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Sidekiq::Throttled

CI Status Latest Version API Documentation

Concurrency and threshold throttling for Sidekiq.

Installation

Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

gem "sidekiq-throttled"

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install sidekiq-throttled

Usage

Add somewhere in your app’s bootstrap (e.g. config/initializers/sidekiq.rb if you are using Rails):

require "sidekiq/throttled"

Once you’ve done that you can include Sidekiq::Throttled::Job to your job classes and configure throttling:

class MyJob
  include Sidekiq::Job
  include Sidekiq::Throttled::Job

  sidekiq_options :queue => :my_queue

  sidekiq_throttle(
    # Allow maximum 10 concurrent jobs of this class at a time.
    concurrency: { limit: 10 },
    # Allow maximum 1K jobs being processed within one hour window.
    threshold: { limit: 1_000, period: 1.hour }
  )

  def perform
    # ...
  end
end
Tip
Sidekiq::Throttled::Job is aliased as Sidekiq::Throttled::Worker, thus if you’re using Sidekiq::Worker naming convention, you can use the alias for consistency:
class MyWorker
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  include Sidekiq::Throttled::Worker

  # ...
end

Web UI

To add a Throttled tab to your sidekiq web dashboard, require it durring your application initialization.

require "sidekiq/throttled/web"

Configuration

Sidekiq::Throttled.configure do |config|
  # Period in seconds to exclude queue from polling in case it returned
  # {config.cooldown_threshold} amount of throttled jobs in a row. Set
  # this value to `nil` to disable cooldown manager completely.
  # Default: 1.0
  config.cooldown_period = 1.0

  # Exclude queue from polling after it returned given amount of throttled
  # jobs in a row.
  # Default: 100 (cooldown after hundredth throttled job in a row)
  config.cooldown_threshold = 100
end
Warning
Cooldown Settings

If a queue contains a thousand jobs in a row that will be throttled, the cooldown will kick-in 10 times in a row, meaning it will take 10 seconds before all those jobs are put back at the end of the queue and you actually start processing other jobs.

You may want to adjust the cooldown_threshold and cooldown_period, keeping in mind that this will also impact the load on your Redis server.

Middleware(s)

Sidekiq::Throttled relies on following bundled middlewares:

  • Sidekiq::Throttled::Middlewares::Server

The middleware is automatically injected when you require sidekiq/throttled. In rare cases, when this causes an issue, you can change middleware order manually:

Sidekiq.configure_server do |config|
  # ...

  config.server_middleware do |chain|
    chain.prepend(Sidekiq::Throttled::Middlewares::Server)
  end
end

Observer

You can specify an observer that will be called on throttling. To do so pass an :observer option with callable object:

class MyJob
  include Sidekiq::Job
  include Sidekiq::Throttled::Job

  MY_OBSERVER = lambda do |strategy, *args|
    # do something
  end

  sidekiq_options queue: :my_queue

  sidekiq_throttle(
    concurrency: { limit: 10 },
    threshold:   { limit: 100, period: 1.hour },
    observer:    MY_OBSERVER
  )

  def perform(*args)
    # ...
  end
end

Observer will receive strategy, *args arguments, where strategy is a Symbol :concurrency or :threshold, and *args are the arguments that were passed to the job.

Dynamic throttling

You can throttle jobs dynamically with :key_suffix option:

class MyJob
  include Sidekiq::Job
  include Sidekiq::Throttled::Job

  sidekiq_options queue: :my_queue

  sidekiq_throttle(
    # Allow maximum 10 concurrent jobs per user at a time.
    concurrency: { limit: 10, key_suffix: -> (user_id) { user_id } }
  )

  def perform(user_id)
    # ...
  end
end

You can also supply dynamic values for limits and periods by supplying a proc for these values. The proc will be evaluated at the time the job is fetched and will receive the same arguments that are passed to the job.

class MyJob
  include Sidekiq::Job
  include Sidekiq::Throttled::Job

  sidekiq_options queue: :my_queue

  sidekiq_throttle(
    # Allow maximum 1000 concurrent jobs of this class at a time for VIPs and 10 for all other users.
    concurrency: {
      limit:      ->(user_id) { User.vip?(user_id) ? 1_000 : 10 },
      key_suffix: ->(user_id) { User.vip?(user_id) ? "vip" : "std" }
    },
    # Allow 1000 jobs/hour to be processed for VIPs and 10/day for all others
    threshold: {
      limit:      ->(user_id) { User.vip?(user_id) ? 1_000 : 10 },
      period:     ->(user_id) { User.vip?(user_id) ? 1.hour : 1.day },
      key_suffix: ->(user_id) { User.vip?(user_id) ? "vip" : "std" }
    }
  )

  def perform(user_id)
    # ...
  end
end

You also can use several different keys to throttle one worker.

class MyJob
  include Sidekiq::Job
  include Sidekiq::Throttled::Job

  sidekiq_options queue: :my_queue

  sidekiq_throttle(
    # Allow maximum 10 concurrent jobs per project at a time and maximum 2 jobs per user
    concurrency: [
      { limit: 10, key_suffix: -> (project_id, user_id) { project_id } },
      { limit: 2, key_suffix: -> (project_id, user_id) { user_id } }
    ]
    # For :threshold it works the same
  )

  def perform(project_id, user_id)
    # ...
  end
end
Important
Don’t forget to specify :key_suffix and make it return different values if you are using dynamic limit/period options. Otherwise, you risk getting into some trouble.

Concurrency throttling fine-tuning

Concurrency throttling is based on distributed locks. Those locks have default time to live (TTL) set to 15 minutes. If your job takes more than 15 minutes to finish, lock will be released and you might end up with more jobs running concurrently than you expect.

This is done to avoid deadlocks - when by any reason (e.g. Sidekiq process was OOM-killed) cleanup middleware wasn’t executed and locks were not released.

If your job takes more than 15 minutes to complete, you can tune concurrency lock TTL to fit your needs:

# Set concurrency strategy lock TTL to 1 hour.
sidekiq_throttle(concurrency: { limit: 20, ttl: 1.hour.to_i })

Supported Ruby Versions

This library aims to support and is tested against the following Ruby versions:

  • Ruby 2.7.x

  • Ruby 3.0.x

  • Ruby 3.1.x

  • Ruby 3.2.x

  • Ruby 3.3.x

If something doesn’t work on one of these versions, it’s a bug.

This library may inadvertently work (or seem to work) on other Ruby versions, however support will only be provided for the versions listed above.

If you would like this library to support another Ruby version or implementation, you may volunteer to be a maintainer. Being a maintainer entails making sure all tests run and pass on that implementation. When something breaks on your implementation, you will be responsible for providing patches in a timely fashion. If critical issues for a particular implementation exist at the time of a major release, support for that Ruby version may be dropped.

Supported Sidekiq Versions

This library aims to support and work with following Sidekiq versions:

  • Sidekiq 7.0.x

  • Sidekiq 7.1.x

  • Sidekiq 7.2.x

And the following Sidekiq Pro versions:

  • Sidekiq Pro 7.0.x

  • Sidekiq Pro 7.1.x

  • Sidekiq Pro 7.2.x

Development

bundle install
bundle exec appraisal generate
bundle exec appraisal install
bundle exec rake

Sidekiq-Pro

If you’re working on Sidekiq-Pro support make sure that you have Sidekiq-Pro license set either in the global config, or in BUNDLE_GEMS__CONTRIBSYS__COM environment variable.

Contributing

  • Fork sidekiq-throttled on GitHub

  • Make your changes

  • Ensure all tests pass (bundle exec rake)

  • Send a pull request

  • If we like them we’ll merge them

  • If we’ve accepted a patch, feel free to ask for commit access!

Endorsement

SensorTower

The initial work on the project was initiated to address the needs of SensorTower.

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