What's New?
v2.1.0
Add back ability to work on multiple queues on a per-Provider basis. Currently only the DBProvider
supports it.
Add support for before
and after
lifecycle methods on a Job instance.
Add ability to restrict interceptor execution with a jobPattern
annotation. (This is similar to the eventPattern
annotation provided by ColdBox.)
v2.0.5
DBProvider: Disable forceRun
because it is causing ColdBox Futures to lose mappings.
v2.0.4
Reload module mappings in an attempt to work around ColdBox Async losing them.
v2.0.3
SyncProvider: Add pool to releaseJob call
v2.0.2
Fix moduleSettings missing a queryOptions key for failed jobs
v2.0.1
ColdBoxAsyncProvider now correctly respects Worker Pool conifguration, including queues.
v2.0.0
BREAKING CHANGES
Worker Pools can only define a single queue to work
In order to work with new Queue Providers, the Worker Pools need to be updated to only work a specific queue. This is because many future Queue Providers like RabbitMQ and Amazon SQS only support listening to a single queue in a consumer.
If you previously had multiple queues defined in a Worker Pool, you will need to define multiple Worker Pool instances, one for each of the queues.
Notice that the method has been renamed from onQueues
to onQueue
.
Additionally, there are no more wildcard queues. Every queue you publish to must have a WorkerPool defined in order for that Job to be worked.
Finally, queue priorities are defined by the number of workers (quantity
) you define for the WorkerPool. WorkerPools can no longer share workers across queues.
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