NAME
Gearman::Driver::Worker - Base class for workers
SYNOPSIS
package My::Worker;
use base qw(Gearman::Driver::Worker);
use Moose;
sub begin {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
# called before each job
}
sub prefix {
# default: return ref(shift) . '::';
return join '_', split /::/, __PACKAGE__;
}
sub do_something : Job : MinProcesses(2) : MaxProcesses(15) {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
# $job => Gearman::XS::Job instance
}
sub end {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
# called after each job
}
sub spread_work : Job {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
my $gc = Gearman::XS::Client->new;
$gc->add_servers( $self->server );
$gc->do_background( 'some_job_1' => $job->workload );
$gc->do_background( 'some_job_2' => $job->workload );
$gc->do_background( 'some_job_3' => $job->workload );
$gc->do_background( 'some_job_4' => $job->workload );
$gc->do_background( 'some_job_5' => $job->workload );
}
1;
ATTRIBUTES
server
Gearman::Driver connects to the server passed to its constructor. This value is also stored in this class. This can be useful if a job uses Gearman::XS::Client to add another job. See 'spread_work' method in "SYNOPSIS" above.
METHODATTRIBUTES
Job
This will register the method with gearmand.
MinProcesses
Minimum number of processes working parallel on this job/method.
MaxProcesses
Maximum number of processes working parallel on this job/method.
Encode
This will automatically look for a method encode
in this object which has to be defined in the subclass. It will call the encode
method passing the return value from the job method. The return value of the encode
method will be returned to the Gearman client. This is useful to serialize Perl datastructures to JSON before sending them back to the client.
sub do_some_job : Job : Encode : Decode {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
return { message => 'OK', status => 1 };
# calls 'encode' and returns JSON string: {"status":1,"message":"OK"}
}
sub custom_encoder : Job : Encode(enc_yaml) : Decode(dec_yaml) {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
return { message => 'OK', status => 1 };
# calls 'enc_yaml' and returns YAML string:
# ---
# message: OK
# status: 1
}
sub encode {
my ( $self, $result ) = @_;
return JSON::XS::encode_json($result);
}
sub decode {
my ( $self, $workload ) = @_;
return JSON::XS::decode_json($workload);
}
sub enc_yaml {
my ( $self, $result ) = @_;
return YAML::XS::Dump($result);
}
sub dec_yaml {
my ( $self, $workload ) = @_;
return YAML::XS::Load($workload);
}
Decode
This will automatically look for a method decode
in this object which has to be defined in the subclass. It will call the decode
method passing the workload value ($job->workload
). The return value of the decode
method will be passed as 3rd argument to the job method. This is useful to deserialize JSON workload to Perl datastructures for example. If this attribute is not set, $job->workload
and $workload
is the same.
Example, workload is this string: {"status":1,"message":"OK"}
sub decode {
my ( $self, $workload ) = @_;
return JSON::XS::decode_json($workload);
}
sub job1 : Job {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
# $workload eq $job->workload eq '{"status":1,"message":"OK"}'
}
sub job2 : Job : Decode {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
# $workload ne $job->workload
# $job->workload eq '{"status":1,"message":"OK"}'
# $workload = { status => 1, message => 'OK' }
}
METHODS
prefix
Having the same method name in two different classes would result in a clash when registering it with gearmand. To avoid this, all jobs are registered with the full package and method name (e.g. My::Worker::some_job
). The default prefix is ref(shift . '::')
, but this can be changed by overriding the prefix
method in the subclass, see "SYNOPSIS" above.
begin
This method is called before a job method is called. In this base class this methods just does nothing, but can be overridden in a subclass.
The parameters are the same as in the job method:
$self
$job
end
This method is called after a job method has been called. In this base class this methods just does nothing, but can be overridden in a subclass.
The parameters are the same as in the job method:
$self
$job
process_name
If this method is overridden in the subclass it will change the process name after a job has been forked.
The following parameters are passed to this method:
$self
$orig
- the original process name ($0
)$job_name
- the name of the job
Example:
sub process_name {
my ( $self, $orig, $job_name ) = @_;
return "$orig ($job_name)";
}
This may look like:
plu 2034 0.0 1.7 22392 17948 pts/2 S 21:17 0:00 ./examples/test.pl (GDExamples::Sleeper::ZzZzZzzz)
plu 2035 0.0 1.7 22392 17944 pts/2 S 21:17 0:00 ./examples/test.pl (GDExamples::Sleeper::ZzZzZzzz)
plu 2036 0.0 1.7 22392 17948 pts/2 S 21:17 0:00 ./examples/test.pl (GDExamples::Sleeper::ZzZzZzzz)
plu 2037 0.0 1.7 22392 17956 pts/2 S 21:17 0:00 ./examples/test.pl (GDExamples::Sleeper::long_running_ZzZzZzzz)
override_attributes
If this method is overridden in the subclass it will change all attributes of your job methods. It must return a reference to a hash containing valid attribute keys. E.g.:
sub override_attributes {
return {
MinProcesses => 1,
MaxProcesses => 1,
}
}
sub job1 : Job : MinProcesses(10) : MaxProcesses(20) {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
# This will get MinProcesses(1) MaxProcesses(1) from override_attributes
}
default_attributes
If this method is overridden in the subclass it can supply default attributes which are added to all job methods. This is useful if you want to Encode/Decode all your jobs:
sub default_attributes {
return {
Encode => 'encode',
Decode => 'decode',
}
}
sub decode {
my ( $self, $workload ) = @_;
return JSON::XS::decode_json($workload);
}
sub encode {
my ( $self, $result ) = @_;
return JSON::XS::encode_json($result);
}
sub job1 : Job {
my ( $self, $job, $workload ) = @_;
}
AUTHOR
See Gearman::Driver.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
See Gearman::Driver.