QueueInterface.php
Same filename in other branches
Namespace
Drupal\Core\QueueFile
-
core/
lib/ Drupal/ Core/ Queue/ QueueInterface.php
View source
<?php
namespace Drupal\Core\Queue;
/**
* Interface for a queue.
*
* Classes implementing this interface will do a best effort to preserve order
* in messages and to execute them at least once.
*
* @ingroup queue
*/
interface QueueInterface {
/**
* Adds a queue item and store it directly to the queue.
*
* @param $data
* Arbitrary data to be associated with the new task in the queue.
*
* @return
* A unique ID if the item was successfully created and was (best effort)
* added to the queue, otherwise FALSE. We don't guarantee the item was
* committed to disk etc, but as far as we know, the item is now in the
* queue.
*/
public function createItem($data);
/**
* Retrieves the number of items in the queue.
*
* This is intended to provide a "best guess" count of the number of items in
* the queue. Depending on the implementation and the setup, the accuracy of
* the results of this function may vary.
*
* e.g. On a busy system with a large number of consumers and items, the
* result might only be valid for a fraction of a second and not provide an
* accurate representation.
*
* @return int
* An integer estimate of the number of items in the queue.
*/
public function numberOfItems();
/**
* Claims an item in the queue for processing.
*
* @param $lease_time
* How long the processing is expected to take in seconds, defaults to an
* hour. After this lease expires, the item will be reset and another
* consumer can claim the item. For idempotent tasks (which can be run
* multiple times without side effects), shorter lease times would result
* in lower latency in case a consumer fails. For tasks that should not be
* run more than once (non-idempotent), a larger lease time will make it
* more rare for a given task to run multiple times in cases of failure,
* at the cost of higher latency.
*
* @return
* On success we return an item object. If the queue is unable to claim an
* item it returns false. This implies a best effort to retrieve an item
* and either the queue is empty or there is some other non-recoverable
* problem.
*
* If returned, the object will have at least the following properties:
* - data: the same as what what passed into createItem().
* - item_id: the unique ID returned from createItem().
* - created: timestamp when the item was put into the queue.
*/
public function claimItem($lease_time = 3600);
/**
* Deletes a finished item from the queue.
*
* @param $item
* The item returned by \Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::claimItem().
*/
public function deleteItem($item);
/**
* Releases an item that the worker could not process.
*
* Another worker can come in and process it before the timeout expires.
*
* @param $item
* The item returned by \Drupal\Core\Queue\QueueInterface::claimItem().
*
* @return bool
* TRUE if the item has been released, FALSE otherwise.
*/
public function releaseItem($item);
/**
* Creates a queue.
*
* Called during installation and should be used to perform any necessary
* initialization operations. This should not be confused with the
* constructor for these objects, which is called every time an object is
* instantiated to operate on a queue. This operation is only needed the
* first time a given queue is going to be initialized (for example, to make
* a new database table or directory to hold tasks for the queue -- it
* depends on the queue implementation if this is necessary at all).
*/
public function createQueue();
/**
* Deletes a queue and every item in the queue.
*/
public function deleteQueue();
}
Interfaces
Title | Deprecated | Summary |
---|---|---|
QueueInterface | Interface for a queue. |
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