routing.rst 20 KB

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  1. .. _guide-routing:
  2. ===============
  3. Routing Tasks
  4. ===============
  5. .. note::
  6. Alternate routing concepts like topic and fanout may not be
  7. available for all transports, please consult the
  8. :ref:`transport comparison table <kombu:transport-comparison>`.
  9. .. contents::
  10. :local:
  11. .. _routing-basics:
  12. Basics
  13. ======
  14. .. _routing-automatic:
  15. Automatic routing
  16. -----------------
  17. The simplest way to do routing is to use the
  18. :setting:`task_create_missing_queues` setting (on by default).
  19. With this setting on, a named queue that is not already defined in
  20. :setting:`task_queues` will be created automatically. This makes it easy to
  21. perform simple routing tasks.
  22. Say you have two servers, `x`, and `y` that handles regular tasks,
  23. and one server `z`, that only handles feed related tasks. You can use this
  24. configuration::
  25. task_routes = {'feed.tasks.import_feed': {'queue': 'feeds'}}
  26. With this route enabled import feed tasks will be routed to the
  27. `"feeds"` queue, while all other tasks will be routed to the default queue
  28. (named `"celery"` for historical reasons).
  29. Alternatively, you can use glob pattern matching, or even regular expressions,
  30. to match all tasks in the ``feed.tasks`` namespace::
  31. task_routes = {'feed.tasks.*': {'queue': 'feeds'}}
  32. If the order in which the patterns are matched is important you should should
  33. specify a tuple as the task router instead::
  34. task_routes = ([
  35. ('feed.tasks.*': {'queue': 'feeds'}),
  36. ('web.tasks.*': {'queue': 'web'}),
  37. (re.compile(r'(video|image)\.tasks\..*'), {'queue': 'media'}),
  38. ],)
  39. .. note::
  40. The :setting:`task_routes` setting can either be a dictionary, or a
  41. list of router objects, so in this case we need to specify the setting
  42. as a tuple containing a list.
  43. After installing the router, you can start server `z` to only process the feeds
  44. queue like this:
  45. .. code-block:: console
  46. user@z:/$ celery -A proj worker -Q feeds
  47. You can specify as many queues as you want, so you can make this server
  48. process the default queue as well:
  49. .. code-block:: console
  50. user@z:/$ celery -A proj worker -Q feeds,celery
  51. .. _routing-changing-default-queue:
  52. Changing the name of the default queue
  53. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  54. You can change the name of the default queue by using the following
  55. configuration:
  56. .. code-block:: python
  57. from kombu import Exchange, Queue
  58. app.conf.task_default_queue = 'default'
  59. app.conf.task_queues = (
  60. Queue('default', Exchange('default'), routing_key='default'),
  61. )
  62. .. _routing-autoqueue-details:
  63. How the queues are defined
  64. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  65. The point with this feature is to hide the complex AMQP protocol for users
  66. with only basic needs. However -- you may still be interested in how these queues
  67. are declared.
  68. A queue named `"video"` will be created with the following settings:
  69. .. code-block:: javascript
  70. {'exchange': 'video',
  71. 'exchange_type': 'direct',
  72. 'routing_key': 'video'}
  73. The non-AMQP backends like `Redis` or `Django-models` do not support exchanges,
  74. so they require the exchange to have the same name as the queue. Using this
  75. design ensures it will work for them as well.
  76. .. _routing-manual:
  77. Manual routing
  78. --------------
  79. Say you have two servers, `x`, and `y` that handles regular tasks,
  80. and one server `z`, that only handles feed related tasks, you can use this
  81. configuration:
  82. .. code-block:: python
  83. from kombu import Queue
  84. app.conf.task_default_queue = 'default'
  85. app.conf.task_queues = (
  86. Queue('default', routing_key='task.#'),
  87. Queue('feed_tasks', routing_key='feed.#'),
  88. )
  89. task_default_exchange = 'tasks'
  90. task_default_exchange_type = 'topic'
  91. task_default_routing_key = 'task.default'
  92. :setting:`task_queues` is a list of :class:`~kombu.entitity.Queue`
  93. instances.
  94. If you don't set the exchange or exchange type values for a key, these
  95. will be taken from the :setting:`task_default_exchange` and
  96. :setting:`task_default_exchange_type` settings.
  97. To route a task to the `feed_tasks` queue, you can add an entry in the
  98. :setting:`task_routes` setting:
  99. .. code-block:: python
  100. task_routes = {
  101. 'feeds.tasks.import_feed': {
  102. 'queue': 'feed_tasks',
  103. 'routing_key': 'feed.import',
  104. },
  105. }
  106. You can also override this using the `routing_key` argument to
  107. :meth:`Task.apply_async`, or :func:`~celery.execute.send_task`:
  108. >>> from feeds.tasks import import_feed
  109. >>> import_feed.apply_async(args=['http://cnn.com/rss'],
  110. ... queue='feed_tasks',
  111. ... routing_key='feed.import')
  112. To make server `z` consume from the feed queue exclusively you can
  113. start it with the :option:`celery worker -Q` option:
  114. .. code-block:: console
  115. user@z:/$ celery -A proj worker -Q feed_tasks --hostname=z@%h
  116. Servers `x` and `y` must be configured to consume from the default queue:
  117. .. code-block:: console
  118. user@x:/$ celery -A proj worker -Q default --hostname=x@%h
  119. user@y:/$ celery -A proj worker -Q default --hostname=y@%h
  120. If you want, you can even have your feed processing worker handle regular
  121. tasks as well, maybe in times when there's a lot of work to do:
  122. .. code-block:: console
  123. user@z:/$ celery -A proj worker -Q feed_tasks,default --hostname=z@%h
  124. If you have another queue but on another exchange you want to add,
  125. just specify a custom exchange and exchange type:
  126. .. code-block:: python
  127. from kombu import Exchange, Queue
  128. app.conf.task_queues = (
  129. Queue('feed_tasks', routing_key='feed.#'),
  130. Queue('regular_tasks', routing_key='task.#'),
  131. Queue('image_tasks', exchange=Exchange('mediatasks', type='direct'),
  132. routing_key='image.compress'),
  133. )
  134. If you're confused about these terms, you should read up on AMQP.
  135. .. seealso::
  136. In addition to the :ref:`amqp-primer` below, there's
  137. `Rabbits and Warrens`_, an excellent blog post describing queues and
  138. exchanges. There's also AMQP in 10 minutes*: `Flexible Routing Model`_,
  139. and `Standard Exchange Types`_. For users of RabbitMQ the `RabbitMQ FAQ`_
  140. could be useful as a source of information.
  141. .. _`Rabbits and Warrens`: http://blogs.digitar.com/jjww/2009/01/rabbits-and-warrens/
  142. .. _`Flexible Routing Model`: http://bit.ly/95XFO1
  143. .. _`Standard Exchange Types`: http://bit.ly/EEWca
  144. .. _`RabbitMQ FAQ`: http://www.rabbitmq.com/faq.html
  145. .. _routing-special_options:
  146. Special Routing Options
  147. =======================
  148. .. _routing-options-rabbitmq-priorities:
  149. RabbitMQ Message Priorities
  150. ---------------------------
  151. :supported transports: rabbitmq
  152. .. versionadded:: 4.0
  153. Queues can be configured to support priorities by setting the
  154. ``x-max-priority`` argument:
  155. .. code-block:: python
  156. from kombu import Exchange, Queue
  157. app.conf.task_queues = [
  158. Queue('tasks', Exchange('tasks'), routing_key='tasks',
  159. queue_arguments={'x-max-priority': 10},
  160. ]
  161. A default value for all queues can be set using the
  162. :setting:`task_queue_max_priority` setting:
  163. .. code-block:: python
  164. app.conf.task_queue_max_priority = 10
  165. .. _amqp-primer:
  166. AMQP Primer
  167. ===========
  168. Messages
  169. --------
  170. A message consists of headers and a body. Celery uses headers to store
  171. the content type of the message and its content encoding. The
  172. content type is usually the serialization format used to serialize the
  173. message. The body contains the name of the task to execute, the
  174. task id (UUID), the arguments to apply it with and some additional
  175. metadata -- like the number of retries or an ETA.
  176. This is an example task message represented as a Python dictionary:
  177. .. code-block:: javascript
  178. {'task': 'myapp.tasks.add',
  179. 'id': '54086c5e-6193-4575-8308-dbab76798756',
  180. 'args': [4, 4],
  181. 'kwargs': {}}
  182. .. _amqp-producers-consumers-brokers:
  183. Producers, consumers and brokers
  184. --------------------------------
  185. The client sending messages is typically called a *publisher*, or
  186. a *producer*, while the entity receiving messages is called
  187. a *consumer*.
  188. The *broker* is the message server, routing messages from producers
  189. to consumers.
  190. You are likely to see these terms used a lot in AMQP related material.
  191. .. _amqp-exchanges-queues-keys:
  192. Exchanges, queues and routing keys.
  193. -----------------------------------
  194. 1. Messages are sent to exchanges.
  195. 2. An exchange routes messages to one or more queues. Several exchange types
  196. exists, providing different ways to do routing, or implementing
  197. different messaging scenarios.
  198. 3. The message waits in the queue until someone consumes it.
  199. 4. The message is deleted from the queue when it has been acknowledged.
  200. The steps required to send and receive messages are:
  201. 1. Create an exchange
  202. 2. Create a queue
  203. 3. Bind the queue to the exchange.
  204. Celery automatically creates the entities necessary for the queues in
  205. :setting:`task_queues` to work (except if the queue's `auto_declare`
  206. setting is set to :const:`False`).
  207. Here's an example queue configuration with three queues;
  208. One for video, one for images and one default queue for everything else:
  209. .. code-block:: python
  210. from kombu import Exchange, Queue
  211. app.conf.task_queues = (
  212. Queue('default', Exchange('default'), routing_key='default'),
  213. Queue('videos', Exchange('media'), routing_key='media.video'),
  214. Queue('images', Exchange('media'), routing_key='media.image'),
  215. )
  216. app.conf.task_default_queue = 'default'
  217. app.conf.task_default_exchange_type = 'direct'
  218. app.conf.task_default_routing_key = 'default'
  219. .. _amqp-exchange-types:
  220. Exchange types
  221. --------------
  222. The exchange type defines how the messages are routed through the exchange.
  223. The exchange types defined in the standard are `direct`, `topic`,
  224. `fanout` and `headers`. Also non-standard exchange types are available
  225. as plug-ins to RabbitMQ, like the `last-value-cache plug-in`_ by Michael
  226. Bridgen.
  227. .. _`last-value-cache plug-in`:
  228. https://github.com/squaremo/rabbitmq-lvc-plugin
  229. .. _amqp-exchange-type-direct:
  230. Direct exchanges
  231. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  232. Direct exchanges match by exact routing keys, so a queue bound by
  233. the routing key `video` only receives messages with that routing key.
  234. .. _amqp-exchange-type-topic:
  235. Topic exchanges
  236. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  237. Topic exchanges matches routing keys using dot-separated words, and the
  238. wildcard characters: ``*`` (matches a single word), and ``#`` (matches
  239. zero or more words).
  240. With routing keys like ``usa.news``, ``usa.weather``, ``norway.news`` and
  241. ``norway.weather``, bindings could be ``*.news`` (all news), ``usa.#`` (all
  242. items in the USA) or ``usa.weather`` (all USA weather items).
  243. .. _amqp-api:
  244. Related API commands
  245. --------------------
  246. .. method:: exchange.declare(exchange_name, type, passive,
  247. durable, auto_delete, internal)
  248. Declares an exchange by name.
  249. See :meth:`amqp:Channel.exchange_declare <amqp.channel.Channel.exchange_declare>`.
  250. :keyword passive: Passive means the exchange won't be created, but you
  251. can use this to check if the exchange already exists.
  252. :keyword durable: Durable exchanges are persistent. That is - they survive
  253. a broker restart.
  254. :keyword auto_delete: This means the queue will be deleted by the broker
  255. when there are no more queues using it.
  256. .. method:: queue.declare(queue_name, passive, durable, exclusive, auto_delete)
  257. Declares a queue by name.
  258. See :meth:`amqp:Channel.queue_declare <amqp.channel.Channel.queue_declare>`
  259. Exclusive queues can only be consumed from by the current connection.
  260. Exclusive also implies `auto_delete`.
  261. .. method:: queue.bind(queue_name, exchange_name, routing_key)
  262. Binds a queue to an exchange with a routing key.
  263. Unbound queues will not receive messages, so this is necessary.
  264. See :meth:`amqp:Channel.queue_bind <amqp.channel.Channel.queue_bind>`
  265. .. method:: queue.delete(name, if_unused=False, if_empty=False)
  266. Deletes a queue and its binding.
  267. See :meth:`amqp:Channel.queue_delete <amqp.channel.Channel.queue_delete>`
  268. .. method:: exchange.delete(name, if_unused=False)
  269. Deletes an exchange.
  270. See :meth:`amqp:Channel.exchange_delete <amqp.channel.Channel.exchange_delete>`
  271. .. note::
  272. Declaring does not necessarily mean "create". When you declare you
  273. *assert* that the entity exists and that it's operable. There is no
  274. rule as to whom should initially create the exchange/queue/binding,
  275. whether consumer or producer. Usually the first one to need it will
  276. be the one to create it.
  277. .. _amqp-api-hands-on:
  278. Hands-on with the API
  279. ---------------------
  280. Celery comes with a tool called :program:`celery amqp`
  281. that is used for command line access to the AMQP API, enabling access to
  282. administration tasks like creating/deleting queues and exchanges, purging
  283. queues or sending messages. It can also be used for non-AMQP brokers,
  284. but different implementation may not implement all commands.
  285. You can write commands directly in the arguments to :program:`celery amqp`,
  286. or just start with no arguments to start it in shell-mode:
  287. .. code-block:: console
  288. $ celery -A proj amqp
  289. -> connecting to amqp://guest@localhost:5672/.
  290. -> connected.
  291. 1>
  292. Here ``1>`` is the prompt. The number 1, is the number of commands you
  293. have executed so far. Type ``help`` for a list of commands available.
  294. It also supports auto-completion, so you can start typing a command and then
  295. hit the `tab` key to show a list of possible matches.
  296. Let's create a queue you can send messages to:
  297. .. code-block:: console
  298. $ celery -A proj amqp
  299. 1> exchange.declare testexchange direct
  300. ok.
  301. 2> queue.declare testqueue
  302. ok. queue:testqueue messages:0 consumers:0.
  303. 3> queue.bind testqueue testexchange testkey
  304. ok.
  305. This created the direct exchange ``testexchange``, and a queue
  306. named ``testqueue``. The queue is bound to the exchange using
  307. the routing key ``testkey``.
  308. From now on all messages sent to the exchange ``testexchange`` with routing
  309. key ``testkey`` will be moved to this queue. You can send a message by
  310. using the ``basic.publish`` command:
  311. .. code-block:: console
  312. 4> basic.publish 'This is a message!' testexchange testkey
  313. ok.
  314. Now that the message is sent you can retrieve it again. You can use the
  315. ``basic.get``` command here, which polls for new messages on the queue
  316. (which is alright for maintenance tasks, for services you'd want to use
  317. ``basic.consume`` instead)
  318. Pop a message off the queue:
  319. .. code-block:: console
  320. 5> basic.get testqueue
  321. {'body': 'This is a message!',
  322. 'delivery_info': {'delivery_tag': 1,
  323. 'exchange': u'testexchange',
  324. 'message_count': 0,
  325. 'redelivered': False,
  326. 'routing_key': u'testkey'},
  327. 'properties': {}}
  328. AMQP uses acknowledgment to signify that a message has been received
  329. and processed successfully. If the message has not been acknowledged
  330. and consumer channel is closed, the message will be delivered to
  331. another consumer.
  332. Note the delivery tag listed in the structure above; Within a connection
  333. channel, every received message has a unique delivery tag,
  334. This tag is used to acknowledge the message. Also note that
  335. delivery tags are not unique across connections, so in another client
  336. the delivery tag `1` might point to a different message than in this channel.
  337. You can acknowledge the message you received using ``basic.ack``:
  338. .. code-block:: console
  339. 6> basic.ack 1
  340. ok.
  341. To clean up after our test session you should delete the entities you created:
  342. .. code-block:: console
  343. 7> queue.delete testqueue
  344. ok. 0 messages deleted.
  345. 8> exchange.delete testexchange
  346. ok.
  347. .. _routing-tasks:
  348. Routing Tasks
  349. =============
  350. .. _routing-defining-queues:
  351. Defining queues
  352. ---------------
  353. In Celery available queues are defined by the :setting:`task_queues` setting.
  354. Here's an example queue configuration with three queues;
  355. One for video, one for images and one default queue for everything else:
  356. .. code-block:: python
  357. default_exchange = Exchange('default', type='direct')
  358. media_exchange = Exchange('media', type='direct')
  359. app.conf.task_queues = (
  360. Queue('default', default_exchange, routing_key='default'),
  361. Queue('videos', media_exchange, routing_key='media.video'),
  362. Queue('images', media_exchange, routing_key='media.image')
  363. )
  364. app.conf.task_default_queue = 'default'
  365. app.conf.task_default_exchange = 'default'
  366. app.conf.task_default_routing_key = 'default'
  367. Here, the :setting:`task_default_queue` will be used to route tasks that
  368. doesn't have an explicit route.
  369. The default exchange, exchange type and routing key will be used as the
  370. default routing values for tasks, and as the default values for entries
  371. in :setting:`task_queues`.
  372. .. _routing-task-destination:
  373. Specifying task destination
  374. ---------------------------
  375. The destination for a task is decided by the following (in order):
  376. 1. The :ref:`routers` defined in :setting:`task_routes`.
  377. 2. The routing arguments to :func:`Task.apply_async`.
  378. 3. Routing related attributes defined on the :class:`~celery.task.base.Task`
  379. itself.
  380. It is considered best practice to not hard-code these settings, but rather
  381. leave that as configuration options by using :ref:`routers`;
  382. This is the most flexible approach, but sensible defaults can still be set
  383. as task attributes.
  384. .. _routers:
  385. Routers
  386. -------
  387. A router is a class that decides the routing options for a task.
  388. All you need to define a new router is to create a class with a
  389. ``route_for_task`` method:
  390. .. code-block:: python
  391. class MyRouter(object):
  392. def route_for_task(self, task, args=None, kwargs=None):
  393. if task == 'myapp.tasks.compress_video':
  394. return {'exchange': 'video',
  395. 'exchange_type': 'topic',
  396. 'routing_key': 'video.compress'}
  397. return None
  398. If you return the ``queue`` key, it will expand with the defined settings of
  399. that queue in :setting:`task_queues`:
  400. .. code-block:: javascript
  401. {'queue': 'video', 'routing_key': 'video.compress'}
  402. becomes -->
  403. .. code-block:: javascript
  404. {'queue': 'video',
  405. 'exchange': 'video',
  406. 'exchange_type': 'topic',
  407. 'routing_key': 'video.compress'}
  408. You install router classes by adding them to the :setting:`task_routes`
  409. setting:
  410. .. code-block:: python
  411. task_routes = (MyRouter(),)
  412. Router classes can also be added by name:
  413. .. code-block:: python
  414. task_routes = ('myapp.routers.MyRouter',)
  415. For simple task name -> route mappings like the router example above,
  416. you can simply drop a dict into :setting:`task_routes` to get the
  417. same behavior:
  418. .. code-block:: python
  419. task_routes = (
  420. {'myapp.tasks.compress_video': {
  421. 'queue': 'video',
  422. 'routing_key': 'video.compress',
  423. }},
  424. )
  425. The routers will then be traversed in order, it will stop at the first router
  426. returning a true value, and use that as the final route for the task.
  427. Broadcast
  428. ---------
  429. Celery can also support broadcast routing.
  430. Here is an example exchange ``broadcast_tasks`` that delivers
  431. copies of tasks to all workers connected to it:
  432. .. code-block:: python
  433. from kombu.common import Broadcast
  434. app.conf.task_queues = (Broadcast('broadcast_tasks'),)
  435. app.conf.task_routes = {'tasks.reload_cache': {'queue': 'broadcast_tasks'}}
  436. Now the ``tasks.reload_cache`` task will be sent to every
  437. worker consuming from this queue.
  438. Here is another example of broadcast routing, this time with
  439. a celerybeat schedule:
  440. .. code-block:: python
  441. from kombu.common import Broadcast
  442. from celery.schedules import crontab
  443. app.conf.task_queues = (Broadcast('broadcast_tasks'),)
  444. app.conf.beat_schedule = {
  445. 'test-task': {
  446. 'task': 'tasks.reload_cache',
  447. 'schedule': crontab(minute=0, hour='*/3'),
  448. 'options': {'exchange': 'broadcast_tasks'}
  449. },
  450. }
  451. .. admonition:: Broadcast & Results
  452. Note that Celery result does not define what happens if two
  453. tasks have the same task_id. If the same task is distributed to more
  454. than one worker, then the state history may not be preserved.
  455. It is a good idea to set the ``task.ignore_result`` attribute in
  456. this case.