Browse Source

Use celery.start() instead of celery.celery_main()

Ask Solem 13 years ago
parent
commit
554931f9a2

+ 1 - 1
celery/app/__init__.py

@@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ class App(base.BaseApp):
         return instantiate("celery.task.sets:TaskSet",
                            app=self, *args, **kwargs)
 
-    def celery_main(self, argv=None):
+    def start(self, argv=None):
         """Run :program:`celery` using `argv`.  Uses :data:`sys.argv`
         if `argv` is not specified."""
         return instantiate("celery.bin.celery:CeleryCommand", app=self) \

+ 1 - 1
docs/getting-started/first-steps-with-celery.rst

@@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ Let's create the file :file:`tasks.py`:
         return x + y
 
     if __name__ == "__main__":
-        celery.celery_main()
+        celery.start()
 
 The first argument to :class:`Celery` is the name of the current module,
 this is needed to that names can be automatically generated, the second

+ 1 - 1
examples/tutorial/tasks.py

@@ -9,4 +9,4 @@ def add(x, y):
     return x + y
 
 if __name__ == "__main__":
-    celery.celery_main()
+    celery.start()