Configuring channels and the job runner¶
What is the job runner?¶
The job runner is the main process managing the dispatch of delayed jobs to available Odoo workers
How does it work?¶
- It starts as a thread in the Odoo main process
- It receives postgres NOTIFY messages each time jobs are added or updated in the queue_job table.
- It maintains an in-memory priority queue of jobs that is populated from the queue_job tables in all databases.
- It does not run jobs itself, but asks Odoo to run them through an
anonymous
/queue_job/runjob
HTTP request. [1]
How to use it?¶
- By default, the job runner will
- use
root:1
as channels configuration (one single channel) - connect to Odoo via
- host
xmlrpc_interface
orlocalhost
if unset - portxmlrpc_port
, or8069
if unset - connect to the database via
db_host
anddb_port
- use
- To adjust these values, you can either use environment variables:
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_CHANNELS=root:4
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_SCHEME=https
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_HOST=load-balancer
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_PORT=443
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_HTTP_AUTH_USER=connector
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_HTTP_AUTH_PASSWORD=s3cr3t
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_JOBRUNNER_DB_HOST=master-db
ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_JOBRUNNER_DB_PORT=5432
- Or, alternatively, you can add a
[queue_job]
section in Odoo’s configuration file, like this:
[queue_job]
channels = root:4
scheme = https
host = load-balancer
port = 443
http_auth_user = connector
http_auth_password = s3cr3t
jobrunner_db_host = master-db
jobrunner_db_port = 5432
- If using
anybox.recipe.odoo
, add this to your buildout configuration:
[odoo]
recipe = anybox.recipe.odoo
(...)
queue_job.channels = root:4
queue_job.scheme = https
queue_job.host = load-balancer
queue_job.port = 443
queue_job.http_auth_user = jobrunner
queue_job.http_auth_password = s3cr3t
- Start Odoo with
--load=web,web_kanban,queue_job
and--workers
greater than 1 [2], or set theserver_wide_modules
option in The Odoo configuration file:
[options]
(...)
workers = 4
server_wide_modules = web,web_kanban,queue_job
(...)
- Or, if using
anybox.recipe.odoo
:
[odoo]
recipe = anybox.recipe.odoo
(...)
options.workers = 4
options.server_wide_modules = web,web_kanban,queue_job
- Confirm the runner is starting correctly by checking the odoo log file:
...INFO...queue_job.jobrunner.runner: starting
...INFO...queue_job.jobrunner.runner: initializing database connections
...INFO...queue_job.jobrunner.runner: queue job runner ready for db <dbname>
...INFO...queue_job.jobrunner.runner: database connections ready
- Create jobs (eg using base_import_async) and observe they start immediately and in parallel.
- Tip: to enable debug logging for the queue job, use
--log-handler=odoo.addons.queue_job:DEBUG
Caveat¶
- After creating a new database or installing queue_job on an existing database, Odoo must be restarted for the runner to detect it.
- When Odoo shuts down normally, it waits for running jobs to finish.
However, when the Odoo server crashes or is otherwise force-stopped,
running jobs are interrupted while the runner has no chance to know
they have been aborted. In such situations, jobs may remain in
started
orenqueued
state after the Odoo server is halted. Since the runner has no way to know if they are actually running or not, and does not know for sure if it is safe to restart the jobs, it does not attempt to restart them automatically. Such stale jobs therefore fill the running queue and prevent other jobs to start. You must therefore requeue them manually, either from the Jobs view, or by running the following SQL statement before starting Odoo:
update queue_job set state='pending' where state in ('started', 'enqueued')
Footnotes
[1] | From a security standpoint, it is safe to have an anonymous HTTP request because this request only accepts to run jobs that are enqueued. |
[2] | It works with the threaded Odoo server too, although this way of running Odoo is obviously not for production purposes. |
What is a channel?¶
-
class
odoo.addons.queue_job.jobrunner.channels.
Channel
(name, parent, capacity=None, sequential=False, throttle=0)[source] A channel for jobs, with a maximum capacity.
When jobs are created by queue_job modules, they may be associated to a job channel. Jobs with no channel are inserted into the root channel.
Job channels are joined in a hierarchy down to the root channel. When a job channel has available capacity, jobs are dequeued, marked as running in the channel and are inserted into the queue of the parent channel where they wait for available capacity and so on.
Job channels can be visualized as water channels with a given flow limit (= capacity). Channels are joined together in a downstream channel and the flow limit of the downstream channel limits upstream channels.:
---------------------+ | | Ch. A C:4,Q:12,R:4 +----------------------- ---------------------+ Ch. root C:5,Q:0,R:4 | ---------------------+ Ch. B C:1,Q:0,R:0 ---------------------+-----------------------
The above diagram illustrates two channels joining in the root channel. The root channel has a capacity of 5, and 4 running jobs coming from Channel A. Channel A has a capacity of 4, all in use (passed down to the root channel), and 12 jobs enqueued. Channel B has a capacity of 1, none in use. This means that whenever a new job comes in channel B, there will be available room for it to run in the root channel.
Note that from the point of view of a channel, ‘running’ means enqueued in the downstream channel. Only jobs marked running in the root channel are actually sent to Odoo for execution.
Should a downstream channel have less capacity than its upstream channels, jobs going downstream will be enqueued in the downstream channel, and compete normally according to their properties (priority, etc).
Using this technique, it is possible to enforce sequence in a channel with a capacity of 1. It is also possible to dedicate a channel with a limited capacity for application-autocreated subchannels without risking to overflow the system.
How to configure Channels?¶
The ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_CHANNELS
environment variable must be
set before starting Odoo in order to enable the job runner
and configure the capacity of the channels.
The general syntax is channel(.subchannel)*(:capacity(:key(=value)?)*)?,...
.
Intermediate subchannels which are not configured explicitly are autocreated with an unlimited capacity (except the root channel which if not configured gets a default capacity of 1).
A delay in seconds between jobs can be set at the channel level with
the throttle
key.
Example ODOO_QUEUE_JOB_CHANNELS
:
root:4
: allow up to 4 concurrent jobs in the root channel.root:4,root.sub:2
: allow up to 4 concurrent jobs in the root channel and up to 2 concurrent jobs in the channel namedroot.sub
.sub:2
: the same.root:4:throttle=2
: wait at least 2 seconds before starting the next job