daemonizing.rst 12 KB

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  1. .. _daemonizing:
  2. ================================
  3. Running the worker as a daemon
  4. ================================
  5. Celery does not daemonize itself, please use one of the following
  6. daemonization tools.
  7. .. contents::
  8. :local:
  9. .. _daemon-generic:
  10. Generic init scripts
  11. ====================
  12. See the `extra/generic-init.d/`_ directory Celery distribution.
  13. This directory contains generic bash init scripts for the
  14. :program:`celery worker` program,
  15. these should run on Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and other Unix-like platforms.
  16. .. _`extra/generic-init.d/`:
  17. http://github.com/celery/celery/tree/3.1/extra/generic-init.d/
  18. .. _generic-initd-celeryd:
  19. Init script: celeryd
  20. --------------------
  21. :Usage: `/etc/init.d/celeryd {start|stop|restart|status}`
  22. :Configuration file: /etc/default/celeryd
  23. To configure this script to run the worker properly you probably need to at least
  24. tell it where to change
  25. directory to when it starts (to find the module containing your app, or your
  26. configuration module).
  27. The daemonization script is configured by the file ``/etc/default/celeryd``,
  28. which is a shell (sh) script. You can add environment variables and the
  29. configuration options below to this file. To add environment variables you
  30. must also export them (e.g. ``export DISPLAY=":0"``)
  31. .. Admonition:: Superuser privileges required
  32. The init scripts can only be used by root,
  33. and the shell configuration file must also be owned by root.
  34. Unprivileged users do not need to use the init script,
  35. instead they can use the :program:`celery multi` utility (or
  36. :program:`celery worker --detach`):
  37. .. code-block:: console
  38. $ celery multi start worker1 \
  39. -A proj \
  40. --pidfile="$HOME/run/celery/%n.pid" \
  41. --logfile="$HOME/log/celery/%n%I.log"
  42. $ celery multi restart worker1 \
  43. -A proj \
  44. --logfile="$HOME/log/celery/%n%I.log" \
  45. --pidfile="$HOME/run/celery/%n.pid
  46. $ celery multi stopwait worker1 --pidfile="$HOME/run/celery/%n.pid"
  47. .. _generic-initd-celeryd-example:
  48. Example configuration
  49. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  50. This is an example configuration for a Python project.
  51. :file:`/etc/default/celeryd`:
  52. .. code-block:: bash
  53. # Names of nodes to start
  54. # most people will only start one node:
  55. CELERYD_NODES="worker1"
  56. # but you can also start multiple and configure settings
  57. # for each in CELERYD_OPTS (see `celery multi --help` for examples):
  58. #CELERYD_NODES="worker1 worker2 worker3"
  59. # alternatively, you can specify the number of nodes to start:
  60. #CELERYD_NODES=10
  61. # Absolute or relative path to the 'celery' command:
  62. CELERY_BIN="/usr/local/bin/celery"
  63. #CELERY_BIN="/virtualenvs/def/bin/celery"
  64. # App instance to use
  65. # comment out this line if you don't use an app
  66. CELERY_APP="proj"
  67. # or fully qualified:
  68. #CELERY_APP="proj.tasks:app"
  69. # Where to chdir at start.
  70. CELERYD_CHDIR="/opt/Myproject/"
  71. # Extra command-line arguments to the worker
  72. CELERYD_OPTS="--time-limit=300 --concurrency=8"
  73. # Set logging level to DEBUG
  74. #CELERYD_LOG_LEVEL="DEBUG"
  75. # %n will be replaced with the first part of the nodename.
  76. CELERYD_LOG_FILE="/var/log/celery/%n%I.log"
  77. CELERYD_PID_FILE="/var/run/celery/%n.pid"
  78. # Workers should run as an unprivileged user.
  79. # You need to create this user manually (or you can choose
  80. # a user/group combination that already exists, e.g. nobody).
  81. CELERYD_USER="celery"
  82. CELERYD_GROUP="celery"
  83. # If enabled pid and log directories will be created if missing,
  84. # and owned by the userid/group configured.
  85. CELERY_CREATE_DIRS=1
  86. Using a login shell
  87. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  88. You can inherit the environment of the ``CELERYD_USER`` by using a login
  89. shell:
  90. .. code-block:: bash
  91. CELERYD_SU_ARGS="-l"
  92. Note that this is not recommended, and that you should only use this option
  93. when absolutely necessary.
  94. .. _generic-initd-celeryd-django-example:
  95. Example Django configuration
  96. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  97. Django users now uses the exact same template as above,
  98. but make sure that the module that defines your Celery app instance
  99. also sets a default value for :envvar:`DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE`
  100. as shown in the example Django project in :ref:`django-first-steps`.
  101. .. _generic-initd-celeryd-options:
  102. Available options
  103. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  104. * CELERY_APP
  105. App instance to use (value for ``--app`` argument).
  106. If you're still using the old API, or django-celery, then you
  107. can omit this setting.
  108. * CELERY_BIN
  109. Absolute or relative path to the :program:`celery` program.
  110. Examples:
  111. * :file:`celery`
  112. * :file:`/usr/local/bin/celery`
  113. * :file:`/virtualenvs/proj/bin/celery`
  114. * :file:`/virtualenvs/proj/bin/python -m celery`
  115. * CELERYD_NODES
  116. List of node names to start (separated by space).
  117. * CELERYD_OPTS
  118. Additional command-line arguments for the worker, see
  119. `celery worker --help` for a list. This also supports the extended
  120. syntax used by `multi` to configure settings for individual nodes.
  121. See `celery multi --help` for some multi-node configuration examples.
  122. * CELERYD_CHDIR
  123. Path to change directory to at start. Default is to stay in the current
  124. directory.
  125. * CELERYD_PID_FILE
  126. Full path to the PID file. Default is /var/run/celery/%n.pid
  127. * CELERYD_LOG_FILE
  128. Full path to the worker log file. Default is /var/log/celery/%n%I.log
  129. **Note**: Using `%I` is important when using the prefork pool as having
  130. multiple processes share the same log file will lead to race conditions.
  131. * CELERYD_LOG_LEVEL
  132. Worker log level. Default is INFO.
  133. * CELERYD_USER
  134. User to run the worker as. Default is current user.
  135. * CELERYD_GROUP
  136. Group to run worker as. Default is current user.
  137. * CELERY_CREATE_DIRS
  138. Always create directories (log directory and pid file directory).
  139. Default is to only create directories when no custom logfile/pidfile set.
  140. * CELERY_CREATE_RUNDIR
  141. Always create pidfile directory. By default only enabled when no custom
  142. pidfile location set.
  143. * CELERY_CREATE_LOGDIR
  144. Always create logfile directory. By default only enable when no custom
  145. logfile location set.
  146. .. _generic-initd-celerybeat:
  147. Init script: celerybeat
  148. -----------------------
  149. :Usage: `/etc/init.d/celerybeat {start|stop|restart}`
  150. :Configuration file: /etc/default/celerybeat or /etc/default/celeryd
  151. .. _generic-initd-celerybeat-example:
  152. Example configuration
  153. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  154. This is an example configuration for a Python project:
  155. `/etc/default/celerybeat`:
  156. .. code-block:: bash
  157. # Absolute or relative path to the 'celery' command:
  158. CELERY_BIN="/usr/local/bin/celery"
  159. #CELERY_BIN="/virtualenvs/def/bin/celery"
  160. # App instance to use
  161. # comment out this line if you don't use an app
  162. CELERY_APP="proj"
  163. # or fully qualified:
  164. #CELERY_APP="proj.tasks:app"
  165. # Where to chdir at start.
  166. CELERYBEAT_CHDIR="/opt/Myproject/"
  167. # Extra arguments to celerybeat
  168. CELERYBEAT_OPTS="--schedule=/var/run/celery/celerybeat-schedule"
  169. .. _generic-initd-celerybeat-django-example:
  170. Example Django configuration
  171. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  172. You should use the same template as above, but make sure the
  173. ``DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE`` variable is set (and exported), and that
  174. ``CELERYD_CHDIR`` is set to the projects directory:
  175. .. code-block:: bash
  176. export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE="settings"
  177. CELERYD_CHDIR="/opt/MyProject"
  178. .. _generic-initd-celerybeat-options:
  179. Available options
  180. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  181. * CELERY_APP
  182. App instance to use (value for ``--app`` argument).
  183. * CELERYBEAT_OPTS
  184. Additional arguments to celerybeat, see `celerybeat --help` for a
  185. list.
  186. * CELERYBEAT_PID_FILE
  187. Full path to the PID file. Default is /var/run/celeryd.pid.
  188. * CELERYBEAT_LOG_FILE
  189. Full path to the celeryd log file. Default is /var/log/celeryd.log
  190. * CELERYBEAT_LOG_LEVEL
  191. Log level to use for celeryd. Default is INFO.
  192. * CELERYBEAT_USER
  193. User to run beat as. Default is current user.
  194. * CELERYBEAT_GROUP
  195. Group to run beat as. Default is current user.
  196. * CELERY_CREATE_DIRS
  197. Always create directories (log directory and pid file directory).
  198. Default is to only create directories when no custom logfile/pidfile set.
  199. * CELERY_CREATE_RUNDIR
  200. Always create pidfile directory. By default only enabled when no custom
  201. pidfile location set.
  202. * CELERY_CREATE_LOGDIR
  203. Always create logfile directory. By default only enable when no custom
  204. logfile location set.
  205. .. _daemon-systemd-generic:
  206. Usage systemd
  207. =============
  208. .. _generic-systemd-celery:
  209. Service file: celery.service
  210. ----------------------------
  211. :Usage: `systemctl {start|stop|restart|status} celery.service`
  212. :Configuration file: /etc/conf.d/celery
  213. To create a temporary folders for the log and pid files change user and group in
  214. /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/celery.conf.
  215. To configure user, group, chdir change settings User, Group and WorkingDirectory defines
  216. in /usr/lib/systemd/system/celery.service.
  217. .. _generic-systemd-celery-example:
  218. Example configuration
  219. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  220. This is an example configuration for a Python project:
  221. :file:`/etc/conf.d/celery`:
  222. .. code-block:: bash
  223. # Name of nodes to start
  224. # here we have a single node
  225. CELERYD_NODES="w1"
  226. # or we could have three nodes:
  227. #CELERYD_NODES="w1 w2 w3"
  228. # Absolute or relative path to the 'celery' command:
  229. CELERY_BIN="/usr/local/bin/celery"
  230. #CELERY_BIN="/virtualenvs/def/bin/celery"
  231. # How to call manage.py
  232. CELERYD_MULTI="multi"
  233. # Extra command-line arguments to the worker
  234. CELERYD_OPTS="--time-limit=300 --concurrency=8"
  235. # - %n will be replaced with the first part of the nodename.
  236. # - %I will be replaced with the current child process index
  237. # and is important when using the prefork pool to avoid race conditions.
  238. CELERYD_LOG_FILE="/var/log/celery/%n%I.log"
  239. CELERYD_PID_FILE="/var/run/celery/%n.pid"
  240. .. _generic-systemd-celeryd-django-example:
  241. Example Django configuration
  242. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  243. This is an example configuration for those using `django-celery`:
  244. .. code-block:: bash
  245. # Name of nodes to start
  246. # here we have a single node
  247. CELERYD_NODES="w1"
  248. # or we could have three nodes:
  249. #CELERYD_NODES="w1 w2 w3"
  250. # Absolute path to "manage.py"
  251. CELERY_BIN="/opt/Myproject/manage.py"
  252. # How to call manage.py
  253. CELERYD_MULTI="celery multi"
  254. # Extra command-line arguments to the worker
  255. CELERYD_OPTS="--time-limit=300 --concurrency=8"
  256. # - %n will be replaced with the first part of the nodename.
  257. # - %I will be replaced with the current child process index
  258. CELERYD_LOG_FILE="/var/log/celery/%n%I.log"
  259. CELERYD_PID_FILE="/var/run/celery/%n.pid"
  260. To add an environment variable such as DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE use the
  261. Environment in celery.service.
  262. .. _generic-initd-troubleshooting:
  263. Troubleshooting
  264. ---------------
  265. If you can't get the init scripts to work, you should try running
  266. them in *verbose mode*:
  267. .. code-block:: console
  268. # sh -x /etc/init.d/celeryd start
  269. This can reveal hints as to why the service won't start.
  270. If the worker starts with "OK" but exits almost immediately afterwards
  271. and there is nothing in the log file, then there is probably an error
  272. but as the daemons standard outputs are already closed you'll
  273. not be able to see them anywhere. For this situation you can use
  274. the :envvar:`C_FAKEFORK` environment variable to skip the
  275. daemonization step:
  276. .. code-block:: console
  277. # C_FAKEFORK=1 sh -x /etc/init.d/celeryd start
  278. and now you should be able to see the errors.
  279. Commonly such errors are caused by insufficient permissions
  280. to read from, or write to a file, and also by syntax errors
  281. in configuration modules, user modules, 3rd party libraries,
  282. or even from Celery itself (if you've found a bug, in which case
  283. you should :ref:`report it <reporting-bugs>`).
  284. .. _daemon-supervisord:
  285. `supervisord`_
  286. ==============
  287. * `extra/supervisord/`_
  288. .. _`extra/supervisord/`:
  289. http://github.com/celery/celery/tree/3.1/extra/supervisord/
  290. .. _`supervisord`: http://supervisord.org/
  291. .. _daemon-launchd:
  292. launchd (OS X)
  293. ==============
  294. * `extra/osx`_
  295. .. _`extra/osx`:
  296. http://github.com/celery/celery/tree/3.1/extra/osx/
  297. .. _daemon-windows:
  298. Windows
  299. =======
  300. See this excellent external tutorial:
  301. http://www.calazan.com/windows-tip-run-applications-in-the-background-using-task-scheduler/