Package Exports
- blezer
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Readme
blezer
Blezer is a simple background job/task processing queue for Node.js (>= 7.6) using cluster & separate Node processes, powered by Redis.
Features
- each worker runs its tasks in a separate Node.js process
- RESTful JSON API
- integrated UI
- logging per job/task
- delay job/task execution
- job/task expiry value for being in active state
Install
npm install -g blezerUsage
Step 1: Create a task
Each job triggers an execution of a Task i.e. a recipe what to do for that job. It is defined as a class with perform method. Task corresponds to Worker from similar projects such as resque or sidekiq. It is named this way to avoid the clash with cluster workers.
const { Task } = require('blezer');
class LoopTask extends Task {
perform(args) {
this.log(`Running inside: ${process.pid}`);
this.log(`Args: ${args}`);
let progress = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < 1e10; i++) {
if (i % 1e8 == 0) {
this.log(i)
this.progress(progress, 100);
progress++;
}
}
}
}
module.exports = LoopTaskStep 2: Run the server
Put your tasks in tasks/ directory and run
blezer startBy default, it checks available number of cores and it instantiates the number of Node processes accordingly. You can specify number of process by hand using -c option. Type blezer start --help to see all available options.
Step 3: Enqueue a job
You can enqueue a job to perform given task from a JavaScript application
const { enqueue } = require('blezer');
enqueue('LoopTask', '[1, 2, 3]');By default, the enqueue function puts the new job on default queue; this can be changed with the name parameter from options.
enqueue('LoopTask', '[1, 2, 3]', { name: 'high' });A job can be scheduled to run at a specific time using scheduledAt parameter.
enqueue('LoopTask', '[1, 2, 3]', { name: 'high', scheduledAt: Date.now() + Sugar.Number.days(4) });It is also possible to enqueue a job through Blezer REST API
http POST :3000/api/enqueue task=LoopTask args='[1,2,3]'(optional) Step 4: Check the progress via UI
Go to localhost:3000 to check the job proegress through Blezer UI.
Blezer UI
Blezer comes with a built-in web UI that allows to quickly see the status of all jobs. Here's a preview of what it looks like:

Environments
You can distinguish visually the UI between staging and production environments by specifying BLEZER_ENV variable accordingly. You can set this variable when launching Blezer with blezer start e.g.
BLEZER_ENV=production blezer startIt will add a small color bar at the top to help you identify at a glance which UI instance you are currently using.
Concepts
Queues
Queue is a list of Job items, stored so as to be retrievable and handled in the order of insertion. You can create a Queue by giving it a name. This is a lower level API which usually shouldn't be used directly - it's advised to use enqueue helper.
const { Queue } = require('blezer');
const highQueue = new Queue('high');Logging
You can log on per job/task basis by using this.log(message) method, where message is an object or a string.
this.log("This is my log message");
this.log({ a: 1, b: 2});Create tasks from CLI
You can create a task in tasks using CLI
blezer create fooThis command will create FooTask.js task in tasks/ directory.
Roadmap
Blezer keeps track of the upcoming fixes and features on GitHub Projects: Blezer Roadmap
Bug reports
We use Github Issues for managing bug reports and feature requests. If you run into problems, please search the issues or submit a new one here: https://github.com/zaiste/blezer/issues
Detailed bug reports are always great; it's event better if you are able to include test cases.
Roadmap
- visualisation with Clui https://github.com/nathanpeck/clui
Contributing
- run the code through
prettier