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							- .. _guide-beat:
 
- ================
 
-  Periodic Tasks
 
- ================
 
- .. contents::
 
-     :local:
 
- Introduction
 
- ============
 
- Celerybeat is a scheduler.  It kicks off tasks at regular intervals,
 
- which are then executed by worker nodes available in the cluster.
 
- By default the entries are taken from the :setting:`CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE` setting,
 
- but custom stores can also be used, like storing the entries
 
- in an SQL database.
 
- You have to ensure only a single scheduler is running for a schedule
 
- at a time, otherwise you would end up with duplicate tasks. Using
 
- a centralized approach means the schedule does not have to be synchronized,
 
- and the service can operate without using locks.
 
- .. _beat-entries:
 
- Entries
 
- =======
 
- To schedule a task periodically you have to add an entry to the
 
- :setting:`CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE` setting:
 
- .. code-block:: python
 
-     from datetime import timedelta
 
-     CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE = {
 
-         "runs-every-30-seconds": {
 
-             "task": "tasks.add",
 
-             "schedule": timedelta(seconds=30),
 
-             "args": (16, 16)
 
-         },
 
-     }
 
- Here we run the ``tasks.add`` task every 30 seconds.
 
- Using a :class:`~datetime.timedelta` means the task will be executed
 
- 30 seconds after ``celerybeat`` starts, and then every 30 seconds
 
- after the last run. A crontab like schedule also exists, see the section
 
- on `Crontab schedules`_.
 
- .. _beat-entry-fields:
 
- Available Fields
 
- ----------------
 
- * ``task``
 
-     The name of the task to execute.
 
- * ``schedule``
 
-     The frequency of execution.
 
-     This can be the number of seconds as an integer, a
 
-     :class:`~datetime.timedelta`, or a :class:`~celery.schedules.crontab`.
 
-     You can also define your own custom schedule types, just make sure
 
-     it supports the :class:`~celery.schedules.schedule` interface.
 
- * ``args``
 
-     Positional arguments (:class:`list` or :class:`tuple`).
 
- * ``kwargs``
 
-     Keyword arguments (:class:`dict`).
 
- * ``options``
 
-     Execution options (:class:`dict`).
 
-     This can be any argument supported by :meth:`~celery.execute.apply_async`,
 
-     e.g. ``exchange``, ``routing_key``, ``expires``, and so on.
 
- * ``relative``
 
-     By default :class:`~datetime.timedelta` schedules are scheduled
 
-     "by the clock". This means the frequency is rounded to the nearest
 
-     second, minute, hour or day depending on the period of the timedelta.
 
-     If ``relative`` is true the frequency is not rounded and will be
 
-     relative to the time ``celerybeat`` was started.
 
- .. _beat-crontab:
 
- Crontab schedules
 
- =================
 
- If you want more control over when the task is executed, for
 
- example, a particular time of day or day of the week, you can use
 
- the ``crontab`` schedule type:
 
- .. code-block:: python
 
-     from celery.schedules import crontab
 
-     CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE = {
 
-         # Executes every monday morning at 7:30 A.M
 
-         "every-monday-morning": {
 
-             "task": "tasks.add",
 
-             "schedule": crontab(hour=7, minute=30, day_of_week=1),
 
-             "args": (16, 16),
 
-         },
 
-     }
 
- The syntax of these crontab expressions are very flexible.  Some examples:
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | **Example**                         | **Meaning**                                |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab()                           | Execute every minute.                      |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute=0, hour=0)           | Execute daily at midnight.                 |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute=0,                   | Execute every three hours---at midnight,   |
 
- |                                     | 3am, 6am, 9am, noon, 3pm, 6pm, 9pm.        |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute=0,                   | Same as previous.                          |
 
- |         hour=[0,3,6,9,12,15,18,21]) |                                            |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute="\*/15")             | Execute every 15 minutes.                  |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(day_of_week="sunday")       | Execute every minute (!) at sundays.       |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute="*",                 | Same as previous.                          |
 
- |         hour="*",                   |                                            |
 
- |         day_of_week="sun")          |                                            |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute="\*/10",             | Execute every ten minutes, but only        |
 
- |         hour="3,17,22",             | between 3-4 am, 5-6 pm and 10-11 pm on     |
 
- |         day_of_week="thu,fri")      | thursdays or fridays.                      |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute=0, hour="\*/2,\*/3") | Execute every even hour, and every hour    |
 
- |                                     | divisable by three. This means:            |
 
- |                                     | at every hour *except*: 1am,               |
 
- |                                     | 5am, 7am, 11am, 1pm, 5pm, 7pm,             |
 
- |                                     | 11pm                                       |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute=0, hour="\*/5")      | Execute hour divisable by 5. This means    |
 
- |                                     | that it is triggered at 3pm, not 5pm       |
 
- |                                     | (since 3pm equals the 24-hour clock        |
 
- |                                     | value of "15", which is divisable by 5).   |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- | crontab(minute=0, hour="\*/3,8-17") | Execute every hour divisable by 3, and     |
 
- |                                     | every hour during office hours (8am-5pm).  |
 
- +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
 
- .. _beat-starting:
 
- Starting celerybeat
 
- ===================
 
- To start the ``celerybeat`` service::
 
-     $ celerybeat
 
- You can also start ``celerybeat`` with ``celeryd`` by using the ``-B`` option,
 
- this is convenient if you only intend to use one worker node::
 
-     $ celeryd -B
 
- Celerybeat needs to store the last run times of the tasks in a local database
 
- file (named ``celerybeat-schedule`` by default), so you need access to
 
- write to the current directory, or alternatively you can specify a custom
 
- location for this file::
 
-     $ celerybeat -s /home/celery/var/run/celerybeat-schedule
 
- .. _beat-custom-schedulers:
 
- Using custom scheduler classes
 
- ------------------------------
 
- Custom scheduler classes can be specified on the command line (the ``-S``
 
- argument).  The default scheduler is :class:`celery.beat.PersistentScheduler`,
 
- which is simply keeping track of the last run times in a local database file
 
- (a :mod:`shelve`).
 
- ``django-celery`` also ships with a scheduler that stores the schedule in a
 
- database::
 
-     $ celerybeat -S djcelery.schedulers.DatabaseScheduler
 
- Using ``django-celery``'s scheduler you can add, modify and remove periodic
 
- tasks from the Django Admin.
 
 
  |