Quartz
This add-on allows you to manage Quartz jobs via user interface:
-
Create new Quartz jobs from the existing implementation of
org.quartz.Job
interface. -
Pause and resume jobs execution.
-
Trigger immediate execution of inactive jobs.
-
Edit job triggers and parameters.
-
Delete jobs.
Installation
For automatic installation through Jmix Marketplace, follow instructions in the Add-ons section.
For manual installation, add the following dependencies to your build.gradle
:
implementation 'io.jmix.quartz:jmix-quartz-starter'
implementation 'io.jmix.quartz:jmix-quartz-flowui-starter'
Usage
To create and schedule a job for execution, do the following:
-
Create a class implementing the
org.quartz.Job
interface. It’sexecute()
method will be invoked by the scheduler. For example:package quartz.ex1.app; import org.quartz.Job; import org.quartz.JobExecutionContext; import org.quartz.JobExecutionException; import org.slf4j.Logger; import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory; public class SampleJob implements Job { private static final Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(SampleJob.class); @Override public void execute(JobExecutionContext context) throws JobExecutionException { log.info("Sample job is executed"); } }
In the job class, you can inject Spring beans with
@Autowired
. -
Run the application, open Quartz → Quartz jobs view and click Create.
-
Enter an arbitrary unique name in the Name field and select your job class in the Class field.
The Group field is optional but can be used to group jobs in UI.
-
Create at least one trigger for the job on the Triggers tab. You can select either Cron expression or Simple schedule type. In the former case, enter a Cron expression like
0/5 * * ? * * *
(each 5 sec). In the latter case, enter a repeat interval in milliseconds.
After you save the trigger and the job, it is immediately scheduled for execution according to the trigger settings.
To edit the job settings, first pause it by selecting and clicking Pause. After saving changes, you can resume the scheduling by clicking Resume.
You can also execute any registered job immediately by clicking Execute now, even if the job has no triggers. This is useful for testing.
-
Authentication in Jobs
The code executed by the scheduler is not authenticated, that is not associated with any user.
If you invoke operations that require authentication, for example working with data through DataManager
, use SystemAuthenticator or @Authenticated
annotation:
public class SampleAuthenticatedJob implements Job {
private static final Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(SampleAuthenticatedJob.class);
@Autowired
private DataManager dataManager;
@Authenticated
@Override
public void execute(JobExecutionContext context) throws JobExecutionException {
int usersCount = dataManager.load(User.class).all().list().size();
log.info("There are {} registered users", usersCount);
}
}
You can also use UnconstrainedDataManager to work with data in unauthenticated contexts.
|
Job Parameters
The Job editor view allows you to set parameters for the job instance on the Job data parameters tab. You can use the parameters in the job class as follows:
public class SampleParameterizedJob implements Job {
private static final Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(SampleParameterizedJob.class);
@Override
public void execute(JobExecutionContext context) throws JobExecutionException {
JobDataMap jobDataMap = context.getJobDetail().getJobDataMap();
String paramStr = jobDataMap.entrySet().stream()
.map(e -> e.getKey() + " : " + e.getValue())
.collect(Collectors.joining(", ", "[", "]"));
log.info("Sample job is executed with parameters: " + paramStr);
}
}
Tracking Job Execution
If you want to track execution of jobs, create a bean implementing the JobListener
interface or extending the JobListenerSupport
as follows:
package quartz.ex1.app;
import org.quartz.JobExecutionContext;
import org.quartz.JobExecutionException;
import org.quartz.Scheduler;
import org.quartz.SchedulerException;
import org.quartz.listeners.JobListenerSupport;
import org.slf4j.Logger;
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;
import javax.annotation.PostConstruct;
@Component
public class JobExecutionListener extends JobListenerSupport {
private static final Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(JobExecutionListener.class);
@Autowired
private Scheduler scheduler;
@Override
public String getName() {
return "SampleJobExecutionListener";
}
@PostConstruct
private void registerListener() { (1)
try {
scheduler.getListenerManager().addJobListener(this);
} catch (SchedulerException e) {
log.error("Cannot register job listener", e);
}
}
@Override
public void jobWasExecuted(JobExecutionContext context,
JobExecutionException jobException) { (2)
log.info("jobWasExecuted: name={}, context={}",
context.getJobDetail().getKey().getName(), context);
}
}
1 | Invoked by Spring after the bean is instantiated. |
2 | Invoked by Quartz scheduler after a job is executed. |
In the jobWasExecuted()
method, you can store information about the executed job in the log or in the database.