Re: Scheduler in Postgres

From: Christopher Browne <cbbrowne(at)acm(dot)org>
To: pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: Scheduler in Postgres
Date: 2004-12-17 03:47:24
Message-ID: m3ekhp37sj.fsf@knuth.knuth.cbbrowne.com
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After a long battle with technology, gsstark(at)mit(dot)edu (Greg Stark), an earthling, wrote:
> This wouldn't really be a part of Postgres though, just another
> application using Postgres. It could be something Postgres could
> recommend for people who find cron too awkward for their
> application.

This has considerable merit.

One thing that is unfortunate about cron is that it provides little
verifyable feedback. It logs some things, sort of...

A "cron implementation using PostgreSQL as data store" would have a
wonderfully natural place to record log information in a usefully
structured fashion.

When a job runs, it would be a splendid idea to record such things as:
- Job ID (perhaps an OID, or some other candidate primary key)
- PID
- Start time
- End time
- Exit code

Given all of the above, a job might look at the logs and
self-terminate if there's another instance still running from last
hour.

Jobs that are supposed to be mutually exclusive could detect as much.

You could _attempt_ to run a job every hour, and have it decide "Oh,
I've already run successfully in the last [interval], so I'll not
bother."

None of this means forcing it into the database implementation; it
just means that it would be useful. "pgcron" sounds like an utterly
splendid idea.
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