

You can then run the tests:

$ phpunit

You may also wish to specify your own default values of some tests (db names, passwords, queue sizes, etc.). You can do it by setting environment variables from the command line:

$ export PHIVE_PDO_PGSQL_PASSWORD="pgsql_password"
$ export PHIVE_PDO_MYSQL_PASSWORD="mysql_password"
$ phpunit

You may also create your own phpunit.xml file by copying the phpunit.xml.dist file and customize to your needs.

Performance

To check the performance of queues run:

$ phpunit --group performance

This test inserts a number of items (1000 by default) into a queue, and then retrieves them back. It measures the average time for push and pop operations and outputs the resulting stats, e.g.:

RedisQueue::push()
   Total operations:      1000
   Operations per second: 14031.762 [#/sec]
   Time per operation:    71.267 [ms]
   Time taken for test:   0.071 [sec]

RedisQueue::pop()
   Total operations:      1000
   Operations per second: 16869.390 [#/sec]
   Time per operation:    59.279 [ms]
   Time taken for test:   0.059 [sec]
.
RedisQueue::push() (delayed)
   Total operations:      1000
   Operations per second: 15106.226 [#/sec]
   Time per operation:    66.198 [ms]
   Time taken for test:   0.066 [sec]

RedisQueue::pop() (delayed)
   Total operations:      1000
   Operations per second: 14096.416 [#/sec]
   Time per operation:    70.940 [ms]
   Time taken for test:   0.071 [sec]

You may also change the number of items involved in the test by changing the PHIVE_PERF_QUEUE_SIZE value in your phpunit.xml file or by setting the environment variable from the command line:

$ PHIVE_PERF_QUEUE_SIZE=5000 phpunit --group performance

Concurrency

In order to check the concurrency you'll have to install the Gearman server and the German PECL extension. Once the server has been installed and started, create a number of processes (workers) by running:

$ php tests/worker.php

Then run the tests:

$ phpunit --group concurrency

This test inserts a number of items (100 by default) into a queue, and then each worker tries to retrieve them in parallel.

You may also change the number of items involved in the test by changing the PHIVE_CONCUR_QUEUE_SIZE value in your phpunit.xml file or by setting the environment variable from the command line:

$ PHIVE_CONCUR_QUEUE_SIZE=500 phpunit --group concurrency

License

Phive Queue is released under the MIT License. See the bundled LICENSE file for details.