Horizon provides a beautiful dashboard and code-driven configuration for your Laravel powered Redis queues. Horizon allows you to easily monitor key metrics of your queue system such as job throughput, runtime, and job failures.
All of your worker configuration is stored in a single, simple configuration file, allowing your configuration to stay in source control where your entire team can collaborate.
You should ensure that your queue connection is set to
redis
in yourqueue
configuration file.
You may use Composer to install Horizon into your Laravel project:
composer require laravel/horizon
After installing Horizon, publish its assets using the horizon:install
Artisan command:
php artisan horizon:install
After publishing Horizon's assets, its primary configuration file will be located at config/horizon.php
. This configuration file allows you to configure your worker options and each configuration option includes a description of its purpose, so be sure to thoroughly explore this file.
You should ensure that the
environments
portion of yourhorizon
configuration file contains an entry for each environment on which you plan to run Horizon.
Horizon allows you to choose from three balancing strategies: simple
, auto
, and false
. The simple
strategy, which is the configuration file's default, splits incoming jobs evenly between processes:
'balance' => 'simple',
The auto
strategy adjusts the number of worker processes per queue based on the current workload of the queue. For example, if your notifications
queue has 1,000 waiting jobs while your render
queue is empty, Horizon will allocate more workers to your notifications
queue until it is empty. When the balance
option is set to false
, the default Laravel behavior will be used, which processes queues in the order they are listed in your configuration.
When using the auto
strategy, you may define the minProcesses
and maxProcesses
configuration options to control the minimum and maximum number of processes Horizon should scale up and down to:
'environments' => [ 'production' => [ 'supervisor-1' => [ 'connection' => 'redis', 'queue' => ['default'], 'balance' => 'auto', 'minProcesses' => 1, 'maxProcesses' => 10, 'balanceMaxShift' => 1, 'balanceCooldown' => 3, 'tries' => 3, ], ], ],
The balanceMaxShift
and balanceCooldown
configuration values to determine how quickly Horizon will scale to meet worker demand. In the example above, a maximum of one new process will be created or destroyed every three seconds. You are free to tweak these values as necessary based on your application's needs.
The horizon
configuration file allows you to configure how long recent and failed jobs should be persisted (in minutes). By default, recent jobs are kept for one hour while failed jobs are kept for a week:
'trim' => [ 'recent' => 60, 'failed' => 10080, ],
Horizon exposes a dashboard at /horizon
. By default, you will only be able to access this dashboard in the local
environment. Within your app/Providers/HorizonServiceProvider.php
file, there is a gate
method. This authorization gate controls access to Horizon in non-local environments. You are free to modify this gate as needed to restrict access to your Horizon installation:
/** * Register the Horizon gate. * * This gate determines who can access Horizon in non-local environments. * * @return void */ protected function gate() { Gate::define('viewHorizon', function ($user) { return in_array($user->email, [ '[email protected]', ]); }); }
Remember that Laravel injects the authenticated user to the Gate automatically. If your app is providing Horizon security via another method, such as IP restrictions, then your Horizon users may not need to "login". Therefore, you will need to change
function ($user)
above tofunction ($user = null)
to force Laravel to not require authentication.
When upgrading to a new major version of Horizon, it's important that you carefully review the upgrade guide.
In addition, when upgrading to any new Horizon version, you should re-publish Horizon's assets:
php artisan horizon:publish
To keep the assets up-to-date and avoid issues in future updates, you may add the command to the post-update-cmd
scripts in your composer.json
file:
{ "scripts": { "post-update-cmd": [ "@php artisan horizon:publish --ansi" ] } }
Once you have configured your workers in the config/horizon.php
configuration file, you may start Horizon using the horizon
Artisan command. This single command will start all of your configured workers:
php artisan horizon
You may pause the Horizon process and instruct it to continue processing jobs using the horizon:pause
and horizon:continue
Artisan commands:
php artisan horizon:pause php artisan horizon:continue
You may also pause and continue specific Horizon supervisors (worker groups) using the horizon:pause-supervisor
and horizon:continue-supervisor
Artisan commands:
php artisan horizon:pause-supervisor supervisor-1 php artisan horizon:continue-supervisor supervisor-1
You may check the current status of the Horizon process using the horizon:status
Artisan command:
php artisan horizon:status
You may gracefully terminate the master Horizon process on your machine using the horizon:terminate
Artisan command. Any jobs that Horizon is currently processing will be completed and then Horizon will exit:
php artisan horizon:terminate
If you are deploying Horizon to a live server, you should configure a process monitor to monitor the php artisan horizon
command and restart it if it quits unexpectedly. When deploying fresh code to your server, you will need to instruct the master Horizon process to terminate so it can be restarted by your process monitor and receive your code changes.
Supervisor is a process monitor for the Linux operating system, and will automatically restart your horizon
process if it fails. To install Supervisor on Ubuntu, you may use the following command:
sudo apt-get install supervisor
If configuring Supervisor yourself sounds overwhelming, consider using Laravel Forge, which will automatically install and configure Supervisor for your Laravel projects.
Supervisor configuration files are typically stored in the /etc/supervisor/conf.d
directory. Within this directory, you may create any number of configuration files that instruct supervisor how your processes should be monitored. For example, let's create a horizon.conf
file that starts and monitors a horizon
process:
[program:horizon] process_name=%(program_name)s command=php /home/forge/app.com/artisan horizon autostart=true autorestart=true user=forge redirect_stderr=true stdout_logfile=/home/forge/app.com/horizon.log stopwaitsecs=3600
You should ensure that the value of
stopwaitsecs
is greater than the number of seconds consumed by your longest running job. Otherwise, Supervisor may kill the job before it is finished processing.
Once the configuration file has been created, you may update the Supervisor configuration and start the processes using the following commands:
sudo supervisorctl reread sudo supervisorctl update sudo supervisorctl start horizon
For more information on Supervisor, consult the Supervisor documentation.
Horizon allows you to assign “tags” to jobs, including mailables, event broadcasts, notifications, and queued event listeners. In fact, Horizon will intelligently and automatically tag most jobs depending on the Eloquent models that are attached to the job. For example, take a look at the following job:
<?php namespace App\Jobs; use App\Models\Video; use Illuminate\Bus\Queueable; use Illuminate\Contracts\Queue\ShouldQueue; use Illuminate\Foundation\Bus\Dispatchable; use Illuminate\Queue\InteractsWithQueue; use Illuminate\Queue\SerializesModels; class RenderVideo implements ShouldQueue { use Dispatchable, InteractsWithQueue, Queueable, SerializesModels; /** * The video instance. * * @var \App\Models\Video */ public $video; /** * Create a new job instance. * * @param \App\Models\Video $video * @return void */ public function __construct(Video $video) { $this->video = $video; } /** * Execute the job. * * @return void */ public function handle() { // } }
If this job is queued with an App\Models\Video
instance that has an id
of 1
, it will automatically receive the tag App\Models\Video:1
. This is because Horizon will examine the job's properties for any Eloquent models. If Eloquent models are found, Horizon will intelligently tag the job using the model's class name and primary key:
$video = App\Models\Video::find(1); App\Jobs\RenderVideo::dispatch($video);
If you would like to manually define the tags for one of your queueable objects, you may define a tags
method on the class:
class RenderVideo implements ShouldQueue { /** * Get the tags that should be assigned to the job. * * @return array */ public function tags() { return ['render', 'video:'.$this->video->id]; } }
Note: When configuring Horizon to send Slack or SMS notifications, you should review the prerequisites for the relevant notification driver.
If you would like to be notified when one of your queues has a long wait time, you may use the Horizon::routeMailNotificationsTo
, Horizon::routeSlackNotificationsTo
, and Horizon::routeSmsNotificationsTo
methods. You may call these methods from your application's HorizonServiceProvider
:
Horizon::routeMailNotificationsTo('[email protected]'); Horizon::routeSlackNotificationsTo('slack-webhook-url', '#channel'); Horizon::routeSmsNotificationsTo('15556667777');
You may configure how many seconds are considered a "long wait" within your config/horizon.php
configuration file. The waits
configuration option within this file allows you to control the long wait threshold for each connection / queue combination:
'waits' => [ 'redis:default' => 60, 'redis:critical,high' => 90, ],
Horizon includes a metrics dashboard which provides information on your job and queue wait times and throughput. In order to populate this dashboard, you should configure Horizon's snapshot
Artisan command to run every five minutes via your application's scheduler:
/** * Define the application's command schedule. * * @param \Illuminate\Console\Scheduling\Schedule $schedule * @return void */ protected function schedule(Schedule $schedule) { $schedule->command('horizon:snapshot')->everyFiveMinutes(); }
If you would like to delete a failed job, you may use the horizon:forget
command. The horizon:forget
command accepts the ID of the failed job as its only argument:
php artisan horizon:forget 5
If you would like to delete all jobs from the default queue, you may do so using the horizon:clear
Artisan command:
php artisan horizon:clear
You may also provide the queue
option to delete jobs from a specific queue:
php artisan horizon:clear --queue=emails
© Taylor Otwell
Licensed under the MIT License.
Laravel is a trademark of Taylor Otwell.
https://laravel.com/docs/8.x/horizon