# DelayedJobProgress [![Gem Version](https://img.shields.io/gem/v/delayed_job_progress.svg?style=flat)](http://rubygems.org/gems/delayed_job_progress) [![Gem Downloads](https://img.shields.io/gem/dt/delayed_job_progress.svg?style=flat)](http://rubygems.org/gems/delayed_job_progress) [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/GBH/delayed_job_progress.svg?style=flat)](https://travis-ci.org/GBH/delayed_job_progress) Extension for `Delayed::Job` that allows better tracking of jobs! ## Setup * add to Gemfile: `gem 'delayed_job_progress'` * `bundle install` * `rails g delayed_job:progress` * `rake db:migrate` ## Configuration and Usage Consider this: ```ruby class User < ActiveRecord::Base # convenient relationship to grab associated jobs has_many :jobs, :as => :record, :class_name => 'DelayedJob' end ``` Creating a delayed job: ```ruby user = User.find(123) user.delay.do_things! ``` If you're using custom jobs you'll need to do something like this: ```ruby class CustomUserJob < Struct.new(:user_id) def enqueue(job) job.record = User.find(user_id) job.identifier = 'unique_identifier' job.progress_max = 100 job.progress_current = 0 end def before(job) @job = job @user = job.record end def perform @job.update_column(:progress_state, 'working') (0..100).each do |i| @user.do_a_thing(i) @job.update_column(:progress_current, i) end @job.update_column(:progress_state, 'complete') end end Delayed::Job.enqueue CustomUserJob.new(123) ``` This will create a Delayed::Job record: ```ruby -> user.jobs => [#] ``` That job knows about object that spawned it: ```ruby -> Delayed::Job.last.record => # ``` `Delayed::Job` records now have new attributes: * `progress_max` - default is `100`. You can change it to whatever during `enqueue`. * `progress_current` - default is `0`. You can manually increment it while job is running. Will be set to `process_max` when job completes. * `progress_state` - default is `nil`. Optional informational string. * `completed_at` - when job is done this timestamp is recorded. This extension also introduces worker setting that keeps completed jobs around. This way you can keep list of completed jobs for a while. If you want to remove them, you need to `.destroy(:force)` them. ``` Delayed::Worker.destroy_completed_jobs = false ``` ## Jobs Controller - `GET /jobs` - List all jobs. Can filter based on associated record via `record_type` and `record_id` parameters. `identifier` parameter can be used as well - `GET /jobs/` - Status of a job. Will see all the Delayed::Job attributes including things like progress - `DELETE /jobs/` - If job is stuck/failed, we can remove it - `POST /jobs//reload` - Restart failed job