Recently I've been researching the use of Beanstalkd with PHP. I've learned quite a bit but have a few questions about the setup on a server, etc.
Here is how I see it working:
I have a bash script (such as the following one) that is run as a deamon that basically executes a PHP script.
#!/bin/sh
php worker.php
4) The worker script would have something like this to execute the queued up tasks:
while(1) {
$job = $this->pheanstalk->watch('test')->ignore('default')->reserve();
$job_encoded = json_decode($job->getData(), false);
$done_jobs[] = $job_encoded;
$this->log('job:'.print_r($job_encoded, 1));
$this->pheanstalk->delete($job);
}
Now here are my questions based on the above setup (which correct me if I'm wrong about that):
Say I have the task of importing an RSS feed into a database or something. If 10 users do this at once, they'll all be queued up in the "test" tube. However, they'd then only be executed one at a time. Would it be better to have 10 different tubes all executing at the same time?
If I do need more tubes, does that then also mean that i'd need 10 worker scripts? One for each tube all running concurrently with basically the same code except for the string literal in the watch() function.
If I run that script as a daemon, how does that work? Will it constantly be executing the worker.php script? That script loops until the queue is empty theoretically, so shouldn't it only be kicked off once? How does the daemon decide how often to execute worker.php? Is that just a setting?
Thanks!
job-stat
command to see where a particular $job came from (which tube), or put some meta-information into the message if you need to tell each type from another.reserve()
to have it wait for a few seconds, or more, for the next job the become available without spinning out of control in a tight loop that does not pause at all - even if there was nothing to do.Addendum:
exec $@
). Whenever the php script exits, it re-runs the PHP.If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
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