
Beanstalk::Client - Client class to talk to beanstalkd server

use Beanstalk::Client;
my $client = Beanstalk::Client->new(
{ server => "localhost",
default_tube => 'mine',
}
);
# Send a job with explicit data
my $job = $client->put(
{ data => "data",
priority => 100,
ttr => 120,
delay => 5,
}
);
# Send job, data created by encoding @args. By default with YAML
my $job2 = $client->put(
{ priority => 100,
ttr => 120,
delay => 5,
},
@args
);
# Send job, data created by encoding @args with JSON
use JSON::XS;
$client->encoder(sub { encode_json(\@_) });
my $job2 = $client->put(
{ priority => 100,
ttr => 120,
delay => 5,
},
@args
);
# fetch a job
my $job3 = $client->reserve;

Beanstalk::Client provides a Perl API of protocol version 1.0 to the beanstalkd server, a fast, general-purpose, in-memory workqueue service by Keith Rarick.

The constructor accepts a single argument, which is a reference to a hash containing options. The options can be any of the accessor methods listed below.
Get/set the hostname, and port, to connect to. The port, which defaults to 11300, can be specified by appending it to the hostname with a : (eg "localhost:1234"). (Default: localhost:11300)
Get the socket connection to the server.
Set/get a default value, in seconds, for job delay. A job with a delay will be placed into a delayed state and will not be placed into the ready queue until the time period has passed. This value will be used by put and release as a default. (Default: 0)
Set/get a default value, in seconds, for job ttr (time to run). This value will be used by put as a default. (Default: 120)
Set/get a default value for job priority. The highest priority job is the job where the priority value is the lowest (ie jobs with a lower priority value are run first). This value will be used by put, release and bury as a default. (Default: 10000)
Set/get serialization encoder. $encoder is a reference to a subroutine that will be called when arguments to put need to be encoded to send to the beanstalkd server. The subroutine should accept a list of arguments and return a string representation to pass to the server. (Default: YAML::Syck::Dump)
Set/get the serialization decoder. $decoder is a reference to a subroutine that will be called when data from the beanstalkd server needs to be decoded. The subroutine will be passed the data fetched from the beanstalkd server and should return a list of values the application can use. (Default: YAML::Syck::Load)
Fetch the last error that happened.
Get/set timeout, in seconds, to use for the connect to the server.
Set/get the name of a default tube to put jobs into and fetch from.
By default a connection to a beanstalkd server will put into the default queue and also watch the default queue. If default_tube is set when connect is called the connection will be initialized so that put will put into the given tube and reserve will fetch jobs from the given tube. (Default: none)
Set/get debug value. If set to a true value then all communication with the server will be output with warn
These methods are used by clients that are placing work into the queue
Insert job into the currently used tube. Options may be
priority to use to queue the job. Jobs with smaller priority values will be scheduled before jobs with larger priorities. The most urgent priority is 0
Defaults to $self-priority>
An integer number of seconds to wait before putting the job in the ready queue. The job will be in the "delayed" state during this time
Defaults to $self-delay>
"time to run" - An integer number of seconds to allow a worker to run this job. This time is counted from the moment a worker reserves this job. If the worker does not delete, release, or bury the job within ttr seconds, the job will time out and the server will release the job. The minimum ttr is 1. If the client sends 0, the server will silently increase the ttr to 1.
The job body. Defaults to the result of calling the current encoder passing @args
Change tube that new jobs are inserted into
Reserve a job from the list of tubes currently being watched.
Returns a Beanstalk::Job on success. $timeout is the maximum number of seconds to wait for a job to become ready. If $timeout is not given then the client will wait indefinitely.
Returns undef on error or if $timeout expires.
Delete the specified job.
Release the specified job. Valid options are
The bury command puts a job into the "buried" state. Buried jobs are put into a FIFO linked list and will not be touched by the server again until a client kicks them with the "kick" command.
Valid options are
New priority to assign to the job
Calling touch with the id of a reserved job will reset the time left for the job to complete back to the original ttr value.
Specifies a tube to add to the watch list. If the tube doesn't exist, it will be created
Stop watching $tube
Watch only the list of given tube names
Connect to server. If sucessful, set the tube to use and tube to watch if a default_tube was specified.
Disconnect from server. socket method will return undef.
Disconnect from server. socket method will return undef.
Peek at the job id specified. If the job exists returns a Beanstalk::Job object. Returns undef on error or if job does not exist.
Peek at the first job that is in the ready queue. If there is a job in the ready queue returns a Beanstalk::Job object. Returns undef on error or if there are no ready jobs.
Peek at the first job that is in the delayed queue. If there is a job in the delayed queue returns a Beanstalk::Job object. Returns undef on error or if there are no delayed jobs.
Peek at the first job that is in the buried queue. If there is a job in the buried queue returns a Beanstalk::Job object. Returns undef on error or if there are no buried jobs.
The kick command applies only to the currently used tube. It moves jobs into the ready queue. If there are any buried jobs, it will only kick buried jobs. Otherwise it will kick delayed jobs. The server will not kick more than $bound jobs. Returns the number of jobs kicked, or undef if there was an error.
The kick-job command is a variant of kick that operats with a single job identified by its job id. If the given job id exists and is in a buried or delayed state, it will be moved to the ready queue of the same tube where it currently belongs. Returns undef on error.
Note: the kick_job command was only introduced on version 1.8 of beanstalk. If you have a version of beanstalk prior to this then the command will return an error.
Return stats for the specified job $id. Returns undef on error.
If the job exists, the return will be a Stats object with the following methods
Return stats for the specified tube $tube. Returns undef on error.
If the tube exists, the return will be a Stats object with the following methods
Returns a list of tubes
Returns the current tube being used. This is the tube which put will place jobs.
Returns a list of tubes being watched, or the number of tubes being watched in a scalar context. These are the tubes that reserve will check to find jobs. On error an empty list, or undef in a scalar context, will be returned.
Pause from reserving any jobs in $tube for $delay seconds.
Returns true on success and undef on error.

More tests

Large parts of this documention were lifted from the documention that comes with beanstalkd

http://kr.github.com/beanstalkd/
Beanstalk::Pool, Beanstalk::Job, Beanstalk::Stats

Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>


The Git repository is available at http://github.com/gbarr/perl-beanstalk-client
Please report any bugs or feature requests to the issue tracker at http://github.com/gbarr/perl-beanstalk-client/issues

Copyright (C) 2008-2012 by Graham Barr.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.