Delayed Job records a serialized payload object to the delayed_jobs
table. If you want to know what kinds of jobs are currently enqueued, you must write complicated and brittle queries that parse the serialized payloads (ie the Delayed::Job#handler
column). This gem exists to make queue administration more convenient. β¨
This plugin adds an indexed class_name
column to the delayed_jobs
table. By default, it contains the stringified class name of the enqeued payload object.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'delayed_job_class_name_plugin'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install delayed_job_class_name_plugin
Run the required database migrations:
$ rails generate delayed_job_class_name_plugin:install
$ rails db:migrate
In certain cases, you may want to parse the payload object in a custom way to derive its "class name."
For example, ActiveJob in Rails, will always enqueue a JobWrapper
as the payload object. This object, predictably, wraps the object that's actually doing work. By default, "JobWrapper" would be the value of Delayed::Job#class_name
. You may find this less helpful than having #class_name
contain the class of the wrapped object.
Let's see how we can use the #custom_parser
configuration to accomplish this:
# config/initializers/delayed_job.rb
Delayed::ClassName.configure do |c|
c.custom_parser = ->(payload_object) {
if payload_object.class == ActiveJob::QueueAdapters::DelayedJobAdapter::JobWrapper
payload_object.job_data['job_class']
else
payload_object.class.name
end
}
end
Configuration#custom_parser
can take a Proc
which receives a single parameter, job
, and returns a String
that will be written to Delayed::Job#class_name
at enqueue-time.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.