Overview

Before getting started, ensure that Greenstalk is installed and the server is running.

Setup

Begin by importing the library:

>>> import greenstalk

Create a Client, which immediately connects to the server on the host and port specified:

>>> client = greenstalk.Client(('127.0.0.1', 11300))

Alternatively, if your server is listening on a Unix domain socket, pass the socket path instead:

>>> client = greenstalk.Client('/var/run/beanstalkd/socket')

Inserting Jobs

Jobs are inserted using put. The job body is the only required argument:

>>> client.put('hello')
1

Jobs are inserted into the currently used tube, which defaults to default. The currently used tube can be changed via use. It can also be set with the use argument when creating a Client.

Consuming Jobs

Jobs are consumed using reserve. It blocks until a job is reserved (unless the timeout argument is used):

>>> job = client.reserve()
>>> job.id
1
>>> job.body
'hello'

Jobs will only be reserved from tubes on the watch list, which initially contains a single tube, default. You can add tubes to the watch list with watch and remove them with ignore. For convenience, it can be set with the watch argument when creating a Client.

The server guarantees that jobs are only reserved by a single consumer simultaneously. Let’s go ahead and tell the server that we’ve successfully completed the job using delete:

>>> client.delete(job)

Here’s what you can do with a reserved job to change its state:

Command Normal use case Effect
delete Success Job is permanently deleted
release Expected failure Job is released back into the queue to be retried
bury Unknown failure Job is put in a special FIFO list for later inspection

Body Serialization

The server does not inspect the contents of job bodies, it’s only concerned with routing them between clients. This gives clients full control over how they’re sent and received on the underlying connection.

JSON serialized payloads encoded in UTF-8 are a great default representation.

Here’s an example showing how a producer and consumer (likely running in separate processes) could communicate a user registration email job.

Producer:

payload = {'user_id': user_id}
body = json.dumps(payload)
client.put(body)

The consumer would then do the inverse:

job = client.reserve()
payload = json.loads(job.body)
send_registration_email(payload['user_id'])

Body Encoding

When creating a Client, you can use the encoding argument to control how job bodies are encoded and decoded. It defaults to UTF-8.

You can set the encoding to None if you’re working with binary data. In that case, you’re expected to pass in bytes (rather than str) bodies, and bytes bodies will be returned.

Job Priorities

Every job has a priority which is an integer between 0 and 4,294,967,295. 0 is the most urgent priority. The put, release and bury methods all take a priority argument that defaults to 2**16.

Delaying a Job

Sometimes you’ll want to schedule work to be executed sometime in the future. Both the put and release methods have a delay argument.

Time to Run

Every job has an associated time to run (TTR) value specified by the ttr argument to the put method. It defaults to 60 seconds.

The server starts a timer when a job is reserved. If the consumer doesn’t send a delete, release, or bury command within the TTR, the job will time out and be released back into the ready queue.

If more time is required to complete a job, the touch method can be used to refresh the TTR.

Job Lifecycle

Here’s a great flowchart from the beanstalkd protocol documentation:

 put with delay               release with delay
----------------> [DELAYED] <------------.
                      |                   |
                      | (time passes)     |
                      |                   |
 put                  v     reserve       |       delete
-----------------> [READY] ---------> [RESERVED] --------> *poof*
                     ^  ^                |  |
                     |   \  release      |  |
                     |    `-------------'   |
                     |                      |
                     | kick                 |
                     |                      |
                     |       bury           |
                  [BURIED] <---------------'
                     |
                     |  delete
                      `--------> *poof*