How to cancel scheduled job with delayed_job in Rails?

delayed_job 3 introduced a queue attribute. This can be hijacked to schedule a cancelable job.

class MyJob < Struct.new(:user_id)
  def self.queue_name
    "something-unique"
  end

  def perform
    # ...
  end
end

#scheduler
my_job = MyJob.new(User.first.id)
#'cancel' pending jobs first
Delayed::Job.where(queue: my_job.class.queue_name).destroy_all
#queue it up
Delayed::Job.enqueue(my_job,
  queue: my_job.class.queue_name,
  run_at: 1.hour.from_now
)

disclaimer: I am not an expert user of delayed_job...

"Is there any call to remove particular job, or jobs related to specific model, instance, etc?"

Delayed::Job is just an ActiveRecord object so you can find and destroy any of those records. Depending on your use case this could be handled different ways. If someone is going to manually destroy them this could be handled through an admin interface in your web app.

# list all jobs
Delayed::Job.all
# find a job by id
job = Delayed::Job.find(params[:id])
# delete it
job.delete

if you need some out of process task deleting jobs by 'job type' you could loop through each one and delete it if it matches your job; try this in script/console

class MyJob < Struct.new(:some_value);
    def perform
        # ...
    end
end

my_job = MyJob.new('xyz')
job = Delayed::Job.enqueue(my_job, 0, 1.hour.from_now)
job.name
# => "MyJob"
job.handler
# => "--- !ruby/struct:MyJob \nsome_value: xyz\n"

so given the above if you wanted to delete all jobs of type MyJob

Delayed::Job.all.each do |job|
    if job.name == "MyJob" then
        job.delete
    end
end

this may or may not help for your situation? in many cases you might want to delete a MyJob but only where the :some_value attribute was 'abc' and not 'xyz'. In this case you might need to implement a 'display_name' on your MyJob object. job.name will use this if it exists

class MyJob < Struct.new(:user_id);
    def perform
        # ...
    end

    def display_name
        return "MyJob-User-#{user_id}"
    end 
end

# store reference to a User
my_job = MyJob.new(User.first.id) # users.id is 1
job = Delayed::Job.enqueue(my_job, 0, 1.hour.from_now)
job.name
# => "MyJob-User-1"
job.handler
# => "--- !ruby/struct:MyJob \nuser_id: 1\n"

this way you could be more selective about which records to delete?

hopefully this gives you enough information on possible ways to handle it?