Queueing jobs in Postgres from Node.js like a boss
Queueing jobs in Postgres from Node.js like a boss.
async function readme() {
const PgBoss = require('pg-boss');
const boss = new PgBoss('postgres://user:pass@host/database');
boss.on('error', console.error)
await boss.start()
const queue = 'readme-queue'
await boss.createQueue(queue)
const id = await boss.send(queue, { arg1: 'read me' })
console.log(`created job ${id} in queue ${queue}`)
await boss.work(queue, async ([ job ]) => {
console.log(`received job ${job.id} with data ${JSON.stringify(job.data)}`)
})
}
readme()
.catch(err => {
console.log(err)
process.exit(1)
})
pg-boss is a job queue built in Node.js on top of PostgreSQL in order to provide background processing and reliable asynchronous execution to Node.js applications.
pg-boss relies on SKIP LOCKED, a feature built specifically for message queues to resolve record locking challenges inherent with relational databases. This provides exactly-once delivery and the safety of guaranteed atomic commits to asynchronous job processing.
This will likely cater the most to teams already familiar with the simplicity of relational database semantics and operations (SQL, querying, and backups). It will be especially useful to those already relying on PostgreSQL that want to limit how many systems are required to monitor and support in their architecture.
# npm
npm install pg-boss
# yarn
yarn add pg-boss
To setup a development environment for this library:
git clone https://github.com/timgit/pg-boss.git
npm install
To run the test suite, linter and code coverage:
npm run cover
The test suite will try and create a new database named pgboss. The config.json file has the default credentials to connect to postgres.