# frozen_string_literal: true require "sidekiq/scheduled" require "sidekiq/api" require "zlib" require "base64" module Sidekiq ## # Automatically retry jobs that fail in Sidekiq. # Sidekiq's retry support assumes a typical development lifecycle: # # 0. Push some code changes with a bug in it. # 1. Bug causes job processing to fail, Sidekiq's middleware captures # the job and pushes it onto a retry queue. # 2. Sidekiq retries jobs in the retry queue multiple times with # an exponential delay, the job continues to fail. # 3. After a few days, a developer deploys a fix. The job is # reprocessed successfully. # 4. Once retries are exhausted, Sidekiq will give up and move the # job to the Dead Job Queue (aka morgue) where it must be dealt with # manually in the Web UI. # 5. After 6 months on the DJQ, Sidekiq will discard the job. # # A job looks like: # # { 'class' => 'HardWorker', 'args' => [1, 2, 'foo'], 'retry' => true } # # The 'retry' option also accepts a number (in place of 'true'): # # { 'class' => 'HardWorker', 'args' => [1, 2, 'foo'], 'retry' => 5 } # # The job will be retried this number of times before giving up. (If simply # 'true', Sidekiq retries 25 times) # # We'll add a bit more data to the job to support retries: # # * 'queue' - the queue to use # * 'retry_count' - number of times we've retried so far. # * 'error_message' - the message from the exception # * 'error_class' - the exception class # * 'failed_at' - the first time it failed # * 'retried_at' - the last time it was retried # * 'backtrace' - the number of lines of error backtrace to store # # We don't store the backtrace by default as that can add a lot of overhead # to the job and everyone is using an error service, right? # # The default number of retries is 25 which works out to about 3 weeks # You can change the default maximum number of retries in your initializer: # # Sidekiq.options[:max_retries] = 7 # # or limit the number of retries for a particular worker with: # # class MyWorker # include Sidekiq::Worker # sidekiq_options :retry => 10 # end # class JobRetry class Handled < ::RuntimeError; end class Skip < Handled; end include Sidekiq::Util DEFAULT_MAX_RETRY_ATTEMPTS = 25 def initialize(options = {}) @max_retries = Sidekiq.options.merge(options).fetch(:max_retries, DEFAULT_MAX_RETRY_ATTEMPTS) end # The global retry handler requires only the barest of data. # We want to be able to retry as much as possible so we don't # require the worker to be instantiated. def global(jobstr, queue) yield rescue Handled => ex raise ex rescue Sidekiq::Shutdown => ey # ignore, will be pushed back onto queue during hard_shutdown raise ey rescue Exception => e # ignore, will be pushed back onto queue during hard_shutdown raise Sidekiq::Shutdown if exception_caused_by_shutdown?(e) msg = Sidekiq.load_json(jobstr) if msg["retry"] attempt_retry(nil, msg, queue, e) else Sidekiq.death_handlers.each do |handler| handler.call(msg, e) rescue => handler_ex handle_exception(handler_ex, {context: "Error calling death handler", job: msg}) end end raise Handled end # The local retry support means that any errors that occur within # this block can be associated with the given worker instance. # This is required to support the `sidekiq_retries_exhausted` block. # # Note that any exception from the block is wrapped in the Skip # exception so the global block does not reprocess the error. The # Skip exception is unwrapped within Sidekiq::Processor#process before # calling the handle_exception handlers. def local(worker, jobstr, queue) yield rescue Handled => ex raise ex rescue Sidekiq::Shutdown => ey # ignore, will be pushed back onto queue during hard_shutdown raise ey rescue Exception => e # ignore, will be pushed back onto queue during hard_shutdown raise Sidekiq::Shutdown if exception_caused_by_shutdown?(e) msg = Sidekiq.load_json(jobstr) if msg["retry"].nil? msg["retry"] = worker.class.get_sidekiq_options["retry"] end raise e unless msg["retry"] attempt_retry(worker, msg, queue, e) # We've handled this error associated with this job, don't # need to handle it at the global level raise Skip end private # Note that +worker+ can be nil here if an error is raised before we can # instantiate the worker instance. All access must be guarded and # best effort. def attempt_retry(worker, msg, queue, exception) max_retry_attempts = retry_attempts_from(msg["retry"], @max_retries) msg["queue"] = (msg["retry_queue"] || queue) m = exception_message(exception) if m.respond_to?(:scrub!) m.force_encoding("utf-8") m.scrub! end msg["error_message"] = m msg["error_class"] = exception.class.name count = if msg["retry_count"] msg["retried_at"] = Time.now.to_f msg["retry_count"] += 1 else msg["failed_at"] = Time.now.to_f msg["retry_count"] = 0 end if msg["backtrace"] lines = if msg["backtrace"] == true exception.backtrace else exception.backtrace[0...msg["backtrace"].to_i] end msg["error_backtrace"] = compress_backtrace(lines) end if count < max_retry_attempts delay = delay_for(worker, count, exception) # Logging here can break retries if the logging device raises ENOSPC #3979 # logger.debug { "Failure! Retry #{count} in #{delay} seconds" } retry_at = Time.now.to_f + delay payload = Sidekiq.dump_json(msg) Sidekiq.redis do |conn| conn.zadd("retry", retry_at.to_s, payload) end else # Goodbye dear message, you (re)tried your best I'm sure. retries_exhausted(worker, msg, exception) end end def retries_exhausted(worker, msg, exception) begin block = worker&.sidekiq_retries_exhausted_block block&.call(msg, exception) rescue => e handle_exception(e, {context: "Error calling retries_exhausted", job: msg}) end send_to_morgue(msg) unless msg["dead"] == false Sidekiq.death_handlers.each do |handler| handler.call(msg, exception) rescue => e handle_exception(e, {context: "Error calling death handler", job: msg}) end end def send_to_morgue(msg) logger.info { "Adding dead #{msg["class"]} job #{msg["jid"]}" } payload = Sidekiq.dump_json(msg) DeadSet.new.kill(payload, notify_failure: false) end def retry_attempts_from(msg_retry, default) if msg_retry.is_a?(Integer) msg_retry else default end end def delay_for(worker, count, exception) if worker&.sidekiq_retry_in_block custom_retry_in = retry_in(worker, count, exception).to_i return custom_retry_in if custom_retry_in > 0 end seconds_to_delay(count) end # delayed_job uses the same basic formula def seconds_to_delay(count) (count**4) + 15 + (rand(30) * (count + 1)) end def retry_in(worker, count, exception) worker.sidekiq_retry_in_block.call(count, exception) rescue Exception => e handle_exception(e, {context: "Failure scheduling retry using the defined `sidekiq_retry_in` in #{worker.class.name}, falling back to default"}) nil end def exception_caused_by_shutdown?(e, checked_causes = []) return false unless e.cause # Handle circular causes checked_causes << e.object_id return false if checked_causes.include?(e.cause.object_id) e.cause.instance_of?(Sidekiq::Shutdown) || exception_caused_by_shutdown?(e.cause, checked_causes) end # Extract message from exception. # Set a default if the message raises an error def exception_message(exception) # App code can stuff all sorts of crazy binary data into the error message # that won't convert to JSON. exception.message.to_s[0, 10_000] rescue +"!!! ERROR MESSAGE THREW AN ERROR !!!" end def compress_backtrace(backtrace) serialized = Sidekiq.dump_json(backtrace) compressed = Zlib::Deflate.deflate(serialized) Base64.encode64(compressed) end end end