nq

Unix command line queue utility

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nq: queue utilities

These small utilities allow creating very lightweight job queue
systems which require no setup, maintenance, supervision, or any
long-running processes.

nq should run on any POSIX.1-2008 compliant system which also
provides a working flock(2). Tested on Linux 2.6.37, Linux 4.1,
OpenBSD 5.7, FreeBSD 10.1, NetBSD 7.0.2, Mac OS X 10.3 and
SmartOS joyent_20160304T005100Z.

The intended purpose is ad-hoc queuing of command lines (e.g. for
building several targets of a Makefile, downloading multiple files one
at a time, running benchmarks in several configurations, or simply as
a glorified nohup), but as any good Unix tool, it can be abused for
whatever you like.

Job order is enforced by a timestamp nq gets immediately when
started. Synchronization happens on file-system level. Timer
resolution is milliseconds. No sub-second file system time stamps are
required. Polling is not used. Exclusive execution is maintained
strictly.

Enforcing job order works like this:

  • every job has a flock(2)ed output file ala ,TIMESTAMP.PID
  • every job starts only after all earlier flock(2)ed files are unlocked
  • Why flock(2)? Because it locks the file handle, which is shared
    across exec(2) with the child process (the actual job), and it will
    unlock when the file is closed (usually when the job terminates).

You enqueue (get it?) new jobs using nq CMDLINE.... The job id is
output (unless suppressed using -q) and nq detaches immediately,
running the job in the background. STDOUT and STDERR are redirected
into the log file.

nq tries hard (but does not guarantee) to ensure the log file of the
currently running job has +x bit set. Thus you can use ls -F to get
a quick overview of the state of your queue.

The "file extension" of the log file is actually the PID, so you can
kill jobs easily. Before the job is started, it is the PID of nq,
so you can cancel a queued job by killing it as well.

Due to the initial exec line in the log files, you can resubmit a
job by executing it as a shell command file, i.e. running sh $jobid.

You can wait for jobs to finish using nq -w, possibly listing job
ids you want to wait for; the default is all of them. Likewise, you
can test if there are jobs which need to be waited upon using -t.

By default, job ids are per-directory, but you can set $NQDIR to put
them elsewhere. Creating nq wrappers setting $NQDIR to provide
different queues for different purposes is encouraged.

All these operations take worst-case quadratic time in the amount of
lock files produced, so you should clean them regularly.

Examples

Build targets clean, depends, all, without occupying the terminal:

% nq make clean
% nq make depends
% nq make all
% fq
... look at output, can interrupt with C-c any time
without stopping the build ...

Simple download queue, accessible from multiple terminals:

% mkdir -p /tmp/downloads
% alias qget='NQDIR=/tmp/downloads nq wget'
% alias qwait='NQDIR=/tmp/downloads fq -q'
window1% qget http://mymirror/big1.iso
window2% qget http://mymirror/big2.iso
window3% qget http://mymirror/big3.iso
% qwait
... wait for all downloads to finish ...

As nohup replacement (The benchmark will run in background, every run
gets a different output file, and the command line you ran is logged
too.):

% ssh remote
remote% nq ./run-benchmark
,14f6f3034f8.17035
remote% ^D
% ssh remote
remote% fq
... see output, fq exits when job finished ...

Assumptions

nq will only work correctly when:

  • $NQDIR (respectively .) is writable.
  • flock(2) works in $NQDIR (respectively .).
  • gettimeofday behaves monotonic (using CLOCK_MONOTONIC would
    create confusing file names). Else job order can be confused and
    multiple tasks can run at once due to race conditions.
  • No other programs put files matching ,* into $NQDIR (respectively .).

nq helpers

Two helper programs are provided:

fq outputs the log of the currently running jobs, exiting when the
jobs are done. If no job is running, the output of the last job is
shown. fq -a shows the output of all jobs, fq -q only shows one
line per job. fq uses inotify on Linux and falls back to polling
for size change else. (fq.sh is a similar tool, not quite as robust,
implemented as shell-script calling tail.)

tq wraps nq and displays the fq output in a new tmux or screen window.

(A pure shell implementation of nq is provided as nq.sh. It needs
flock from util-linux, and only has a timer resolution of 1s.
Lock files from nq and nq.sh should not be mixed.)

Installation

Use make all to build, make install to install relative to PREFIX
(/usr/local by default). The DESTDIR convention is respected.
You can also just copy the binaries into your PATH.

You can use make check to run a simple test suite, if you have
Perl's prove installed.

nq is in the public domain.

To the extent possible under law,
Leah Neukirchen leah@vuxu.org
has waived all copyright and related or
neighboring rights to this work.

http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownerleahneukirchen/nq
Primary LanguageC
Program languageMakefile (Language Count: 4)
Platform
License:Other
所有者活动
Created At2015-07-31 14:17:30
Pushed At2024-07-03 16:09:12
Last Commit At2024-07-03 17:55:45
Release Count9
Last Release Namev1.0 (Posted on 2024-07-03 18:02:45)
First Release Namev0.1 (Posted on 2015-08-28 15:53:06)
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Stargazers Count3k
Watchers Count51
Fork Count66
Commits Count125
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count32
Issue Open Count4
Pull Requests Count1
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Pull Requests Close Count17
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