Bull Dashboard is a UI built on top of Bull to help you visualize your queues and their jobs. With this library you get a beautiful UI for visualizing what's happening with each job in your queues, their status and some actions that will enable you to get the jobs done.
As this library provides only the visualization for your queues, keep in mind that:
- You must have Bull installed in your projects;
- Aside the options to retry and clean jobs, this library is not responsible for processing the jobs, reporting progress or any other thing. This must be done in your application with your own logic;
- If you want to understand the possibilities you have with the queues please refer to Bull's docs;
- This library doesn't hijack Bull's way of working.
If you want to learn more about queues and Redis: https://redis.io/.
The code in the main branch is under alpha release, you can install it by using specific versions in your package.json
file, otherwise you can checkout the branch latest-stable
for our current stable release.
This README file is not matching the alpha version, we are changing APIs and we need to update the documentation.
For the brave and valuable souls help me trying to test the alpha, plese refer to examples.js file to check how to implement it.
To add it to your project start by adding the library to your dependencies list:
yarn add bull-board
Or
npm i bull-board
The first step is to let bull-board know the queues you have already set up, to do so we use the setQueues
method.
const Queue = require('bull')
const { setQueues } = require('bull-board')
const someQueue = new Queue()
const someOtherQueue = new Queue()
setQueues([someQueue, someOtherQueue])
You can then add UI
to your middlewares (this can be set up using an admin endpoint with some authentication method):
const app = require('express')()
const { UI } = require('bull-board')
app.use('/admin/queues', UI)
// other configurations for your server
That's it! Now you can access the /admin/queues
route and you will be able to monitor everything that is happening in your queues 😁
First of all, thank you for being interested in helping out, your time is always appreciated in every way. 💯
Remember to read the Code of Conduct so you also help maintaining a good Open source community around this project!
Here's some tips:
- Check the issues page for already opened issues (or maybe even closed ones) that might already address your question/bug/feature request.
- When opening a bug report provide as much information as you can, some things might be useful for helping debugging and understading the problem
- Node, Redis, Bull, bull-board versions
- Sample code that reproduces the problem
- Some of your environment details
- Framework you're using (Express, Koa, Hapi, etc).
- Feature requests are welcomed! Provide some details on why it would be helpful for you and others, explain how you're using bull-board and if possible even some screenshots if you are willing to mock something!
If you want to help us solving the issues, be it a bug, a feature or a question, you might need to fork and clone this project.
To fork a project means you're going to have your own version of it under your own GitHub profile, you do it by clicking the "Fork" button on the top of any project's page on GitHub.
Cloning a project means downloading it to your local machine, you do it in the command line:
git clone git@github.com:YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME/bull-board.git
That will create a bull-board
folder inside the directory you executed the command, so you need to navigate inside it:
cd bull-board
This project requires that you have yarn installed
Also make sure you are running Redis for this project (bull-board's example connects to Redis' default port 6379).
Now, to try it out locally you can run:
yarn && yarn start:dev
- Juan for building the first version of this library
This project is licensed under the MIT License, so it means it's completely free to use and copy, but if you do fork this project with nice additions that we could have here, remember to send a PR 👍