Function run priority v3.2.1+
Defining a function's run priority allows you to prioritize specific function runs above other runs within the same function. For example:
- Given you have a single function
- And you initialize two function runs at the same time, A and B
- Function run priority allows you to run run B ahead of A
This is useful to prioritize specific function runs, such as ensuring paid user's functions run ahead of free users when scheduled at similar times.
export default inngest.createFunction(
{
id: "synchronize-data",
priority: {
// Allow runs to have a dynamic "factor" between -600 and 600. This changes
// the order of jobs in the queue; returning `120` means that this new run should
// execute before any jobs enqueued in the last 120 seconds (as it has a higher priority).
//
// Example:
//
// If two jobs are enqueued at time 150 (t150) with the following factors:
//
// - Job X: t150, factor 0 (no expression or data)
// - Job Y: t150, factor 120
//
// Then Job Y will run ahead of Job X. Job Y will also run before any jobs scheduled
// 120 seconds beforehand. Visually:
//
// Jobs: [A, B, C, ]
// Priority/Time: [10, 40, 130]
//
// Becomes:
//
// Jobs: [A, Y, B, C, X]
// Priority/Time: [10, 30, 40, 130, 150]
//
// Job Y's score becomes 30 (t150 - 120 = 30), going before any other work except job A.
//
// NOTE: returning a negative number delays the function run's jobs by the given value
// in seconds.
run: "event.data.account_type == 'enterprise' ? 120 : 0",
},
},
{ event: "intercom/company.updated" },
async ({ event, step }) => {
}
);
How priority.run
works
The queue
Within Inngest, each function's scheduled runs is a priority queue scored by the time that jobs should run. When you create new function runs by sending events, a new job is inserted into the queue with a score of the current time (as a millisecond epoch).
Expressions
Any time a new function run is scheduled, Inngest evaluates the priority.run
expression given
the input event's data. By default, this returns 0.
For example, the expression "event.data.plan == 'enterprise' ? 300 : 0"
may return 300 or 0. If
an event's data.plan
field equals enterprise
, the expression returns 300
.
Expressions are defined using the Common Expression Language (CEL) with the original event accessible using dot-notation. Read our guide to writing expressions for more info.
Prioritization
We take the returning number from the expression, and subtract this from the function run's epoch
time (as seconds). Returning 300
subtracts 300 seconds from the function run's epoch time,
pushing the new run ahead of any other functions in the last 300 seconds (5 minutes).
If two function runs are scheduled at similar times, the functions with a higher priority run sooner when at capacity.
Fairness
The expression defined within priority.run
has a max return value of 600 by default, though this
can be increased upon request.
That is, we only skew a function run's priority by up to 600 seconds. This ensures that you can never starve work older than 600 seconds; the longer a run exists in the queue without work, the more likely it is to be worked on.
Using this model, it's impossible to stave work on lower priority items and functions always exhibit some level of fairness.
Configuration
- Name
priority
- Type
- object
- Required
- optional
- Description
Options to configure how to prioritize functions
Properties- Name
run
- Type
- string
- Required
- optional
- Description
An expression which must return an integer between -600 and 600 (by default), with higher return values resulting in a higher priority.
Expressions are defined using the Common Expression Language (CEL) with the original event accessible using dot-notation. Read our guide to writing expressions for more info. Examples:
- Return the priority within an event directly:
event.data.priority
(whereevent.data.priority
is an int within your account's range) - Rate limit by a string field:
event.data.plan == 'enterprise' ? 180 : 0
- Return the priority within an event directly:
Return values outside of your account's range (by default, -600 to 600) will automatically be clipped to your max bounds.
An invalid expression will evaluate to 0, as in "no priority".