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- .. _whatsnew-3.0:
- ===========================================
- What's new in Celery 3.0 (Chiastic Slide)
- ===========================================
- Celery is a simple, flexible, and reliable distributed system to
- process vast amounts of messages, while providing operations with
- the tools required to maintain such a system.
- It's a task queue with focus on real-time processing, while also
- supporting task scheduling.
- Celery has a large and diverse community of users and contributors,
- you should come join us :ref:`on IRC <irc-channel>`
- or :ref:`our mailing-list <mailing-list>`.
- To read more about Celery you should go read the :ref:`introduction <intro>`.
- While this version is backward compatible with previous versions
- it's important that you read the following section.
- If you use Celery in combination with Django you must also
- read the `django-celery changelog`_ and upgrade
- to :pypi:`django-celery 3.0 <django-celery>`.
- This version is officially supported on CPython 2.5, 2.6, 2.7, 3.2 and 3.3,
- as well as PyPy and Jython.
- Highlights
- ==========
- .. topic:: Overview
- - A new and improved API, that's both simpler and more powerful.
- Everyone must read the new :ref:`first-steps` tutorial,
- and the new :ref:`next-steps` tutorial. Oh, and
- why not reread the user guide while you're at it :)
- There are no current plans to deprecate the old API,
- so you don't have to be in a hurry to port your applications.
- - The worker is now thread-less, giving great performance improvements.
- - The new "Canvas" makes it easy to define complex work-flows.
- Ever wanted to chain tasks together? This is possible, but
- not just that, now you can even chain together groups and chords,
- or even combine multiple chains.
- Read more in the :ref:`Canvas <guide-canvas>` user guide.
- - All of Celery's command-line programs are now available from a single
- :program:`celery` umbrella command.
- - This is the last version to support Python 2.5.
- Starting with Celery 3.1, Python 2.6 or later is required.
- - Support for the new :pypi:`librabbitmq` C client.
- Celery will automatically use the :pypi:`librabbitmq` module
- if installed, which is a very fast and memory-optimized
- replacement for the :pypi:`amqp` module.
- - Redis support is more reliable with improved ack emulation.
- - Celery now always uses UTC
- - Over 600 commits, 30k additions/36k deletions.
- In comparison 1.0➝ 2.0 had 18k additions/8k deletions.
- .. _`website`: http://celeryproject.org/
- .. _`django-celery changelog`:
- https://github.com/celery/django-celery/tree/master/Changelog
- .. contents::
- :local:
- :depth: 2
- .. _v300-important:
- Important Notes
- ===============
- Broadcast exchanges renamed
- ---------------------------
- The workers remote control command exchanges has been renamed
- (a new :term:`pidbox` name), this is because the ``auto_delete`` flag on
- the exchanges has been removed, and that makes it incompatible with
- earlier versions.
- You can manually delete the old exchanges if you want,
- using the :program:`celery amqp` command (previously called ``camqadm``):
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery amqp exchange.delete celeryd.pidbox
- $ celery amqp exchange.delete reply.celeryd.pidbox
- Event-loop
- ----------
- The worker is now running *without threads* when used with RabbitMQ (AMQP),
- or Redis as a broker, resulting in:
- - Much better overall performance.
- - Fixes several edge case race conditions.
- - Sub-millisecond timer precision.
- - Faster shutdown times.
- The transports supported are: ``py-amqp`` ``librabbitmq``, ``redis``,
- and ``amqplib``.
- Hopefully this can be extended to include additional broker transports
- in the future.
- For increased reliability the :setting:`CELERY_FORCE_EXECV` setting is enabled
- by default if the event-loop isn't used.
- New ``celery`` umbrella command
- -------------------------------
- All Celery's command-line programs are now available from a single
- :program:`celery` umbrella command.
- You can see a list of sub-commands and options by running:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery help
- Commands include:
- - ``celery worker`` (previously ``celeryd``).
- - ``celery beat`` (previously ``celerybeat``).
- - ``celery amqp`` (previously ``camqadm``).
- The old programs are still available (``celeryd``, ``celerybeat``, etc),
- but you're discouraged from using them.
- Now depends on :pypi:`billiard`
- -------------------------------
- Billiard is a fork of the multiprocessing containing
- the no-execv patch by ``sbt`` (http://bugs.python.org/issue8713),
- and also contains the pool improvements previously located in Celery.
- This fork was necessary as changes to the C extension code was required
- for the no-execv patch to work.
- - Issue #625
- - Issue #627
- - Issue #640
- - `django-celery #122 <https://github.com/celery/django-celery/issues/122`
- - `django-celery #124 <https://github.com/celery/django-celery/issues/122`
- :mod:`celery.app.task` no longer a package
- ------------------------------------------
- The :mod:`celery.app.task` module is now a module instead of a package.
- The :file:`setup.py` install script will try to remove the old package,
- but if that doesn't work for some reason you have to remove
- it manually. This command helps:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ rm -r $(dirname $(python -c 'import celery;print(celery.__file__)'))/app/task/
- If you experience an error like ``ImportError: cannot import name _unpickle_task``,
- you just have to remove the old package and everything is fine.
- Last version to support Python 2.5
- ----------------------------------
- The 3.0 series will be last version to support Python 2.5,
- and starting from 3.1 Python 2.6 and later will be required.
- With several other distributions taking the step to discontinue
- Python 2.5 support, we feel that it is time too.
- Python 2.6 should be widely available at this point, and we urge
- you to upgrade, but if that's not possible you still have the option
- to continue using the Celery 3.0, and important bug fixes
- introduced in Celery 3.1 will be back-ported to Celery 3.0 upon request.
- UTC timezone is now used
- ------------------------
- This means that ETA/countdown in messages aren't compatible with Celery
- versions prior to 2.5.
- You can disable UTC and revert back to old local time by setting
- the :setting:`CELERY_ENABLE_UTC` setting.
- Redis: Ack emulation improvements
- ---------------------------------
- Reducing the possibility of data loss.
- Acks are now implemented by storing a copy of the message when the message
- is consumed. The copy isn't removed until the consumer acknowledges
- or rejects it.
- This means that unacknowledged messages will be redelivered either
- when the connection is closed, or when the visibility timeout is exceeded.
- - Visibility timeout
- This is a timeout for acks, so that if the consumer
- doesn't ack the message within this time limit, the message
- is redelivered to another consumer.
- The timeout is set to one hour by default, but
- can be changed by configuring a transport option::
- BROKER_TRANSPORT_OPTIONS = {'visibility_timeout': 18000} # 5 hours
- .. note::
- Messages that haven't been acked will be redelivered
- if the visibility timeout is exceeded, for Celery users
- this means that ETA/countdown tasks that are scheduled to execute
- with a time that exceeds the visibility timeout will be executed
- twice (or more). If you plan on using long ETA/countdowns you
- should tweak the visibility timeout accordingly.
- Setting a long timeout means that it'll take a long time
- for messages to be redelivered in the event of a power failure,
- but if so happens you could temporarily set the visibility timeout lower
- to flush out messages when you start up the systems again.
- .. _v300-news:
- News
- ====
- Chaining Tasks
- --------------
- Tasks can now have callbacks and errbacks, and dependencies are recorded
- - The task message format have been updated with two new extension keys
- Both keys can be empty/undefined or a list of subtasks.
- - ``callbacks``
- Applied if the task exits successfully, with the result
- of the task as an argument.
- - ``errbacks``
- Applied if an error occurred while executing the task,
- with the uuid of the task as an argument. Since it may not be possible
- to serialize the exception instance, it passes the uuid of the task
- instead. The uuid can then be used to retrieve the exception and
- traceback of the task from the result backend.
- - ``link`` and ``link_error`` keyword arguments has been added
- to ``apply_async``.
- These add callbacks and errbacks to the task, and
- you can read more about them at :ref:`calling-links`.
- - We now track what subtasks a task sends, and some result backends
- supports retrieving this information.
- - task.request.children
- Contains the result instances of the subtasks
- the currently executing task has applied.
- - AsyncResult.children
- Returns the tasks dependencies, as a list of
- ``AsyncResult``/``ResultSet`` instances.
- - AsyncResult.iterdeps
- Recursively iterates over the tasks dependencies,
- yielding `(parent, node)` tuples.
- Raises IncompleteStream if any of the dependencies
- hasn't returned yet.
- - AsyncResult.graph
- A :class:`~celery.utils.graph.DependencyGraph` of the tasks
- dependencies. With this you can also convert to dot format:
- .. code-block:: python
- with open('graph.dot') as fh:
- result.graph.to_dot(fh)
- then produce an image of the graph:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ dot -Tpng graph.dot -o graph.png
- - A new special subtask called ``chain`` is also included:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> from celery import chain
- # (2 + 2) * 8 / 2
- >>> res = chain(add.subtask((2, 2)),
- mul.subtask((8,)),
- div.subtask((2,))).apply_async()
- >>> res.get() == 16
- >>> res.parent.get() == 32
- >>> res.parent.parent.get() == 4
- - Adds :meth:`AsyncResult.get_leaf`
- Waits and returns the result of the leaf subtask.
- That's the last node found when traversing the graph,
- but this means that the graph can be 1-dimensional only (in effect
- a list).
- - Adds ``subtask.link(subtask)`` + ``subtask.link_error(subtask)``
- Shortcut to ``s.options.setdefault('link', []).append(subtask)``
- - Adds ``subtask.flatten_links()``
- Returns a flattened list of all dependencies (recursively)
- Redis: Priority support
- -----------------------
- The message's ``priority`` field is now respected by the Redis
- transport by having multiple lists for each named queue.
- The queues are then consumed by in order of priority.
- The priority field is a number in the range of 0 - 9, where
- 0 is the default and highest priority.
- The priority range is collapsed into four steps by default, since it is
- unlikely that nine steps will yield more benefit than using four steps.
- The number of steps can be configured by setting the ``priority_steps``
- transport option, which must be a list of numbers in **sorted order**:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> BROKER_TRANSPORT_OPTIONS = {
- ... 'priority_steps': [0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9],
- ... }
- Priorities implemented in this way isn't as reliable as
- priorities on the server side, which is why
- the feature is nicknamed "quasi-priorities";
- **Using routing is still the suggested way of ensuring
- quality of service**, as client implemented priorities
- fall short in a number of ways, for example if the worker
- is busy with long running tasks, has prefetched many messages,
- or the queues are congested.
- Still, it is possible that using priorities in combination
- with routing can be more beneficial than using routing
- or priorities alone. Experimentation and monitoring
- should be used to prove this.
- Contributed by Germán M. Bravo.
- Redis: Now cycles queues so that consuming is fair
- --------------------------------------------------
- This ensures that a very busy queue won't block messages
- from other queues, and ensures that all queues have
- an equal chance of being consumed from.
- This used to be the case before, but the behavior was
- accidentally changed while switching to using blocking pop.
- `group`/`chord`/`chain` are now subtasks
- ----------------------------------------
- - group is no longer an alias to ``TaskSet``, but new all together,
- since it was very difficult to migrate the ``TaskSet`` class to become
- a subtask.
- - A new shortcut has been added to tasks:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> task.s(arg1, arg2, kw=1)
- as a shortcut to:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> task.subtask((arg1, arg2), {'kw': 1})
- - Tasks can be chained by using the ``|`` operator:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> (add.s(2, 2), pow.s(2)).apply_async()
- - Subtasks can be "evaluated" using the ``~`` operator:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> ~add.s(2, 2)
- 4
- >>> ~(add.s(2, 2) | pow.s(2))
- is the same as:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> chain(add.s(2, 2), pow.s(2)).apply_async().get()
- - A new subtask_type key has been added to the subtask dictionary.
- This can be the string ``"chord"``, ``"group"``, ``"chain"``,
- ``"chunks"``, ``"xmap"``, or ``"xstarmap"``.
- - maybe_subtask now uses subtask_type to reconstruct
- the object, to be used when using non-pickle serializers.
- - The logic for these operations have been moved to dedicated
- tasks celery.chord, celery.chain and celery.group.
- - subtask no longer inherits from AttributeDict.
- It's now a pure dict subclass with properties for attribute
- access to the relevant keys.
- - The repr's now outputs how the sequence would like imperatively:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> from celery import chord
- >>> (chord([add.s(i, i) for i in xrange(10)], xsum.s())
- | pow.s(2))
- tasks.xsum([tasks.add(0, 0),
- tasks.add(1, 1),
- tasks.add(2, 2),
- tasks.add(3, 3),
- tasks.add(4, 4),
- tasks.add(5, 5),
- tasks.add(6, 6),
- tasks.add(7, 7),
- tasks.add(8, 8),
- tasks.add(9, 9)]) | tasks.pow(2)
- New remote control commands
- ---------------------------
- These commands were previously experimental, but they've proven
- stable and is now documented as part of the official API.
- - :control:`add_consumer`/:control:`cancel_consumer`
- Tells workers to consume from a new queue, or cancel consuming from a
- queue. This command has also been changed so that the worker remembers
- the queues added, so that the change will persist even if
- the connection is re-connected.
- These commands are available programmatically as
- :meth:`@control.add_consumer` / :meth:`@control.cancel_consumer`:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> celery.control.add_consumer(queue_name,
- ... destination=['w1.example.com'])
- >>> celery.control.cancel_consumer(queue_name,
- ... destination=['w1.example.com'])
- or using the :program:`celery control` command:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery control -d w1.example.com add_consumer queue
- $ celery control -d w1.example.com cancel_consumer queue
- .. note::
- Remember that a control command without *destination* will be
- sent to **all workers**.
- - :control:`autoscale`
- Tells workers with ``--autoscale`` enabled to change autoscale
- max/min concurrency settings.
- This command is available programmatically as :meth:`@control.autoscale`:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> celery.control.autoscale(max=10, min=5,
- ... destination=['w1.example.com'])
- or using the :program:`celery control` command:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery control -d w1.example.com autoscale 10 5
- - :control:`pool_grow`/:control:`pool_shrink`
- Tells workers to add or remove pool processes.
- These commands are available programmatically as
- :meth:`@control.pool_grow` / :meth:`@control.pool_shrink`:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> celery.control.pool_grow(2, destination=['w1.example.com'])
- >>> celery.contorl.pool_shrink(2, destination=['w1.example.com'])
- or using the :program:`celery control` command:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery control -d w1.example.com pool_grow 2
- $ celery control -d w1.example.com pool_shrink 2
- - :program:`celery control` now supports :control:`rate_limit` and
- :control:`time_limit` commands.
- See ``celery control --help`` for details.
- Crontab now supports Day of Month, and Month of Year arguments
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- See the updated list of examples at :ref:`beat-crontab`.
- Immutable subtasks
- ------------------
- ``subtask``'s can now be immutable, which means that the arguments
- won't be modified when calling callbacks:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> chain(add.s(2, 2), clear_static_electricity.si())
- means it'll not receive the argument of the parent task,
- and ``.si()`` is a shortcut to:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> clear_static_electricity.subtask(immutable=True)
- Logging Improvements
- --------------------
- Logging support now conforms better with best practices.
- - Classes used by the worker no longer uses app.get_default_logger, but uses
- `celery.utils.log.get_logger` which simply gets the logger not setting the
- level, and adds a NullHandler.
- - Loggers are no longer passed around, instead every module using logging
- defines a module global logger that's used throughout.
- - All loggers inherit from a common logger called "celery".
- - Before ``task.get_logger`` would setup a new logger for every task,
- and even set the log level. This is no longer the case.
- - Instead all task loggers now inherit from a common "celery.task" logger
- that's set up when programs call `setup_logging_subsystem`.
- - Instead of using LoggerAdapter to augment the formatter with
- the task_id and task_name field, the task base logger now use
- a special formatter adding these values at run-time from the
- currently executing task.
- - In fact, ``task.get_logger`` is no longer recommended, it is better
- to add a module-level logger to your tasks module.
- For example, like this:
- .. code-block:: python
- from celery.utils.log import get_task_logger
- logger = get_task_logger(__name__)
- @celery.task
- def add(x, y):
- logger.debug('Adding %r + %r' % (x, y))
- return x + y
- The resulting logger will then inherit from the ``"celery.task"`` logger
- so that the current task name and id is included in logging output.
- - Redirected output from stdout/stderr is now logged to a "celery.redirected"
- logger.
- - In addition a few warnings.warn have been replaced with logger.warn.
- - Now avoids the 'no handlers for logger multiprocessing' warning
- Task registry no longer global
- ------------------------------
- Every Celery instance now has its own task registry.
- You can make apps share registries by specifying it:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> app1 = Celery()
- >>> app2 = Celery(tasks=app1.tasks)
- Note that tasks are shared between registries by default, so that
- tasks will be added to every subsequently created task registry.
- As an alternative tasks can be private to specific task registries
- by setting the ``shared`` argument to the ``@task`` decorator:
- .. code-block:: python
- @celery.task(shared=False)
- def add(x, y):
- return x + y
- Abstract tasks are now lazily bound
- -----------------------------------
- The :class:`~celery.task.Task` class is no longer bound to an app
- by default, it will first be bound (and configured) when
- a concrete subclass is created.
- This means that you can safely import and make task base classes,
- without also initializing the app environment:
- .. code-block:: python
- from celery.task import Task
- class DebugTask(Task):
- abstract = True
- def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
- print('CALLING %r' % (self,))
- return self.run(*args, **kwargs)
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> DebugTask
- <unbound DebugTask>
- >>> @celery1.task(base=DebugTask)
- ... def add(x, y):
- ... return x + y
- >>> add.__class__
- <class add of <Celery default:0x101510d10>>
- Lazy task decorators
- --------------------
- The ``@task`` decorator is now lazy when used with custom apps.
- That is, if ``accept_magic_kwargs`` is enabled (her by called "compat mode"), the task
- decorator executes inline like before, however for custom apps the @task
- decorator now returns a special PromiseProxy object that's only evaluated
- on access.
- All promises will be evaluated when :meth:`@finalize` is called, or implicitly
- when the task registry is first used.
- Smart `--app` option
- --------------------
- The :option:`--app <celery --app>` option now 'auto-detects'
- - If the provided path is a module it tries to get an
- attribute named 'celery'.
- - If the provided path is a package it tries
- to import a sub module named celery',
- and get the celery attribute from that module.
- For example, if you have a project named ``proj`` where the
- celery app is located in ``from proj.celery import app``,
- then the following will be equivalent:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery worker --app=proj
- $ celery worker --app=proj.celery:
- $ celery worker --app=proj.celery:app
- In Other News
- -------------
- - New :setting:`CELERYD_WORKER_LOST_WAIT` to control the timeout in
- seconds before :exc:`billiard.WorkerLostError` is raised
- when a worker can't be signaled (Issue #595).
- Contributed by Brendon Crawford.
- - Redis event monitor queues are now automatically deleted (Issue #436).
- - App instance factory methods have been converted to be cached
- descriptors that creates a new subclass on access.
- For example, this means that ``app.Worker`` is an actual class
- and will work as expected when:
- .. code-block:: python
- class Worker(app.Worker):
- ...
- - New signal: :signal:`task_success`.
- - Multiprocessing logs are now only emitted if the :envvar:`MP_LOG`
- environment variable is set.
- - The Celery instance can now be created with a broker URL
- .. code-block:: python
- app = Celery(broker='redis://')
- - Result backends can now be set using a URL
- Currently only supported by redis. Example use:
- .. code-block:: python
- CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'redis://localhost/1'
- - Heartbeat frequency now every 5s, and frequency sent with event
- The heartbeat frequency is now available in the worker event messages,
- so that clients can decide when to consider workers offline based on
- this value.
- - Module celery.actors has been removed, and will be part of cl instead.
- - Introduces new ``celery`` command, which is an entry-point for all other
- commands.
- The main for this command can be run by calling ``celery.start()``.
- - Annotations now supports decorators if the key starts with '@'.
- For example:
- .. code-block:: python
- def debug_args(fun):
- @wraps(fun)
- def _inner(*args, **kwargs):
- print('ARGS: %r' % (args,))
- return _inner
- CELERY_ANNOTATIONS = {
- 'tasks.add': {'@__call__': debug_args},
- }
- Also tasks are now always bound by class so that
- annotated methods end up being bound.
- - Bug-report now available as a command and broadcast command
- - Get it from a Python REPL:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> import celery
- >>> print(celery.bugreport())
- - Using the ``celery`` command line program:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery report
- - Get it from remote workers:
- .. code-block:: console
- $ celery inspect report
- - Module ``celery.log`` moved to :mod:`celery.app.log`.
- - Module ``celery.task.control`` moved to :mod:`celery.app.control`.
- - New signal: :signal:`task_revoked`
- Sent in the main process when the task is revoked or terminated.
- - ``AsyncResult.task_id`` renamed to ``AsyncResult.id``
- - ``TasksetResult.taskset_id`` renamed to ``.id``
- - ``xmap(task, sequence)`` and ``xstarmap(task, sequence)``
- Returns a list of the results applying the task function to every item
- in the sequence.
- Example:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> from celery import xstarmap
- >>> xstarmap(add, zip(range(10), range(10)).apply_async()
- [0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18]
- - ``chunks(task, sequence, chunksize)``
- - ``group.skew(start=, stop=, step=)``
- Skew will skew the countdown for the individual tasks in a group -- for
- example with this group:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> g = group(add.s(i, i) for i in xrange(10))
- Skewing the tasks from 0 seconds to 10 seconds:
- .. code-block:: pycon
- >>> g.skew(stop=10)
- Will have the first task execute in 0 seconds, the second in 1 second,
- the third in 2 seconds and so on.
- - 99% test Coverage
- - :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` can now be a list/tuple of :class:`~kombu.Queue`
- instances.
- Internally :attr:`@amqp.queues` is now a mapping of name/Queue instances,
- instead of converting on the fly.
- - Can now specify connection for :class:`@control.inspect`.
- .. code-block:: python
- from kombu import Connection
- i = celery.control.inspect(connection=Connection('redis://'))
- i.active_queues()
- - :setting:`CELERY_FORCE_EXECV` is now enabled by default.
- If the old behavior is wanted the setting can be set to False,
- or the new `--no-execv` option to :program:`celery worker`.
- - Deprecated module ``celery.conf`` has been removed.
- - The :setting:`CELERY_TIMEZONE` now always require the :pypi:`pytz`
- library to be installed (except if the timezone is set to `UTC`).
- - The Tokyo Tyrant backend has been removed and is no longer supported.
- - Now uses :func:`~kombu.common.maybe_declare` to cache queue declarations.
- - There's no longer a global default for the
- :setting:`CELERYBEAT_MAX_LOOP_INTERVAL` setting, it is instead
- set by individual schedulers.
- - Worker: now truncates very long message bodies in error reports.
- - No longer deep-copies exceptions when trying to serialize errors.
- - :envvar:`CELERY_BENCH` environment variable, will now also list
- memory usage statistics at worker shutdown.
- - Worker: now only ever use a single timer for all timing needs,
- and instead set different priorities.
- - An exceptions arguments are now safely pickled
- Contributed by Matt Long.
- - Worker/Beat no longer logs the start-up banner.
- Previously it would be logged with severity warning,
- now it's only written to stdout.
- - The ``contrib/`` directory in the distribution has been renamed to
- ``extra/``.
- - New signal: :signal:`task_revoked`
- - :mod:`celery.contrib.migrate`: Many improvements, including;
- filtering, queue migration, and support for acking messages on the broker
- migrating from.
- Contributed by John Watson.
- - Worker: Prefetch count increments are now optimized and grouped together.
- - Worker: No longer calls ``consume`` on the remote control command queue
- twice.
- Probably didn't cause any problems, but was unnecessary.
- Internals
- ---------
- - ``app.broker_connection`` is now ``app.connection``
- Both names still work.
- - Compatibility modules are now generated dynamically upon use.
- These modules are ``celery.messaging``, ``celery.log``,
- ``celery.decorators`` and ``celery.registry``.
- - :mod:`celery.utils` refactored into multiple modules:
- :mod:`celery.utils.text`
- :mod:`celery.utils.imports`
- :mod:`celery.utils.functional`
- - Now using :mod:`kombu.utils.encoding` instead of
- :mod:`celery.utils.encoding`.
- - Renamed module ``celery.routes`` -> :mod:`celery.app.routes`.
- - Renamed package ``celery.db`` -> :mod:`celery.backends.database`.
- - Renamed module ``celery.abstract`` -> :mod:`celery.worker.bootsteps`.
- - Command line docs are now parsed from the module docstrings.
- - Test suite directory has been reorganized.
- - :program:`setup.py` now reads docs from the :file:`requirements/` directory.
- - Celery commands no longer wraps output (Issue #700).
- Contributed by Thomas Johansson.
- .. _v300-experimental:
- Experimental
- ============
- :mod:`celery.contrib.methods`: Task decorator for methods
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- This is an experimental module containing a task
- decorator, and a task decorator filter, that can be used
- to create tasks out of methods::
- from celery.contrib.methods import task_method
- class Counter(object):
- def __init__(self):
- self.value = 1
- @celery.task(name='Counter.increment', filter=task_method)
- def increment(self, n=1):
- self.value += 1
- return self.value
- See :mod:`celery.contrib.methods` for more information.
- .. _v300-unscheduled-removals:
- Unscheduled Removals
- ====================
- Usually we don't make backward incompatible removals,
- but these removals should have no major effect.
- - The following settings have been renamed:
- - ``CELERYD_ETA_SCHEDULER`` -> ``CELERYD_TIMER``
- - ``CELERYD_ETA_SCHEDULER_PRECISION`` -> ``CELERYD_TIMER_PRECISION``
- .. _v300-deprecations:
- Deprecation Time-line Changes
- =============================
- See the :ref:`deprecation-timeline`.
- - The ``celery.backends.pyredis`` compat module has been removed.
- Use :mod:`celery.backends.redis` instead!
- - The following undocumented API's has been moved:
- - ``control.inspect.add_consumer`` -> :meth:`@control.add_consumer`.
- - ``control.inspect.cancel_consumer`` -> :meth:`@control.cancel_consumer`.
- - ``control.inspect.enable_events`` -> :meth:`@control.enable_events`.
- - ``control.inspect.disable_events`` -> :meth:`@control.disable_events`.
- This way ``inspect()`` is only used for commands that don't
- modify anything, while idempotent control commands that make changes
- are on the control objects.
- Fixes
- =====
- - Retry SQLAlchemy backend operations on DatabaseError/OperationalError
- (Issue #634)
- - Tasks that called ``retry`` wasn't acknowledged if acks late was enabled
- Fix contributed by David Markey.
- - The message priority argument wasn't properly propagated to Kombu
- (Issue #708).
- Fix contributed by Eran Rundstein
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