peridot/vendor/go.temporal.io/sdk/worker/worker.go

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// The MIT License
//
// Copyright (c) 2020 Temporal Technologies Inc. All rights reserved.
//
// Copyright (c) 2020 Uber Technologies, Inc.
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.
// Package worker contains functions to manage lifecycle of a Temporal client side worker.
package worker
import (
"context"
historypb "go.temporal.io/api/history/v1"
"go.temporal.io/api/workflowservice/v1"
"go.temporal.io/sdk/activity"
"go.temporal.io/sdk/client"
"go.temporal.io/sdk/internal"
"go.temporal.io/sdk/log"
"go.temporal.io/sdk/workflow"
)
type (
// Worker hosts workflow and activity implementations.
// Use worker.New(...) to create an instance.
Worker interface {
Registry
// Start the worker in a non-blocking fashion.
Start() error
// Run the worker in a blocking fashion. Stop the worker when interruptCh receives signal.
// Pass worker.InterruptCh() to stop the worker with SIGINT or SIGTERM.
// Pass nil to stop the worker with external Stop() call.
// Pass any other `<-chan interface{}` and Run will wait for signal from that channel.
// Returns error only if worker fails to start.
Run(interruptCh <-chan interface{}) error
// Stop the worker.
Stop()
}
// Registry exposes registration functions to consumers.
Registry interface {
WorkflowRegistry
ActivityRegistry
}
// WorkflowRegistry exposes workflow registration functions to consumers.
WorkflowRegistry interface {
// RegisterWorkflow - registers a workflow function with the worker.
// A workflow takes a workflow.Context and input and returns a (result, error) or just error.
// Examples:
// func sampleWorkflow(ctx workflow.Context, input []byte) (result []byte, err error)
// func sampleWorkflow(ctx workflow.Context, arg1 int, arg2 string) (result []byte, err error)
// func sampleWorkflow(ctx workflow.Context) (result []byte, err error)
// func sampleWorkflow(ctx workflow.Context, arg1 int) (result string, err error)
// Serialization of all primitive types, structures is supported ... except channels, functions, variadic, unsafe pointer.
// For global registration consider workflow.Register
// This method panics if workflowFunc doesn't comply with the expected format or tries to register the same workflow
RegisterWorkflow(w interface{})
// RegisterWorkflowWithOptions registers the workflow function with options.
// The user can use options to provide an external name for the workflow or leave it empty if no
// external name is required. This can be used as
// worker.RegisterWorkflowWithOptions(sampleWorkflow, RegisterWorkflowOptions{})
// worker.RegisterWorkflowWithOptions(sampleWorkflow, RegisterWorkflowOptions{Name: "foo"})
// This method panics if workflowFunc doesn't comply with the expected format or tries to register the same workflow
// type name twice. Use workflow.RegisterOptions.DisableAlreadyRegisteredCheck to allow multiple registrations.
RegisterWorkflowWithOptions(w interface{}, options workflow.RegisterOptions)
}
// ActivityRegistry exposes activity registration functions to consumers.
ActivityRegistry interface {
// RegisterActivity - register an activity function or a pointer to a structure with the worker.
// An activity function takes a context and input and returns a (result, error) or just error.
//
// And activity struct is a structure with all its exported methods treated as activities. The default
// name of each activity is the method name.
//
// Examples:
// func sampleActivity(ctx context.Context, input []byte) (result []byte, err error)
// func sampleActivity(ctx context.Context, arg1 int, arg2 string) (result *customerStruct, err error)
// func sampleActivity(ctx context.Context) (err error)
// func sampleActivity() (result string, err error)
// func sampleActivity(arg1 bool) (result int, err error)
// func sampleActivity(arg1 bool) (err error)
//
// type Activities struct {
// // fields
// }
// func (a *Activities) SampleActivity1(ctx context.Context, arg1 int, arg2 string) (result *customerStruct, err error) {
// ...
// }
//
// func (a *Activities) SampleActivity2(ctx context.Context, arg1 int, arg2 *customerStruct) (result string, err error) {
// ...
// }
//
// Serialization of all primitive types, structures is supported ... except channels, functions, variadic, unsafe pointer.
// This method panics if activityFunc doesn't comply with the expected format or an activity with the same
// type name is registered more than once.
RegisterActivity(a interface{})
// RegisterActivityWithOptions registers the activity function or struct pointer with options.
// The user can use options to provide an external name for the activity or leave it empty if no
// external name is required. This can be used as
// worker.RegisterActivityWithOptions(barActivity, RegisterActivityOptions{})
// worker.RegisterActivityWithOptions(barActivity, RegisterActivityOptions{Name: "barExternal"})
// When registering the structure that implements activities the name is used as a prefix that is
// prepended to the activity method name.
// worker.RegisterActivityWithOptions(&Activities{ ... }, RegisterActivityOptions{Name: "MyActivities_"})
// To override each name of activities defined through a structure register the methods one by one:
// activities := &Activities{ ... }
// worker.RegisterActivityWithOptions(activities.SampleActivity1, RegisterActivityOptions{Name: "Sample1"})
// worker.RegisterActivityWithOptions(activities.SampleActivity2, RegisterActivityOptions{Name: "Sample2"})
// See RegisterActivity function for more info.
// The other use of options is to disable duplicated activity registration check
// which might be useful for integration tests.
// worker.RegisterActivityWithOptions(barActivity, RegisterActivityOptions{DisableAlreadyRegisteredCheck: true})
RegisterActivityWithOptions(a interface{}, options activity.RegisterOptions)
}
// WorkflowReplayer supports replaying a workflow from its event history.
// Use for troubleshooting and backwards compatibility unit tests.
// For example if a workflow failed in production then its history can be downloaded through UI or CLI
// and replayed in a debugger as many times as necessary.
// Use this class to create unit tests that check if workflow changes are backwards compatible.
// It is important to maintain backwards compatibility through use of workflow.GetVersion
// to ensure that new deployments are not going to break open workflows.
WorkflowReplayer interface {
// RegisterWorkflow registers workflow that is going to be replayed
RegisterWorkflow(w interface{})
// RegisterWorkflowWithOptions registers workflow that is going to be replayed with user provided name
RegisterWorkflowWithOptions(w interface{}, options workflow.RegisterOptions)
// ReplayWorkflowHistory executes a single workflow task for the given json history file.
// Use for testing the backwards compatibility of code changes and troubleshooting workflows in a debugger.
// The logger is an optional parameter. Defaults to the noop logger.
ReplayWorkflowHistory(logger log.Logger, history *historypb.History) error
// ReplayWorkflowHistoryFromJSONFile executes a single workflow task for the json history file downloaded from the cli.
// To download the history file: temporal workflow showid <workflow_id> -of <output_filename>
// See https://github.com/temporalio/temporal/blob/master/tools/cli/README.md for full documentation
// Use for testing the backwards compatibility of code changes and troubleshooting workflows in a debugger.
// The logger is an optional parameter. Defaults to the noop logger.
ReplayWorkflowHistoryFromJSONFile(logger log.Logger, jsonfileName string) error
// ReplayPartialWorkflowHistoryFromJSONFile executes a single workflow task for the json history file upto provided
// lastEventID(inclusive), downloaded from the cli.
// To download the history file: temporal workflow showid <workflow_id> -of <output_filename>
// See https://github.com/temporalio/temporal/blob/master/tools/cli/README.md for full documentation
// Use for testing the backwards compatibility of code changes and troubleshooting workflows in a debugger.
// The logger is an optional parameter. Defaults to the noop logger.
ReplayPartialWorkflowHistoryFromJSONFile(logger log.Logger, jsonfileName string, lastEventID int64) error
// ReplayWorkflowExecution loads a workflow execution history from the Temporal service and executes a single workflow task for it.
// Use for testing the backwards compatibility of code changes and troubleshooting workflows in a debugger.
// The logger is the only optional parameter. Defaults to the noop logger.
ReplayWorkflowExecution(ctx context.Context, service workflowservice.WorkflowServiceClient, logger log.Logger, namespace string, execution workflow.Execution) error
}
// Options is used to configure a worker instance.
Options = internal.WorkerOptions
// WorkflowPanicPolicy is used for configuring how worker deals with workflow
// code panicking which includes non backwards compatible changes to the workflow code without appropriate
// versioning (see workflow.GetVersion).
// The default behavior is to block workflow execution until the problem is fixed.
WorkflowPanicPolicy = internal.WorkflowPanicPolicy
// WorkflowReplayerOptions are options used for
// NewWorkflowReplayerWithOptions.
WorkflowReplayerOptions = internal.WorkflowReplayerOptions
)
const (
// BlockWorkflow is the default WorkflowPanicPolicy policy for handling workflow panics and detected non-determinism.
// This option causes workflow to get stuck in the workflow task retry loop.
// It is expected that after the problem is discovered and fixed the workflows are going to continue
// without any additional manual intervention.
BlockWorkflow = internal.BlockWorkflow
// FailWorkflow WorkflowPanicPolicy immediately fails workflow execution if workflow code throws panic or
// detects non-determinism. This feature is convenient during development.
// WARNING: enabling this in production can cause all open workflows to fail on a single bug or bad deployment.
FailWorkflow = internal.FailWorkflow
)
// New creates an instance of worker for managing workflow and activity executions.
// client - the client for use by the worker
// taskQueue - is the task queue name you use to identify your client worker, also
// identifies group of workflow and activity implementations that are
// hosted by a single worker process
// options - configure any worker specific options like logger, metrics, identity
func New(
client client.Client,
taskQueue string,
options Options,
) Worker {
return internal.NewWorker(client, taskQueue, options)
}
// NewWorkflowReplayer creates a WorkflowReplayer instance.
func NewWorkflowReplayer() WorkflowReplayer {
w, err := NewWorkflowReplayerWithOptions(WorkflowReplayerOptions{})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return w
}
// NewWorkflowReplayerWithOptions creates a WorkflowReplayer instance with the
// given options.
func NewWorkflowReplayerWithOptions(options WorkflowReplayerOptions) (WorkflowReplayer, error) {
return internal.NewWorkflowReplayer(options)
}
// EnableVerboseLogging enable or disable verbose logging of internal Temporal library components.
// Most customers don't need this feature, unless advised by the Temporal team member.
// Also there is no guarantee that this API is not going to change.
func EnableVerboseLogging(enable bool) {
internal.EnableVerboseLogging(enable)
}
// SetStickyWorkflowCacheSize sets the cache size for sticky workflow cache. Sticky workflow execution is the affinity
// between workflow tasks of a specific workflow execution to a specific worker. The benefit of sticky execution is that
// the workflow does not have to reconstruct state by replaying history from the beginning. The cache is shared between
// workers running within same process. This must be called before any worker is started. If not called, the default
// size of 10K (which may change) will be used.
func SetStickyWorkflowCacheSize(cacheSize int) {
internal.SetStickyWorkflowCacheSize(cacheSize)
}
// PurgeStickyWorkflowCache resets the sticky workflow cache. This must be called only when all workers are stopped.
func PurgeStickyWorkflowCache() {
internal.PurgeStickyWorkflowCache()
}
// SetBinaryChecksum sets the identifier of the binary(aka BinaryChecksum).
// The identifier is mainly used in recording reset points when respondWorkflowTaskCompleted. For each workflow, the very first
// workflow task completed by a binary will be associated as a auto-reset point for the binary. So that when a customer wants to
// mark the binary as bad, the workflow will be reset to that point -- which means workflow will forget all progress generated
// by the binary.
// On another hand, once the binary is marked as bad, the bad binary cannot poll workflow queue and make any progress any more.
func SetBinaryChecksum(checksum string) {
internal.SetBinaryChecksum(checksum)
}
// InterruptCh returns channel which will get data when system receives interrupt signal from OS. Pass it to worker.Run() func to stop worker with Ctrl+C.
func InterruptCh() <-chan interface{} {
return internal.InterruptCh()
}