queue.php 3.7 KB

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  1. <?php
  2. return [
  3. /*
  4. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  5. | Default Queue Connection Name
  6. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  7. |
  8. | Laravel's queue supports a variety of backends via a single, unified
  9. | API, giving you convenient access to each backend using identical
  10. | syntax for each. The default queue connection is defined below.
  11. |
  12. */
  13. 'default' => env('QUEUE_CONNECTION', 'database'),
  14. /*
  15. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  16. | Queue Connections
  17. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  18. |
  19. | Here you may configure the connection options for every queue backend
  20. | used by your application. An example configuration is provided for
  21. | each backend supported by Laravel. You're also free to add more.
  22. |
  23. | Drivers: "sync", "database", "beanstalkd", "sqs", "redis", "null"
  24. |
  25. */
  26. 'connections' => [
  27. 'sync' => [
  28. 'driver' => 'sync',
  29. ],
  30. 'database' => [
  31. 'driver' => 'database',
  32. 'connection' => env('DB_QUEUE_CONNECTION'),
  33. 'table' => env('DB_QUEUE_TABLE', 'jobs'),
  34. 'queue' => env('DB_QUEUE', 'default'),
  35. 'retry_after' => (int) env('DB_QUEUE_RETRY_AFTER', 90),
  36. 'after_commit' => false,
  37. ],
  38. 'beanstalkd' => [
  39. 'driver' => 'beanstalkd',
  40. 'host' => env('BEANSTALKD_QUEUE_HOST', 'localhost'),
  41. 'queue' => env('BEANSTALKD_QUEUE', 'default'),
  42. 'retry_after' => (int) env('BEANSTALKD_QUEUE_RETRY_AFTER', 90),
  43. 'block_for' => 0,
  44. 'after_commit' => false,
  45. ],
  46. 'sqs' => [
  47. 'driver' => 'sqs',
  48. 'key' => env('AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID'),
  49. 'secret' => env('AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY'),
  50. 'prefix' => env('SQS_PREFIX', 'https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/your-account-id'),
  51. 'queue' => env('SQS_QUEUE', 'default'),
  52. 'suffix' => env('SQS_SUFFIX'),
  53. 'region' => env('AWS_DEFAULT_REGION', 'us-east-1'),
  54. 'after_commit' => false,
  55. ],
  56. 'redis' => [
  57. 'driver' => 'redis',
  58. 'connection' => env('REDIS_QUEUE_CONNECTION', 'default'),
  59. 'queue' => env('REDIS_QUEUE', 'default'),
  60. 'retry_after' => (int) env('REDIS_QUEUE_RETRY_AFTER', 90),
  61. 'block_for' => null,
  62. 'after_commit' => false,
  63. ],
  64. ],
  65. /*
  66. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  67. | Job Batching
  68. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  69. |
  70. | The following options configure the database and table that store job
  71. | batching information. These options can be updated to any database
  72. | connection and table which has been defined by your application.
  73. |
  74. */
  75. 'batching' => [
  76. 'database' => env('DB_CONNECTION', 'sqlite'),
  77. 'table' => 'job_batches',
  78. ],
  79. /*
  80. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  81. | Failed Queue Jobs
  82. |--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  83. |
  84. | These options configure the behavior of failed queue job logging so you
  85. | can control how and where failed jobs are stored. Laravel ships with
  86. | support for storing failed jobs in a simple file or in a database.
  87. |
  88. | Supported drivers: "database-uuids", "dynamodb", "file", "null"
  89. |
  90. */
  91. 'failed' => [
  92. 'driver' => env('QUEUE_FAILED_DRIVER', 'database-uuids'),
  93. 'database' => env('DB_CONNECTION', 'sqlite'),
  94. 'table' => 'failed_jobs',
  95. ],
  96. ];