| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940 | ============================== Example Celery->HTTP Gateway==============================This is an example service exposing the ability to apply tasks and querystatuses/results over HTTP.Some familiarity with Django is recommended.`settings.py` contains the celery settings, you probably want to configureat least the broker related settings.To run the service you have to run the following commands::    $ python manage.py syncdb # (if running the database backend)    $ python manage.py runserverThe service is now running at http://localhost:8000You can apply tasks, with the `/apply/<task_name>` URL::    $ curl http://localhost:8000/apply/celery.ping/    {"ok": "true", "task_id": "e3a95109-afcd-4e54-a341-16c18fddf64b"}Then you can use the resulting task-id to get the return value::    $ curl http://localhost:8000/e3a95109-afcd-4e54-a341-16c18fddf64b/status/    {"task": {"status": "SUCCESS", "result": "pong", "id": "e3a95109-afcd-4e54-a341-16c18fddf64b"}}If you don't want to expose all tasks there are a few possibleapproaches. For instance you can extend the `apply` view to onlyaccept a whitelist. Another possibility is to just make views for every task you want toexpose. We made on such view for ping in `views.ping`::    $ curl http://localhost:8000/ping/    {"ok": "true", "task_id": "383c902c-ba07-436b-b0f3-ea09cc22107c"}
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