rq/docs/patterns/index.md

2.3 KiB

title layout
RQ: Using RQ on Heroku patterns

Using RQ on Heroku

To setup RQ on Heroku, first add it to your requirements.txt file:

redis>=3
rq>=0.13

Create a file called run-worker.py with the following content (assuming you are using Redis To Go with Heroku):

import os
import urlparse
from redis import Redis
from rq import Queue, Connection
from rq.worker import HerokuWorker as Worker

listen = ['high', 'default', 'low']

redis_url = os.getenv('REDISTOGO_URL')
if not redis_url:
    raise RuntimeError('Set up Redis To Go first.')

urlparse.uses_netloc.append('redis')
url = urlparse.urlparse(redis_url)
conn = Redis(host=url.hostname, port=url.port, db=0, password=url.password)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    with Connection(conn):
        worker = Worker(map(Queue, listen))
        worker.work()

Then, add the command to your Procfile:

worker: python -u run-worker.py

Now, all you have to do is spin up a worker:

$ heroku scale worker=1

If you are using Heroku Redis) you might need to change the Redis connection as follows:

conn = redis.Redis(
    host=host,
    password=password,
    port=port,
    ssl=True,
    ssl_cert_reqs=None
)

and for using the cli:

rq info --config rq_conf

Where the rq_conf.py file looks like:

REDIS_HOST = "host"
REDIS_PORT = port
REDIS_PASSWORD = "password"
REDIS_SSL = True
REDIS_SSL_CA_CERTS = None
REDIS_DB = 0
REDIS_SSL_CERT_REQS = None

Putting RQ under foreman

Foreman is probably the process manager you use when you host your app on Heroku, or just because it's a pretty friendly tool to use in development.

When using RQ under foreman, you may experience that the workers are a bit quiet sometimes. This is because of Python buffering the output, so foreman cannot (yet) echo it. Here's a related Wiki page.

Just change the way you run your worker process, by adding the -u option (to force stdin, stdout and stderr to be totally unbuffered):

worker: python -u run-worker.py