Hi Felix, MiddleMan.new_worker returns the worker's key. For example, if you use
w = MiddleMan.new_worker(:worker => :my_worker, :worker_key => '1') #the value of w is 1 To access the worker, you use MiddleMan.worker(:my_worker, '1').some_method_call_here. If you don't pass in a worker_key, then you receive nil. That's my understanding. Jonathan On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 3:54 PM, Felix Holmgren <[email protected]>wrote: > I've been checking out all the async gems and plugins for Rails, and > decided to give BackgroundRb a shot. Unfortunately, I've not even been > able to get past the initial stages. > > Whenever I call MiddleMan.new_worker, it invariably returns nil. The > log file remains empty. > > I've only tried this from the console so far. If I can't even do this > successfully, I'm in no mood to try to start to write code, > > I've followed the example instructions to the letter, and confirmed > that the BGRB server is running, as well as my Mongrel. I'm running on > Leopard. > > Rails 2.2.2 > ruby 1.8.6 (2008-03-03 patchlevel 114) [universal-darwin9.0] > > I'd really appreciate it if someone could give me some feedback on > this fast. Otherwise I'll have to drop BackgroundRb and go with a > hand-made, simpler scheme for now, as the deadline for my project is > very close (basically, like NOW). > > Many thanks! > _______________________________________________ > Backgroundrb-devel mailing list > [email protected] > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/backgroundrb-devel >
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