Oban Releases

Pro v1.5.0-rc.0

Docs

This release includes the new job decorator, unified migrations, a index-backed simple unique mode, changes for distributed PostgreSQL, improved batches, streamlined chains, worker aliases, hybrid job composition, and other performance improvements.

Elixir Support

This release requires a minimum of Elixir v1.14. We officially support 3 Elixir versions back, and use of some newer Elixir and Erlang/OTP features bumped the minimum up to v1.14.

🎨 Job Decorator

The new Oban.Pro.Decorator module converts functions into Oban jobs with a teeny-tiny @job true annotation. Decorated functions, such as those in contexts or other non-worker modules, can be executed as fully fledged background jobs with retries, priority, scheduling, uniqueness, and all the other guarantees you have come to expect from Oban jobs.

defmodule Business do
  use Oban.Pro.Decorator

  @job max_attempts: 3, queue: :notifications
  def activate(account_id) when is_integer(account_id) do
    case Account.fetch(account_id) do
      {:ok, account} ->
        account
        |> notify_admin()
        |> notify_users()

      :error ->
        {:cancel, :not_found}
    end
  end
end

# Insert a Business.activate/1 job
Business.insert_activate(123)

The @job decorator also supports most standard Job options, validated at compile time. As expected, the options can be overridden at runtime through an additional generated clause. Along with generated insert functions, there’s also a new variant that be used to build up job changesets for bulk insert, and a relay_ variant that operates like a distributed async/await.

Finally, the generated functions also respect patterns and guards, so you can write assertive clauses that defend against bad inputs or break logic into multiple clauses.

🦆 Unified Migrations

Oban has had centralized, versioned migrations from the beginning. When there’s a new release with database changes, you run the migrations and it figures out what to change on its own. Pro behaved differently for reasons that made sense when there was a single producers table, but don’t track with multiple tables and custom indexes.

Now Pro has unified migrations to keep all the necessary tables and indexes updated and fresh, and you’ll be warned at runtime if the migrations aren’t current.

See the Oban.Pro.Migration module for more details, or check the v1.5 Upgrade Guide for instructions on putting it to use.

🦄 Enhanced Unique

Oban’s standard unique options are robust, but they require multiple queries and centralized locks to function. Now Pro supports an simplified, opt-in unique mode designed for speed, correctness, scalability, and simplicity.

The enhanced hybrid and simple modes allows slightly fewer options while boosting insert performance 1.5x-3.5x, from reducing database load with fewer queries, improving memory usage, and staying correct across multiple processes/nodes.

Here’s a comparison between inserting various batches with legacy and simple modes:

jobs legacy simple boost
100 45.08 33.93 1.36
1000 140.64 81.452 1.72
10000 3149.71 979.47 3.22
20000 oom error 1741.67

See more in the Enhanced Unique section.

🚚 Distributed PostgreSQL

There were a handful of PostgreSQL features used in Oban and Pro that prevented it from running in distributed PostgreSQL clients such as Yugabyte.

A few table creation options prevented even running the migrations due to unsupported database features. Then there were advisory locks, which are part of how Oban normally handles unique jobs, and how Pro coordinates queues globally.

We’ve worked around both all of these limitations and it’s possible to run Oban and Pro on Yugabyte with most of the same functionality as regular PostgreSQL (global, rate limits, queue partitioning).

🍪 Improved Batches

One of the Pro’s original three features, batches link the execution of many jobs as a group and run optional callback jobs after jobs are processed.

Composing batches used to rely on a dedicated worker, one that couldn’t be composed with other worker types. Now, there’s a stand alone Oban.Pro.Batch module that’s used to dynamically build, append, and manipulate batches from any type of job, and with much more functionality.

Batches gain support for streams (creating and appending with them), clearer callbacks, and allow setting any Oban.Job option on callback jobs.

alias Oban.Pro.Batch

mail_jobs = Enum.map(mail_args, &MyApp.MailWorker.new/1)
push_jobs = Enum.map(push_args, &MyApp.PushWorker.new/1)

[callback_opts: [priority: 9], callback_worker: CallbackWorker]
|> Batch.new()
|> Batch.add(mail_jobs)
|> Batch.add(push_jobs)

🔗 Streamlined Chains

Chains now operate like workflows, where jobs are scheduled until they’re ready to run and then descheduled after the previous link in the chain completes. Preemptive chaining doesn’t clog queues with waiting jobs, and it chews through a backlog without any polling.

Chains are also a standard Oban.Pro.Worker option now. There’s no need to define a chain specific worker, in fact, doing so is deprecated. Just add the chain option and you’re guaranteed a FIFO chain of jobs:

-  use Oban.Pro.Workers.Chain, by: :worker
+  use Oban.Pro.Worker, chain: [by: :worker]

See more in the Chained Jobs section.

🖇️ Improved Workflows

Workflows began the transition from a dedicated worker to a stand-alone module several versions ago. Now that transition is complete, and workflows can be composed from any type of job.

All workflow management functions have moved to a centralized Oban.Pro.Workflow module. An expanded set of functions, including the ability to cancel an entire workflow, conveniently work with either a workflow job or id, so it’s possible to maneuver workflows from anywhere.

Perhaps the most exciting addition, because it’s visual and we like shiny things, is the addition of mermaid output for visualization. Mermaid has become the graphing standard, and it’s an excellent way to visualize workflows in tools like LiveBook.

alias Oban.Pro.Workflow

workflow =
  Workflow.new()
  |> Workflow.add(:a, EchoWorker.new(%{id: 1}))
  |> Workflow.add(:b, EchoWorker.new(%{id: 2}), deps: [:a])
  |> Workflow.add(:c, EchoWorker.new(%{id: 3}), deps: [:b])
  |> Workflow.add(:d, EchoWorker.new(%{id: 4}), deps: [:c])

Oban.insert_all(workflow)

Workflow.cancel_jobs(workflow.id)

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 Worker Aliases

Worker aliases solve a perennial production issue—how to rename workers without breaking existing jobs. Aliasing allows jobs enqueued with the original worker name to continue executing without exceptions using the new worker code.

-defmodule MyApp.UserPurge do
+defmodule MyApp.DataPurge do
-  use Oban.Pro.Worker
+  use Oban.Pro.Worker, aliases: [MyApp.UserPurge]

See more in the Worker Aliases section.

Enhancements

  • [Smart] Implement check_available/1 engine callback for faster staging queries.

    The smart engine defines a custom check_available/1 callback that vastly outperforms the Basic implementation on large tables. This table illustrates the difference in a benchmark of 24 queues with an event split of available and completed jobs on a local database with no additional load:

    jobs original optimized boost
    2.4m 107.79ms 0.72ms 149x
    4.8m 172.10ms 1.15ms 149x
    7.2m 242.32ms 4.28ms 56x
    9.6m 309.46ms 7.89ms 39x

    The difference in production may be much greater.

Worker

  • [Worker] Add before_process/1 callback.

    The new callback is applied before process/1 is called, and is able to to modify the job or stop processing entirely. Like after_process, it executes in the job’s process after all internal processing (encryption, structuring) are applied.

  • [Worker] Avoid re-running stages during after_process/1 hooks.

    Stages such as structuring and encryption are only ran once during execution, then the output is reused in hooks.

  • [Worker] Prevent compile time dependencies in worker hooks.

    Explicit worker hooks are now aliased to prevent a compile time dependency. Initial validation for explicit hooks is reduced as a result, but it retains checks for global hooks.

Batch

  • [Batch] Add new callbacks with clearer, batch-specific names.

    The old handle_ names aren’t clear in the context of hybrid job compositions. This introduces new batch_ prefixed callbacks for the Oban.Pro.Batch module. The legacy callbacks are still handled for backward compatibility.

  • [Batch] Add from_workflow/2 for simplified Batch/Worker composition.

    Create a batch from a workflow by augmenting all jobs to also be part of a batch.

  • [Batch] Add cancel_jobs/2 for easy cancellation of an entire batch.

  • [Batch] Add append/2 for extending batches with new jobs.

  • [Batch] Uniformly accept job or batch_id in all functions.

    Now it’s possible to fetch batch jobs from within a process/1 block via a Job struct, or from anywhere in code with the batch_id alone.

Workflow

  • [Workflow] Add get_job/3 for fetching a single dependent job.

    Internally it uses all_jobs/3, but the name and arguments make it clear that this is the way to get a single workflow job.

  • [Workflow] Add cancel_jobs/3 for easy cancellation of an entire workflow.

    The new helper function simplifies cancelling full or partial workflows using the same query logic behind all_jobs and stream_jobs.

  • [Workflow] Drop optional dependency on libgraph

    The libgraph dependency hasn’t had a new release in years and is no longer necessary, we can build the same simple graph with the digraph module available in OTP.

  • [Workflow] Add to_mermaid/1 for mermaid graph output.

    Now that we’re using digraph we can also take control of rendering our own output, such as mermaid.

  • [Workflow] Uniformly accept job or workflow_id in all functions.

    Now it’s possible to fetch workflow jobs from within a process/1 block via a Job struct, or from anywhere in code with the workflow_id alone.

Bug Fixes

  • [Smart] Require a global queue lock with any flush handlers.

    Flush handlers for batches, chains, and workflows must be staggered without overlapping transactions. Without a mutex to stagger fetching the transactions on different nodes can’t see all completed jobs and handlers can misfire.

    This is most apparent with batches, as they don’t have a lifeline to clean up after there’s an issue as with workflows.

  • [DynamicPruner] Use state-specific timestamps when pruning.

    Previously, the most recent timestamp was used rather than the timestamp for the job’s current state.

  • [Workflow] Prevent incorrect workflow_id types by validating options passed to new/1.

Deprecations

  • [Oban.Pro.Workers.Batch] The worker is deprecated in favor of composing with the new Oban.Pro.Batch module.

  • [Oban.Pro.Workers.Chain] The worker is deprecated in favor of composing with the new chain option in Oban.Pro.Worker.

  • [Oban.Pro.Workers.Workflow] The worker is deprecated in favor of composing with the new Oban.Pro.Workflow module.

Pro v1.5.0-rc.1

Docs

Enhancements

  • [Workflow] Add get_recorded/3 and all_recorded/3 helpers.

    Fetching workflow dependencies to retreive their recorded output is a common operation. However, it’s repetitive and slightly wasteful because it loads an entire job when only part of the meta is required.

    The new get_recorded/3 and all_recorded/3 functions simplify fetching recordings from other workflow jobs. For example, to retrieve all recordings:

    %{"job_a" => job_a_return, "job_b" => job_b_return} = Workflow.all_recorded(job)
  • [Workflow] Use decorated job names in workflow graph output.

    Show the decorated name, i.e. Foo.bar/2, instead of generically using Oban.Pro.Decorator in workflow graphs.

  • [Smart] Async ack jobs with in a single update.

    A carefully crafted query is capable of acking all job rows in a single query. That reduces total queries per-transaction and data sent over the wire, and in an engine benchmark that constantly inserts and executes jobs, it reduces the total CPU load from 46% to 28%.

  • [Smart] Rely on upstream Repo.transaction/3 for automatic retries.

    Oban.Repo.transaction/3 now has built-in backoff for all transactions, so the Smart engine no longer needs to to implement it manually. All other engine operations, as well as plugins, now benefit from more resilient database transactions.

  • [Testing] Add :decorated option to assert/refute enqueued

    Testing decorated jobs is tricky because the worker is constant and exact args are opaque. The new :decorated assertion option expands a captured function and optional args into the correct shape for testing.

    For example, use a capture to test that a decorated function with any args was enqueued:

    assert_enqueued decorated: &Business.weekly_report/2
  • [Migration] Include the current prefix in migration warnings.

    The migration warning now indicates which prefix is missing the migration. This will help applications that miss the migration in one of several prefixes.

Bug Fixes

  • [Smart] Prevent indeterminate type errors in Postgres by casting literal values.

    PostgreSQL 16.2 (and possibly greater) can’t reliably determine the type of values passed literally into a prepared union query.

  • [Smart] Skip unnecessary empty query while fetching jobs.

    The smart engine made an “empty” producer query even when nothing required it. The empty query used the default public prefix, which caused problems for systems without oban_* tables in the public schema.

  • [Worker] Update parameterized type usage for Ecto v3.12 compatibility.

    The recently released Ecto v3.12 change the signature for parameterized types, e.g. enums, which broke enum in structured args.

  • [Workflow] Apply structured args in after_cancelled/2 callback.

    The after_cancelled hook was applied outside normal worker execution and it lacked structured args processing.

  • [Workflow] Inject current conf during after_cancelled/2 callbacks

    The after_cancelled/2 callback was passed a job without the current Oban configuration, which broke workflow functions such as all_jobs/2.

    Now the conf is injected accordingly, and error messages from unhandled after_cancelled/2 execeptions include the stacktrace.

  • [Workflow] Explicitly differentiate references to legacy Workflow worker.

    Conflicting aliases may cause compilation warnings and potential runtime issues for legacy workflows.

  • [DynamicCron] Prevent use of the :delete option with automatic sync mode.

    The :delete option has no effect with :automatic sync mode, and it shouldn’t be used. It’s no loger an accepted option because it could crash on boot and prevent any cron jobs from running.

  • [DynamicLifeline] Delete conflicting unique jobs while rescuing.

    The DynamicLifeline may moves executing jobs back to the available state on rescue. When a unique config includes the available state and omits the executing state, a duplicate may already be enqueued and waiting. Now the orphaned executing job is deleted on conflict to unblock subsequent rescue operations.

Pro v1.5.0-rc.2

Docs

Enhancements

  • [Smart] Increase base expected delay and retry counts for transaction safety.

    Expected retries apply to lock contention and serialization failures. Now there’s increased time between retries and many more of them to compensate for busy systems with many nodes.

  • [DynamicPruner] Always use per state timestamps for pruning.

    The DynamicPruner always uses per state timestamps for pruning now, rather than making it opt-in via a by_state_timestamp option. However, the completed state still prunes using the scheduled_at timestamp so it can leverage the base compound index.

    This is a more sensible default, and the query performance is identical in a system with a typical balance of completed/cancelled/discarded jobs.

Bug Fixes

  • [Testing] Stop using gen_id in perform_callback/4

    New Batch workers don’t implement gen_id/0. Now the perform callback helper generates a UUIDv7 directly when one isn’t provided.

  • [Smart] Prevent noisy logs caused by periodic refresh queries.

    Producer refresh queries no longer generate noisy logs every time they run. Multis don’t use the same query options as the transaction and producer cleanup queries were missing transaction options.

  • [DynamicPartitioner] Prevent retries when managing partitioned tables.

Pro v1.5.0-rc.3

Docs

Upgrading from a Previous RC

The legacy, hybrid, and simple unique modes have been removed in favor of a single index-backed unique mechanism. You must re-run the 1.5.0 migration in order to drop and recreate the correct index:

def up do
 Oban.Pro.Migration.down(version: "1.5.0")
 Oban.Pro.Migration.up(version: "1.5.0")
end

Enhancements

  • [Worker] Add before_new/2 worker hook.

    The before_new/2 hook can augment or override the args and opts used to construct new jobs. It’s akin to overriding a worker’s new/2 callback, but the logic can be shared between workers or operate on a global scale.

    The hook is most useful for augmenting jobs from a central point or injecting custom meta, i.e. to add span ids for tracing. Here, we define a global hook that injects a span_id into the meta:

    defmodule MyApp.SpanHook do
      def before_new(args, opts) do
        opts =
          opts
          |> Keyword.put_new(:meta, %{})
          |> put_in([:meta, :span_id], MyApp.Telemetry.gen_span_id())
    
        {:ok, args, opts}
      end
    end
  • [Smart] Use the array concat operator instead of array_append.

    Using the concat operator, ||, allows working with an errors column that’s an array of jsonb or a single jsonb column. This change allows the Smart engine to work with CockroachDB.

  • [Smart] Remove various unique modes in favor of single, index-backed uniqueness mechanism.

    The new mechanism uses a generated column paired with a partial unique index. It can handle all job uniqueness without various modes. The sole exception are partitioned tables, which don’t support arbitrary unique indexes. In that case, we fall back to the legacy advisory lock and query mechanism.

Bug Fixes

  • [DynamicQueues] Reboot dynamically started queues after the queue supervisor crashes.

    Oban’s Midwife process is typically responsible for starting queues after the Foreman (queue supervisor) crashes. However, the Midwife isn’t aware of dynamic queues, which would leave those queues unstarted after the Foreman restarts.

    Now the DynamicQueues plugin monitors the Foreman and automatically restarts queues after an unexpected crash.

  • [Smart] Handle unique conflicts on state change while acking.

    Jobs with partial uniqueness, e.g. only [:scheduled], are prone to unique conflicts on state change. Now when an acking job encounters a unique violation we clear the conflicting job’s uniqueness to prevent a subsequent violation.

Pro v1.5.0-rc.4

Docs

Enhancements

  • [Smart] Use advisory locks for producer coordination when available.

    Row level locks generate noisy error logs within Postgres and don’t offer any benefit when advisory locks are available. Producers that need global coordination now use advisory locks when they’re available, and they’ll fall back to row level locks in distributed databases.

  • [Workflow] Optimize workflow queries to make better use of indexes.

    Frequently called workflow queries are now further optimized to ensure they make use of the compound workflow index and avoid slower bitmap index scans.

  • [DynamicLifeline] Discard jobs stuck available with max attempts.

    Jobs may be left in the available state when they have exhausted attempts. When that happens, they can “clog” a queue by preventing job fetching. Now those jobs are discarded or have attempts bumped as configured.

  • [DynamicLifeline] Unblock stuck chains that missed scheduling events

    Chains may become stuck if there are persistent errors while acking or an unexpected shutdown. This adds periodic chain rescuing to match the existing workflow rescuing.

Bug Fixes

  • [DynamicQueues] Make queue updates more resilient to changes.

    Queues use an optimistic lock and the update/3 function could raise an error when a scale signal conflicted with an update call. Now updating only touches the database record once, and the update operation is retried after a StaleEntry exception.

  • [DynamicCron] Clear insertion history on crontab upsert.

    Using update/3 to update a DynamicCron entry would clear insertions when the expression or timezone changed, but upserting with insert/2 wouldn’t. Now calling insert/2 or setting the crontab in the plugin options will conditionally clear the insertions history as well.

  • [DynamicPruner] Correct state timestamp checking in pruning query.

    The query used an or_where rather than grouping or together, which caused overrides to apply to cancelled and discarded jobs incorrectly.

  • [Smart] Clear unique conflicts during staging operations.

    Uniqueness that includes available but lacks scheduled or retryable could cause a conflict during job staging. This adds a safeguard to clear the source of the conflict.

  • [Chain] Disable uniqueness on chain workers when continuing.

    Uniqueness across partial states, e.g. available only, could stop a chain due to conflicts, which would prevent chains from running entirely.

Pro v1.5.0-rc.5

Docs

Enhancements

  • [Chunk] Prevent single job chunks after a brief delay

    This removes the last time check from chunks to simplify the logic, reduce queries, and most importantly, prevent erroneously running a chunk with a single job after a delay in processing.

  • [DynamicScaler] Accurately count upcoming available, scheduled, or retryable jobs.

    Restricting queue size checks to jobs scheduled since the last scaling event artificially restricts the recorded size, e.g. it makes large queues look smaller than they really are. The new check considers all available, scheduled, or retryable jobs in the upcoming lookback window.

  • [Chain] Inject chain_id along with chain_key in legacy chain worker jobs.

    The new chain_id format is now added to legacy chain worker jobs so they can be transitioned seamlessly.

Bug Fixes

  • [Smart] Continue staging after resolving unique conflicts.

    Recursively continue staging until there aren’t any remaining unique conflicts to handle.

  • [Workflow] Include ignore_* in add_option/0 type.

    Ignore options were missing, though they’re accepted as options when adding a job to a workflow.