Companion packages: Cloud Scheduler, Cloud Logging
This package allows Google Cloud Tasks to be used as the queue driver.
This package requires Laravel 10 or 11.
Require the package using Composer
composer require stackkit/laravel-google-cloud-tasks-queue
Add a new queue connection to config/queue.php
'cloudtasks' => [
'driver' => 'cloudtasks',
'project' => env('CLOUD_TASKS_PROJECT', ''),
'location' => env('CLOUD_TASKS_LOCATION', ''),
'queue' => env('CLOUD_TASKS_QUEUE', 'default'),
// Required when using AppEngine
'app_engine' => env('APP_ENGINE_TASK', false),
'app_engine_service' => env('APP_ENGINE_SERVICE', ''),
// Required when not using AppEngine
'handler' => env('CLOUD_TASKS_HANDLER', ''),
'service_account_email' => env('CLOUD_TASKS_SERVICE_EMAIL', ''),
'backoff' => 0,
],
Finally, change the QUEUE_CONNECTION
to the newly defined connection.
QUEUE_CONNECTION=cloudtasks
Now that the package is installed, the final step is to set the correct environment variables.
Please check the table below on what the values mean and what their value should be.
Environment variable | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
CLOUD_TASKS_PROJECT |
The project your queue belongs to. | my-project |
CLOUD_TASKS_LOCATION |
The region where the project is hosted. | europe-west6 |
CLOUD_TASKS_QUEUE |
The default queue a job will be added to. | emails |
App Engine | ||
APP_ENGINE_TASK (optional) |
Set to true to use App Engine task (else a Http task will be used). Defaults to false. | true |
APP_ENGINE_SERVICE (optional) |
The App Engine service to handle the task (only if using App Engine task). | api |
Non- App Engine apps | ||
CLOUD_TASKS_SERVICE_EMAIL (optional) |
The email address of the service account. Important, it should have the correct roles. See the section below which roles. | [email protected] |
CLOUD_TASKS_HANDLER (optional) |
The URL that Cloud Tasks will call to process a job. This should be the URL to your Laravel app. By default we will use the URL that dispatched the job. | https://<your website>.com |
Optionally, you may publish the config file:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=cloud-tasks
If you are using separate services for dispatching and handling tasks, and your application only dispatches jobs and should not be able to handle jobs, you may disable the task handler from config/cloud-tasks.php
:
'disable_task_handler' => env('CLOUD_TASKS_DISABLE_TASK_HANDLER', false),
You can pass headers to a task by using the setTaskHeadersUsing
method on the CloudTasksQueue
class.
use Stackkit\LaravelGoogleCloudTasksQueue\CloudTasksQueue;
CloudTasksQueue::setTaskHeadersUsing(static fn() => [
'X-My-Header' => 'My-Value',
]);
If necessary, the current payload being dispatched is also available:
use Stackkit\LaravelGoogleCloudTasksQueue\CloudTasksQueue;
CloudTasksQueue::setTaskHeadersUsing(static fn(array $payload) => [
'X-My-Header' => $payload['displayName'],
]);
You can set the handler url for a task by using the configureHandlerUrlUsing
method on the CloudTasksQueue
class.
use Stackkit\LaravelGoogleCloudTasksQueue\CloudTasksQueue;
CloudTasksQueue::configureHandlerUrlUsing(static fn() => 'https://example.com/my-url');
If necessary, the current job being dispatched is also available:
use Stackkit\LaravelGoogleCloudTasksQueue\CloudTasksQueue;
CloudTasksQueue::configureHandlerUrlUsing(static fn(MyJob $job) => 'https://example.com/my-url/' . $job->something());
You can configure worker options by using the configureWorkerOptionsUsing
method on the CloudTasksQueue
class.
use Stackkit\LaravelGoogleCloudTasksQueue\IncomingTask;
CloudTasksQueue::configureWorkerOptionsUsing(function (IncomingTask $task) {
$queueTries = [
'high' => 5,
'low' => 1,
];
return new WorkerOptions(maxTries: $queueTries[$task->queue()] ?? 1);
});
Modify (or add) the client_options
key in the config/cloud-tasks.php
file:
'client_options' => [
'credentials' => '/path/to/credentials.json',
]
Modify (or add) the client_options
key in the config/cloud-tasks.php
file:
'client_options' => [
// custom options here
]
Using Cloud Tasks as a Laravel queue driver is fundamentally different than other Laravel queue drivers, like Redis.
Typically a Laravel queue has a worker that listens to incoming jobs using the queue:work
/ queue:listen
command.
With Cloud Tasks, this is not the case. Instead, Cloud Tasks will schedule the job for you and make an HTTP request to
your application with the job payload. There is no need to run a queue:work/listen
command.
Cloud Tasks has it's own retry configuration options: maximum number of attempts, retry duration, min/max backoff and max doublings. All of these options are ignored by this package. Instead, you may configure max attempts, retry duration and backoff strategy right from Laravel.
Set the GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
environment variable with a path to the credentials file.
More info: https://cloud.google.com/docs/authentication/production
If you're not using your master service account (which has all abilities), you must add the following roles to make it works:
- App Engine Viewer
- Cloud Tasks Enqueuer
- Cloud Tasks Viewer
- Cloud Tasks Task Deleter
- Service Account User
Read UPGRADING.MD on how to update versions.
This can happen when your application runs behind a reverse proxy. To fix this, add the application domain to Laravel's trusted proxies. You may need to add the wildcard *
as trusted proxy.