Hi opsen,

I'm currently working on this changeset:
https://gerrit.wikimedia.org/r/#/c/157157/ whose goal is to pre-render
commonly used thumbnail sizes at upload time, in order to avoid the delay
experienced by users who are the first to view a particular image at a
given size (particularly in media viewer).

So far I've implemented it as a job (in the job queue sense of the term).
Which implies that the server(s) picking up this job type would need to
have the whole stack of image processing software installed on them. The
idea being that we could the resources for this prerendering separately
from the existing pool of on-demand image scalers. Does this approach make
sense from an Ops perspective? Basically having one or more servers with
the same software as image scalers installed on them, configured as job
runners for that particular job type.

The alternative is that the job would cURL the thumbnail urls to hit the
image scalers. I'm not sure that this is a desirable network path, it might
not be the most future-proof thing to expect job runners to be able to hit
our public-facing URLs. Not to mention this makes it a very WMF-specific
solution, whereas the job type approach is more generic. Maybe there's a
better way for a job runner to make the image scalers do something, though.
That alternative approach of hitting thumbnail urls would imply the job
running on the regular pool of job runners. And it would mean that we
probably wouldn't be able to tell apart the resource usage of the
prerendering compared to the regular on-demand thumbnailing that's
happening at the moment.
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