Minion::Command::minion::worker(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Minion::Command::minion::worker(3pm) |
Minion::Command::minion::worker - Minion worker command
Usage: APPLICATION minion worker [OPTIONS] ./myapp.pl minion worker ./myapp.pl minion worker -m production -I 15 -C 5 -R 3600 -j 10 ./myapp.pl minion worker -q important -q default Options: -C, --command-interval <seconds> Worker remote control command interval, defaults to 10 -D, dequeue-timeout <seconds> Maximum amount of time to wait for jobs, defaults to 5 -h, --help Show this summary of available options --home <path> Path to home directory of your application, defaults to the value of MOJO_HOME or auto-detection -I, --heartbeat-interval <seconds> Heartbeat interval, defaults to 300 -j, --jobs <number> Maximum number of jobs to perform parallel in forked worker processes, defaults to 4 -m, --mode <name> Operating mode for your application, defaults to the value of MOJO_MODE/PLACK_ENV or "development" -q, --queue <name> One or more queues to get jobs from, defaults to "default" -R, --repair-interval <seconds> Repair interval, up to half of this value can be subtracted randomly to make sure not all workers repair at the same time, defaults to 21600 (6 hours)
Minion::Command::minion::worker starts a Minion worker. You can have as many workers as you like.
The Minion::Command::minion::worker process can be controlled at runtime with the following signals.
Stop gracefully after finishing the current jobs.
Stop immediately without finishing the current jobs.
The job processes spawned by the Minion::Command::minion::worker process can be controlled at runtime with the following signals.
This signal starts out with the operating system default and allows for jobs to install a custom signal handler to stop gracefully.
These signals start out being ignored and allow for jobs to install custom signal handlers.
The Minion::Command::minion::worker process can be controlled at runtime through Minion::Command::minion::job, from anywhere in the network, by broadcasting the following remote control commands.
$ ./myapp.pl minion job -b jobs -a '[10]' $ ./myapp.pl minion job -b jobs -a '[10]' 23
Instruct one or more workers to change the number of jobs to perform concurrently. Setting this value to 0 will effectively pause the worker. That means all current jobs will be finished, but no new ones accepted, until the number is increased again.
$ ./myapp.pl minion job -b kill -a '["INT", 10025]' $ ./myapp.pl minion job -b kill -a '["INT", 10025]' 23
Instruct one or more workers to send a signal to a job that is currently being performed. This command will be ignored by workers that do not have a job matching the id. That means it is safe to broadcast this command to all workers.
$ ./myapp.pl minion job -b stop -a '[10025]' $ ./myapp.pl minion job -b stop -a '[10025]' 23
Instruct one or more workers to stop a job that is currently being performed immediately. This command will be ignored by workers that do not have a job matching the id. That means it is safe to broadcast this command to all workers.
Minion::Command::minion::worker inherits all attributes from Mojolicious::Command and implements the following new ones.
my $description = $worker->description; $worker = $worker->description('Foo');
Short description of this command, used for the command list.
my $usage = $worker->usage; $worker = $worker->usage('Foo');
Usage information for this command, used for the help screen.
Minion::Command::minion::worker inherits all methods from Mojolicious::Command and implements the following new ones.
$worker->run(@ARGV);
Run this command.
Minion, Mojolicious::Guides, <https://mojolicious.org>.
2019-02-05 | perl v5.28.1 |