Releases: riverqueue/river
v0.6.1
Fixed
- River now considers per-worker timeout overrides when rescuing jobs so that jobs with a long custom timeout won't be rescued prematurely. PR #350.
- River CLI now exits with status 1 in the case of a problem with commands or flags, like an unknown command or missing required flag. PR #363.
- Fix migration version 4 (from 0.5.0) so that the up migration can be re-run after it was originally rolled back. PR #364.
v0.6.0
Added
RequireNotInserted
test helper (in addition to the existingRequireInserted
) that verifies that a job with matching conditions was not inserted. PR #237.
Changed
- The periodic job enqueuer now sets
scheduled_at
of inserted jobs to the more precise time of when they were scheduled to run, as opposed to when they were inserted. PR #341.
Fixed
- Remove use of
github.com/lib/pq
, making it once again a test-only dependency. PR #337.
v0.5.0
Added
-
Add
pending
job state. This is currently unused, but will be used to build higher level functionality for staging jobs that are not yet ready to run (for some reason other than their scheduled time being in the future). Pending jobs will never be run or deleted and must first be moved to another state by external code. PR #301. -
Queue status tracking, pause and resume. PR #301.
A useful operational lever is the ability to pause and resume a queue without shutting down clients. In addition to pause/resume being a feature request from #54, as part of the work on River's UI it's been useful to list out the active queues so that they can be displayed and manipulated.
A new
river_queue
table is introduced in the v4 migration for this purpose. Upon startup, every producer in each RiverClient
will make anUPSERT
query to the database to either register the queue as being active, or if it already exists it will instead bump the timestamp to keep it active. This query will be run periodically in each producer as long as theClient
is alive, even if the queue is paused. A separate query will delete/purge any queues which have not been active in awhile (currently fixed to 24 hours).QueuePause
andQueueResume
APIs have been introduced toClient
pause and resume a single queue by name, or all queues using the special*
value. Each producer will watch for notifications on the relevantLISTEN/NOTIFY
topic unless operating in poll-only mode, in which case they will periodically poll for changes to their queue record in the database.
Changed
-
Job insert notifications are now handled within application code rather than within the database using triggers. PR #301.
The initial design for River utilized a trigger on job insert that issued notifications (
NOTIFY
) so that listening clients could quickly pick up the work if they were idle. While this is good for lowering latency, it does have the side effect of emitting a large amount of notifications any time there are lots of jobs being inserted. This adds overhead, particularly to high-throughput installations.To improve this situation and reduce overhead in high-throughput installations, the notifications have been refactored to be emitted at the application level. A client-level debouncer ensures that these notifications are not emitted more often than they could be useful. If a queue is due for an insert notification (on a particular Postgres schema), the notification is piggy-backed onto the insert query within the transaction. While this has the impact of increasing insert latency for a certain percentage of cases, the effect should be small.
Additionally, initial releases of River did not properly scope notification topics within the global
LISTEN/NOTIFY
namespace. If two River installations were operating on the same Postgres database but within different schemas (search paths), their notifications would be emitted on a shared topic name. This is no longer the case and all notifications are prefixed with a{schema_name}.
string. -
Add
NOT NULL
constraints to the database forriver_job.args
andriver_job.metadata
. Normal code paths should never have allowed for null values any way, but this constraint further strengthens the guarantee. PR #301. -
Stricter constraint on
river_job.finalized_at
to ensure it is only set when paired with a finalized state (completed, discarded, cancelled). Normal code paths should never have allowed for invalid values any way, but this constraint further strengthens the guarantee. PR #301.
v0.4.1
v0.4.0
- Breaking change: There are a number of small breaking changes in the job list API using
JobList
/JobListTx
:- Now support querying jobs by a list of Job Kinds and States. Also allows for filtering by specific timestamp values. Thank you Jos Kraaijeveld (@thatjos)! 🙏🏻 PR #236.
- Job listing now defaults to ordering by job ID (
JobListOrderByID
) instead of a job timestamp dependent on on requested job state. The previous ordering behavior is still available withNewJobListParams().OrderBy(JobListOrderByTime, SortOrderAsc)
. PR #307. - The function
JobListCursorFromJob
no longer needs a sort order parameter. Instead, sort order is determined based on the job list parameters that the cursor is subsequently used with. PR #307.
- Breaking change: Client
Insert
andInsertTx
functions now return aJobInsertResult
struct instead of aJobRow
. This allows the result to include metadata like the newUniqueSkippedAsDuplicate
property, so callers can tell whether an inserted job was skipped due to unique constraint. PR #292. - Breaking change: Client
InsertMany
andInsertManyTx
now return number of jobs inserted asint
instead ofint64
. This change was made to make the type in use a little more idiomatic. PR #293. - Breaking change:
river.JobState*
type aliases have been removed. All job state constants should be accessed throughrivertype.JobState*
instead. PR #300.
See also the 0.4.0 release blog post with code samples and rationale behind various changes.
v0.3.0
Added
- The River client now supports "poll only" mode with
Config.PollOnly
which makes it avoid issuingLISTEN
statements to wait for new events like a leadership resignation or new job available. The program instead polls periodically to look for changes. A leader resigning or a new job being available will be noticed less quickly, butPollOnly
potentially makes River operable on systems without listen/notify support, like PgBouncer operating in transaction pooling mode. PR #281. - Added
rivertype.JobStates()
that returns the full list of possible job states. PR #297.
v0.2.0
Added
- New periodic jobs can now be added after a client's already started using
Client.PeriodicJobs().Add()
and removed withRemove()
. PR #288.
Changed
- The level of some of River's common log statements has changed, most often demoting
info
statements todebug
so thatinfo
-level logging is overall less verbose. PR #275.
Fixed
- Fixed a bug in the (log-only for now) reindexer service in which it might repeat its work loop multiple times unexpectedly while stopping. PR #280.
- Periodic job enqueuer now bases next run times on each periodic job's last target run time, instead of the time at which the enqueuer is currently running. This is a small difference that will be unnoticeable for most purposes, but makes scheduling of jobs with short cron frequencies a little more accurate. PR #284.
- Fixed a bug in the elector in which it was possible for a resigning, but not completely stopped, elector to reelect despite having just resigned. PR #286.
v0.1.0
Although it comes with a number of improvements, there's nothing particularly notable about version 0.1.0. Until now we've only been incrementing the patch version given the project's nascent nature, but from here on we'll try to adhere more closely to semantic versioning, using the patch version for bug fixes, and incrementing the minor version when new functionality is added.
Added
- The River CLI now supports
river bench
to benchmark River's job throughput against a database. PR #254. - The River CLI now has a
river migrate-get
command to dump SQL for River migrations for use in alternative migration frameworks. Use it likeriver migrate-get --up --version 3 > version3.up.sql
. PR #273. - The River CLI's
migrate-down
andmigrate-up
options get two new options for--dry-run
and--show-sql
. They can be combined to easily run a preflight check on a River upgrade to see which migration commands would be run on a database, but without actually running them. PR #273. - The River client gets a new
Client.SubscribeConfig
function that lets a subscriber specify the maximum size of their subscription channel. PR #258.
Changed
- River uses a new job completer that batches up completion work so that large numbers of them can be performed more efficiently. In a purely synthetic (i.e. mostly unrealistic) benchmark, River's job throughput increases ~4.5x. PR #258.
- Changed default client IDs to be a combination of hostname and the time which the client started. This can still be changed by specifying
Config.ID
. PR #255. - Notifier refactored for better robustness and testability. PR #253.