configuration.rst 50 KB

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  1. .. _configuration:
  2. ============================
  3. Configuration and defaults
  4. ============================
  5. This document describes the configuration options available.
  6. If you're using the default loader, you must create the :file:`celeryconfig.py`
  7. module and make sure it is available on the Python path.
  8. .. contents::
  9. :local:
  10. :depth: 2
  11. .. _conf-example:
  12. Example configuration file
  13. ==========================
  14. This is an example configuration file to get you started.
  15. It should contain all you need to run a basic Celery set-up.
  16. .. code-block:: python
  17. ## Broker settings.
  18. BROKER_URL = 'amqp://guest:guest@localhost:5672//'
  19. # List of modules to import when celery starts.
  20. CELERY_IMPORTS = ('myapp.tasks', )
  21. ## Using the database to store task state and results.
  22. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'db+sqlite:///results.db'
  23. CELERY_ANNOTATIONS = {'tasks.add': {'rate_limit': '10/s'}}
  24. Configuration Directives
  25. ========================
  26. .. _conf-datetime:
  27. Time and date settings
  28. ----------------------
  29. .. setting:: CELERY_ENABLE_UTC
  30. CELERY_ENABLE_UTC
  31. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  32. .. versionadded:: 2.5
  33. If enabled dates and times in messages will be converted to use
  34. the UTC timezone.
  35. Note that workers running Celery versions below 2.5 will assume a local
  36. timezone for all messages, so only enable if all workers have been
  37. upgraded.
  38. Enabled by default since version 3.0.
  39. .. setting:: CELERY_TIMEZONE
  40. CELERY_TIMEZONE
  41. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  42. Configure Celery to use a custom time zone.
  43. The timezone value can be any time zone supported by the `pytz`_
  44. library.
  45. If not set the UTC timezone is used. For backwards compatibility
  46. there is also a :setting:`CELERY_ENABLE_UTC` setting, and this is set
  47. to false the system local timezone is used instead.
  48. .. _`pytz`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pytz/
  49. .. _conf-tasks:
  50. Task settings
  51. -------------
  52. .. setting:: CELERY_ANNOTATIONS
  53. CELERY_ANNOTATIONS
  54. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  55. This setting can be used to rewrite any task attribute from the
  56. configuration. The setting can be a dict, or a list of annotation
  57. objects that filter for tasks and return a map of attributes
  58. to change.
  59. This will change the ``rate_limit`` attribute for the ``tasks.add``
  60. task:
  61. .. code-block:: python
  62. CELERY_ANNOTATIONS = {'tasks.add': {'rate_limit': '10/s'}}
  63. or change the same for all tasks:
  64. .. code-block:: python
  65. CELERY_ANNOTATIONS = {'*': {'rate_limit': '10/s'}}
  66. You can change methods too, for example the ``on_failure`` handler:
  67. .. code-block:: python
  68. def my_on_failure(self, exc, task_id, args, kwargs, einfo):
  69. print('Oh no! Task failed: {0!r}'.format(exc))
  70. CELERY_ANNOTATIONS = {'*': {'on_failure': my_on_failure}}
  71. If you need more flexibility then you can use objects
  72. instead of a dict to choose which tasks to annotate:
  73. .. code-block:: python
  74. class MyAnnotate(object):
  75. def annotate(self, task):
  76. if task.name.startswith('tasks.'):
  77. return {'rate_limit': '10/s'}
  78. CELERY_ANNOTATIONS = (MyAnnotate(), {…})
  79. .. _conf-concurrency:
  80. Concurrency settings
  81. --------------------
  82. .. setting:: CELERYD_CONCURRENCY
  83. CELERYD_CONCURRENCY
  84. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  85. The number of concurrent worker processes/threads/green threads executing
  86. tasks.
  87. If you're doing mostly I/O you can have more processes,
  88. but if mostly CPU-bound, try to keep it close to the
  89. number of CPUs on your machine. If not set, the number of CPUs/cores
  90. on the host will be used.
  91. Defaults to the number of available CPUs.
  92. .. setting:: CELERYD_PREFETCH_MULTIPLIER
  93. CELERYD_PREFETCH_MULTIPLIER
  94. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  95. How many messages to prefetch at a time multiplied by the number of
  96. concurrent processes. The default is 4 (four messages for each
  97. process). The default setting is usually a good choice, however -- if you
  98. have very long running tasks waiting in the queue and you have to start the
  99. workers, note that the first worker to start will receive four times the
  100. number of messages initially. Thus the tasks may not be fairly distributed
  101. to the workers.
  102. To disable prefetching, set CELERYD_PREFETCH_MULTIPLIER to 1. Setting
  103. CELERYD_PREFETCH_MULTIPLIER to 0 will allow the worker to keep consuming
  104. as many messages as it wants.
  105. For more on prefetching, read :ref:`optimizing-prefetch-limit`
  106. .. note::
  107. Tasks with ETA/countdown are not affected by prefetch limits.
  108. .. _conf-result-backend:
  109. Task result backend settings
  110. ----------------------------
  111. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND
  112. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND
  113. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  114. :Deprecated aliases: ``CELERY_BACKEND``
  115. The backend used to store task results (tombstones).
  116. Disabled by default.
  117. Can be one of the following:
  118. * rpc
  119. Send results back as AMQP messages
  120. See :ref:`conf-rpc-result-backend`.
  121. * database
  122. Use a relational database supported by `SQLAlchemy`_.
  123. See :ref:`conf-database-result-backend`.
  124. * redis
  125. Use `Redis`_ to store the results.
  126. See :ref:`conf-redis-result-backend`.
  127. * cache
  128. Use `memcached`_ to store the results.
  129. See :ref:`conf-cache-result-backend`.
  130. * mongodb
  131. Use `MongoDB`_ to store the results.
  132. See :ref:`conf-mongodb-result-backend`.
  133. * cassandra
  134. Use `Cassandra`_ to store the results.
  135. See :ref:`conf-cassandra-result-backend`.
  136. * ironcache
  137. Use `IronCache`_ to store the results.
  138. See :ref:`conf-ironcache-result-backend`.
  139. * couchbase
  140. Use `Couchbase`_ to store the results.
  141. See :ref:`conf-couchbase-result-backend`.
  142. * amqp
  143. Older AMQP backend (badly) emulating a database-based backend.
  144. See :ref:`conf-amqp-result-backend`.
  145. .. warning:
  146. While the AMQP result backend is very efficient, you must make sure
  147. you only receive the same result once. See :doc:`userguide/calling`).
  148. .. _`SQLAlchemy`: http://sqlalchemy.org
  149. .. _`memcached`: http://memcached.org
  150. .. _`MongoDB`: http://mongodb.org
  151. .. _`Redis`: http://redis.io
  152. .. _`Cassandra`: http://cassandra.apache.org/
  153. .. _`IronCache`: http://www.iron.io/cache
  154. .. _`Couchbase`: http://www.couchbase.com/
  155. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_SERIALIZER
  156. CELERY_RESULT_SERIALIZER
  157. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  158. Result serialization format. Default is ``pickle``. See
  159. :ref:`calling-serializers` for information about supported
  160. serialization formats.
  161. .. _conf-database-result-backend:
  162. Database backend settings
  163. -------------------------
  164. Database URL Examples
  165. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  166. To use the database backend you have to configure the
  167. :setting:`CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND` setting with a connection URL and the ``db+``
  168. prefix:
  169. .. code-block:: python
  170. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'db+scheme://user:password@host:port/dbname'
  171. Examples::
  172. # sqlite (filename)
  173. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'db+sqlite:///results.sqlite'
  174. # mysql
  175. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'db+mysql://scott:tiger@localhost/foo'
  176. # postgresql
  177. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'db+postgresql://scott:tiger@localhost/mydatabase'
  178. # oracle
  179. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'db+oracle://scott:tiger@127.0.0.1:1521/sidname'
  180. .. code-block:: python
  181. Please see `Supported Databases`_ for a table of supported databases,
  182. and `Connection String`_ for more information about connection
  183. strings (which is the part of the URI that comes after the ``db+`` prefix).
  184. .. _`Supported Databases`:
  185. http://www.sqlalchemy.org/docs/core/engines.html#supported-databases
  186. .. _`Connection String`:
  187. http://www.sqlalchemy.org/docs/core/engines.html#database-urls
  188. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_DBURI
  189. CELERY_RESULT_DBURI
  190. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  191. This setting is no longer used as it's now possible to specify
  192. the database URL directly in the :setting:`CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND` setting.
  193. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_ENGINE_OPTIONS
  194. CELERY_RESULT_ENGINE_OPTIONS
  195. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  196. To specify additional SQLAlchemy database engine options you can use
  197. the :setting:`CELERY_RESULT_ENGINE_OPTIONS` setting::
  198. # echo enables verbose logging from SQLAlchemy.
  199. CELERY_RESULT_ENGINE_OPTIONS = {'echo': True}
  200. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_DB_SHORT_LIVED_SESSIONS
  201. Short lived sessions
  202. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  203. CELERY_RESULT_DB_SHORT_LIVED_SESSIONS = True
  204. Short lived sessions are disabled by default. If enabled they can drastically reduce
  205. performance, especially on systems processing lots of tasks. This option is useful
  206. on low-traffic workers that experience errors as a result of cached database connections
  207. going stale through inactivity. For example, intermittent errors like
  208. `(OperationalError) (2006, 'MySQL server has gone away')` can be fixed by enabling
  209. short lived sessions. This option only affects the database backend.
  210. Specifying Table Names
  211. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  212. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_DB_TABLENAMES
  213. When SQLAlchemy is configured as the result backend, Celery automatically
  214. creates two tables to store result metadata for tasks. This setting allows
  215. you to customize the table names:
  216. .. code-block:: python
  217. # use custom table names for the database result backend.
  218. CELERY_RESULT_DB_TABLENAMES = {
  219. 'task': 'myapp_taskmeta',
  220. 'group': 'myapp_groupmeta',
  221. }
  222. .. _conf-rpc-result-backend:
  223. RPC backend settings
  224. --------------------
  225. .. _conf-amqp-result-backend:
  226. CELERY_RESULT_PERSISTENT
  227. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  228. If set to :const:`True`, result messages will be persistent. This means the
  229. messages will not be lost after a broker restart. The default is for the
  230. results to be transient.
  231. Example configuration
  232. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  233. .. code-block:: python
  234. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'rpc://'
  235. CELERY_RESULT_PERSISTENT = False
  236. .. _conf-cache-result-backend:
  237. Cache backend settings
  238. ----------------------
  239. .. note::
  240. The cache backend supports the `pylibmc`_ and `python-memcached`
  241. libraries. The latter is used only if `pylibmc`_ is not installed.
  242. Using a single memcached server:
  243. .. code-block:: python
  244. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'cache+memcached://127.0.0.1:11211/'
  245. Using multiple memcached servers:
  246. .. code-block:: python
  247. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = """
  248. cache+memcached://172.19.26.240:11211;172.19.26.242:11211/
  249. """.strip()
  250. .. setting:: CELERY_CACHE_BACKEND_OPTIONS
  251. The "memory" backend stores the cache in memory only:
  252. .. code-block:: python
  253. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'cache'
  254. CELERY_CACHE_BACKEND = 'memory'
  255. CELERY_CACHE_BACKEND_OPTIONS
  256. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  257. You can set pylibmc options using the :setting:`CELERY_CACHE_BACKEND_OPTIONS`
  258. setting:
  259. .. code-block:: python
  260. CELERY_CACHE_BACKEND_OPTIONS = {'binary': True,
  261. 'behaviors': {'tcp_nodelay': True}}
  262. .. _`pylibmc`: http://sendapatch.se/projects/pylibmc/
  263. .. setting:: CELERY_CACHE_BACKEND
  264. CELERY_CACHE_BACKEND
  265. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  266. This setting is no longer used as it's now possible to specify
  267. the cache backend directly in the :setting:`CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND` setting.
  268. .. _conf-redis-result-backend:
  269. Redis backend settings
  270. ----------------------
  271. Configuring the backend URL
  272. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  273. .. note::
  274. The Redis backend requires the :mod:`redis` library:
  275. http://pypi.python.org/pypi/redis/
  276. To install the redis package use `pip` or `easy_install`:
  277. .. code-block:: bash
  278. $ pip install redis
  279. This backend requires the :setting:`CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND`
  280. setting to be set to a Redis URL::
  281. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'redis://:password@host:port/db'
  282. For example::
  283. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'redis://localhost/0'
  284. which is the same as::
  285. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'redis://'
  286. The fields of the URL is defined as folows:
  287. - *host*
  288. Host name or IP address of the Redis server. e.g. `localhost`.
  289. - *port*
  290. Port to the Redis server. Default is 6379.
  291. - *db*
  292. Database number to use. Default is 0.
  293. The db can include an optional leading slash.
  294. - *password*
  295. Password used to connect to the database.
  296. .. setting:: CELERY_REDIS_MAX_CONNECTIONS
  297. CELERY_REDIS_MAX_CONNECTIONS
  298. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  299. Maximum number of connections available in the Redis connection
  300. pool used for sending and retrieving results.
  301. .. _conf-mongodb-result-backend:
  302. MongoDB backend settings
  303. ------------------------
  304. .. note::
  305. The MongoDB backend requires the :mod:`pymongo` library:
  306. http://github.com/mongodb/mongo-python-driver/tree/master
  307. .. setting:: CELERY_MONGODB_BACKEND_SETTINGS
  308. CELERY_MONGODB_BACKEND_SETTINGS
  309. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  310. This is a dict supporting the following keys:
  311. * database
  312. The database name to connect to. Defaults to ``celery``.
  313. * taskmeta_collection
  314. The collection name to store task meta data.
  315. Defaults to ``celery_taskmeta``.
  316. * max_pool_size
  317. Passed as max_pool_size to PyMongo's Connection or MongoClient
  318. constructor. It is the maximum number of TCP connections to keep
  319. open to MongoDB at a given time. If there are more open connections
  320. than max_pool_size, sockets will be closed when they are released.
  321. Defaults to 10.
  322. * options
  323. Additional keyword arguments to pass to the mongodb connection
  324. constructor. See the :mod:`pymongo` docs to see a list of arguments
  325. supported.
  326. .. _example-mongodb-result-config:
  327. Example configuration
  328. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  329. .. code-block:: python
  330. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'mongodb://192.168.1.100:30000/'
  331. CELERY_MONGODB_BACKEND_SETTINGS = {
  332. 'database': 'mydb',
  333. 'taskmeta_collection': 'my_taskmeta_collection',
  334. }
  335. .. _conf-cassandra-result-backend:
  336. Cassandra backend settings
  337. --------------------------
  338. .. note::
  339. The Cassandra backend requires the :mod:`pycassa` library:
  340. http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pycassa/
  341. To install the pycassa package use `pip` or `easy_install`:
  342. .. code-block:: bash
  343. $ pip install pycassa
  344. This backend requires the following configuration directives to be set.
  345. .. setting:: CASSANDRA_SERVERS
  346. CASSANDRA_SERVERS
  347. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  348. List of ``host:port`` Cassandra servers. e.g.::
  349. CASSANDRA_SERVERS = ['localhost:9160']
  350. .. setting:: CASSANDRA_KEYSPACE
  351. CASSANDRA_KEYSPACE
  352. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  353. The keyspace in which to store the results. e.g.::
  354. CASSANDRA_KEYSPACE = 'tasks_keyspace'
  355. .. setting:: CASSANDRA_COLUMN_FAMILY
  356. CASSANDRA_COLUMN_FAMILY
  357. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  358. The column family in which to store the results. e.g.::
  359. CASSANDRA_COLUMN_FAMILY = 'tasks'
  360. .. setting:: CASSANDRA_READ_CONSISTENCY
  361. CASSANDRA_READ_CONSISTENCY
  362. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  363. The read consistency used. Values can be ``ONE``, ``QUORUM`` or ``ALL``.
  364. .. setting:: CASSANDRA_WRITE_CONSISTENCY
  365. CASSANDRA_WRITE_CONSISTENCY
  366. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  367. The write consistency used. Values can be ``ONE``, ``QUORUM`` or ``ALL``.
  368. .. setting:: CASSANDRA_DETAILED_MODE
  369. CASSANDRA_DETAILED_MODE
  370. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  371. Enable or disable detailed mode. Default is :const:`False`.
  372. This mode allows to use the power of Cassandra wide columns to
  373. store all states for a task as a wide column, instead of only the last one.
  374. To use this mode, you need to configure your ColumnFamily to
  375. use the ``TimeUUID`` type as a comparator::
  376. create column family task_results with comparator = TimeUUIDType;
  377. CASSANDRA_OPTIONS
  378. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  379. Options to be passed to the `pycassa connection pool`_ (optional).
  380. .. _`pycassa connection pool`: http://pycassa.github.com/pycassa/api/pycassa/pool.html
  381. Example configuration
  382. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  383. .. code-block:: python
  384. CASSANDRA_SERVERS = ['localhost:9160']
  385. CASSANDRA_KEYSPACE = 'celery'
  386. CASSANDRA_COLUMN_FAMILY = 'task_results'
  387. CASSANDRA_READ_CONSISTENCY = 'ONE'
  388. CASSANDRA_WRITE_CONSISTENCY = 'ONE'
  389. CASSANDRA_DETAILED_MODE = True
  390. CASSANDRA_OPTIONS = {
  391. 'timeout': 300,
  392. 'max_retries': 10
  393. }
  394. .. _conf-ironcache-result-backend:
  395. IronCache backend settings
  396. --------------------------
  397. .. note::
  398. The IronCache backend requires the :mod:`iron_celery` library:
  399. http://pypi.python.org/pypi/iron_celery
  400. To install the iron_celery package use `pip` or `easy_install`:
  401. .. code-block:: bash
  402. $ pip install iron_celery
  403. IronCache is configured via the URL provided in :setting:`CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND`, for example::
  404. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'ironcache://project_id:token@'
  405. Or to change the cache name::
  406. ironcache:://project_id:token@/awesomecache
  407. For more information, see: https://github.com/iron-io/iron_celery
  408. .. _conf-couchbase-result-backend:
  409. Couchbase backend settings
  410. --------------------------
  411. .. note::
  412. The Couchbase backend requires the :mod:`couchbase` library:
  413. https://pypi.python.org/pypi/couchbase
  414. To install the couchbase package use `pip` or `easy_install`:
  415. .. code-block:: bash
  416. $ pip install couchbase
  417. This backend can be configured via the :setting:`CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND`
  418. set to a couchbase URL::
  419. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'couchbase://username:password@host:port/bucket'
  420. .. setting:: CELERY_COUCHBASE_BACKEND_SETTINGS
  421. CELERY_COUCHBASE_BACKEND_SETTINGS
  422. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  423. This is a dict supporting the following keys:
  424. * host
  425. Host name of the Couchbase server. Defaults to ``localhost``.
  426. * port
  427. The port the Couchbase server is listening to. Defaults to ``8091``.
  428. * bucket
  429. The default bucket the Couchbase server is writing to.
  430. Defaults to ``default``.
  431. * username
  432. User name to authenticate to the Couchbase server as (optional).
  433. * password
  434. Password to authenticate to the Couchbase server (optional).
  435. AMQP backend settings
  436. ---------------------
  437. .. admonition:: Do not use in production.
  438. This is the old AMQP result backend that creates one queue per task,
  439. if you want to send results back as message please consider using the
  440. RPC backend instead, or if you need the results to be persistent
  441. use a result backend designed for that purpose (e.g. Redis, or a database).
  442. .. note::
  443. The AMQP backend requires RabbitMQ 1.1.0 or higher to automatically
  444. expire results. If you are running an older version of RabbitMQ
  445. you should disable result expiration like this:
  446. CELERY_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES = None
  447. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_EXCHANGE
  448. CELERY_RESULT_EXCHANGE
  449. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  450. Name of the exchange to publish results in. Default is `celeryresults`.
  451. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_EXCHANGE_TYPE
  452. CELERY_RESULT_EXCHANGE_TYPE
  453. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  454. The exchange type of the result exchange. Default is to use a `direct`
  455. exchange.
  456. .. setting:: CELERY_RESULT_PERSISTENT
  457. CELERY_RESULT_PERSISTENT
  458. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  459. If set to :const:`True`, result messages will be persistent. This means the
  460. messages will not be lost after a broker restart. The default is for the
  461. results to be transient.
  462. Example configuration
  463. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  464. .. code-block:: python
  465. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'amqp'
  466. CELERY_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES = 18000 # 5 hours.
  467. .. _conf-messaging:
  468. Message Routing
  469. ---------------
  470. .. _conf-messaging-routing:
  471. .. setting:: CELERY_QUEUES
  472. CELERY_QUEUES
  473. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  474. Most users will not want to specify this setting and should rather use
  475. the :ref:`automatic routing facilities <routing-automatic>`.
  476. If you really want to configure advanced routing, this setting should
  477. be a list of :class:`kombu.Queue` objects the worker will consume from.
  478. Note that workers can be overriden this setting via the `-Q` option,
  479. or individual queues from this list (by name) can be excluded using
  480. the `-X` option.
  481. Also see :ref:`routing-basics` for more information.
  482. The default is a queue/exchange/binding key of ``celery``, with
  483. exchange type ``direct``.
  484. See also :setting:`CELERY_ROUTES`
  485. .. setting:: CELERY_ROUTES
  486. CELERY_ROUTES
  487. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  488. A list of routers, or a single router used to route tasks to queues.
  489. When deciding the final destination of a task the routers are consulted
  490. in order.
  491. A router can be specified as either:
  492. * A router class instances
  493. * A string which provides the path to a router class
  494. * A dict containing router specification. It will be converted to a :class:`celery.routes.MapRoute` instance.
  495. Examples:
  496. .. code-block:: python
  497. CELERY_ROUTES = {"celery.ping": "default",
  498. "mytasks.add": "cpu-bound",
  499. "video.encode": {
  500. "queue": "video",
  501. "exchange": "media"
  502. "routing_key": "media.video.encode"}}
  503. CELERY_ROUTES = ("myapp.tasks.Router", {"celery.ping": "default})
  504. Where ``myapp.tasks.Router`` could be:
  505. .. code-block:: python
  506. class Router(object):
  507. def route_for_task(self, task, args=None, kwargs=None):
  508. if task == "celery.ping":
  509. return "default"
  510. ``route_for_task`` may return a string or a dict. A string then means
  511. it's a queue name in :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES`, a dict means it's a custom route.
  512. When sending tasks, the routers are consulted in order. The first
  513. router that doesn't return ``None`` is the route to use. The message options
  514. is then merged with the found route settings, where the routers settings
  515. have priority.
  516. Example if :func:`~celery.execute.apply_async` has these arguments:
  517. .. code-block:: python
  518. Task.apply_async(immediate=False, exchange="video",
  519. routing_key="video.compress")
  520. and a router returns:
  521. .. code-block:: python
  522. {"immediate": True, "exchange": "urgent"}
  523. the final message options will be:
  524. .. code-block:: python
  525. immediate=True, exchange="urgent", routing_key="video.compress"
  526. (and any default message options defined in the
  527. :class:`~celery.task.base.Task` class)
  528. Values defined in :setting:`CELERY_ROUTES` have precedence over values defined in
  529. :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` when merging the two.
  530. With the follow settings:
  531. .. code-block:: python
  532. CELERY_QUEUES = {"cpubound": {"exchange": "cpubound",
  533. "routing_key": "cpubound"}}
  534. CELERY_ROUTES = {"tasks.add": {"queue": "cpubound",
  535. "routing_key": "tasks.add",
  536. "serializer": "json"}}
  537. The final routing options for ``tasks.add`` will become:
  538. .. code-block:: python
  539. {"exchange": "cpubound",
  540. "routing_key": "tasks.add",
  541. "serializer": "json"}
  542. See :ref:`routers` for more examples.
  543. .. setting:: CELERY_QUEUE_HA_POLICY
  544. CELERY_QUEUE_HA_POLICY
  545. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  546. :brokers: RabbitMQ
  547. This will set the default HA policy for a queue, and the value
  548. can either be a string (usually ``all``):
  549. .. code-block:: python
  550. CELERY_QUEUE_HA_POLICY = 'all'
  551. Using 'all' will replicate the queue to all current nodes,
  552. Or you can give it a list of nodes to replicate to:
  553. .. code-block:: python
  554. CELERY_QUEUE_HA_POLICY = ['rabbit@host1', 'rabbit@host2']
  555. Using a list will implicitly set ``x-ha-policy`` to 'nodes' and
  556. ``x-ha-policy-params`` to the given list of nodes.
  557. See http://www.rabbitmq.com/ha.html for more information.
  558. .. setting:: CELERY_WORKER_DIRECT
  559. CELERY_WORKER_DIRECT
  560. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  561. This option enables so that every worker has a dedicated queue,
  562. so that tasks can be routed to specific workers.
  563. The queue name for each worker is automatically generated based on
  564. the worker hostname and a ``.dq`` suffix, using the ``C.dq`` exchange.
  565. For example the queue name for the worker with node name ``w1@example.com``
  566. becomes::
  567. w1@example.com.dq
  568. Then you can route the task to the task by specifying the hostname
  569. as the routing key and the ``C.dq`` exchange::
  570. CELERY_ROUTES = {
  571. 'tasks.add': {'exchange': 'C.dq', 'routing_key': 'w1@example.com'}
  572. }
  573. .. setting:: CELERY_CREATE_MISSING_QUEUES
  574. CELERY_CREATE_MISSING_QUEUES
  575. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  576. If enabled (default), any queues specified that are not defined in
  577. :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` will be automatically created. See
  578. :ref:`routing-automatic`.
  579. .. setting:: CELERY_DEFAULT_QUEUE
  580. CELERY_DEFAULT_QUEUE
  581. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  582. The name of the default queue used by `.apply_async` if the message has
  583. no route or no custom queue has been specified.
  584. This queue must be listed in :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES`.
  585. If :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` is not specified then it is automatically
  586. created containing one queue entry, where this name is used as the name of
  587. that queue.
  588. The default is: `celery`.
  589. .. seealso::
  590. :ref:`routing-changing-default-queue`
  591. .. setting:: CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE
  592. CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE
  593. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  594. Name of the default exchange to use when no custom exchange is
  595. specified for a key in the :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` setting.
  596. The default is: `celery`.
  597. .. setting:: CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE_TYPE
  598. CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE_TYPE
  599. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  600. Default exchange type used when no custom exchange type is specified
  601. for a key in the :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` setting.
  602. The default is: `direct`.
  603. .. setting:: CELERY_DEFAULT_ROUTING_KEY
  604. CELERY_DEFAULT_ROUTING_KEY
  605. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  606. The default routing key used when no custom routing key
  607. is specified for a key in the :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` setting.
  608. The default is: `celery`.
  609. .. setting:: CELERY_DEFAULT_DELIVERY_MODE
  610. CELERY_DEFAULT_DELIVERY_MODE
  611. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  612. Can be `transient` or `persistent`. The default is to send
  613. persistent messages.
  614. .. _conf-broker-settings:
  615. Broker Settings
  616. ---------------
  617. .. setting:: CELERY_ACCEPT_CONTENT
  618. CELERY_ACCEPT_CONTENT
  619. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  620. A whitelist of content-types/serializers to allow.
  621. If a message is received that is not in this list then
  622. the message will be discarded with an error.
  623. By default any content type is enabled (including pickle and yaml)
  624. so make sure untrusted parties do not have access to your broker.
  625. See :ref:`guide-security` for more.
  626. Example::
  627. # using serializer name
  628. CELERY_ACCEPT_CONTENT = ['json']
  629. # or the actual content-type (MIME)
  630. CELERY_ACCEPT_CONTENT = ['application/json']
  631. .. setting:: BROKER_FAILOVER_STRATEGY
  632. BROKER_FAILOVER_STRATEGY
  633. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  634. Default failover strategy for the broker Connection object. If supplied,
  635. may map to a key in 'kombu.connection.failover_strategies', or be a reference
  636. to any method that yields a single item from a supplied list.
  637. Example::
  638. # Random failover strategy
  639. def random_failover_strategy(servers):
  640. it = list(it) # don't modify callers list
  641. shuffle = random.shuffle
  642. for _ in repeat(None):
  643. shuffle(it)
  644. yield it[0]
  645. BROKER_FAILOVER_STRATEGY=random_failover_strategy
  646. .. setting:: BROKER_TRANSPORT
  647. BROKER_TRANSPORT
  648. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  649. :Aliases: ``BROKER_BACKEND``
  650. :Deprecated aliases: ``CARROT_BACKEND``
  651. .. setting:: BROKER_URL
  652. BROKER_URL
  653. ~~~~~~~~~~
  654. Default broker URL. This must be an URL in the form of::
  655. transport://userid:password@hostname:port/virtual_host
  656. Only the scheme part (``transport://``) is required, the rest
  657. is optional, and defaults to the specific transports default values.
  658. The transport part is the broker implementation to use, and the
  659. default is ``amqp``, which uses ``librabbitmq`` by default or falls back to
  660. ``pyamqp`` if that is not installed. Also there are many other choices including
  661. ``redis``, ``beanstalk``, ``sqlalchemy``, ``django``, ``mongodb``,
  662. ``couchdb``.
  663. It can also be a fully qualified path to your own transport implementation.
  664. More than broker URL, of the same transport, can also be specified.
  665. The broker URLs can be passed in as a single string that is semicolon delimited::
  666. BROKER_URL = 'transport://userid:password@hostname:port//;transport://userid:password@hostname:port//'
  667. Or as a list::
  668. BROKER_URL = [
  669. 'transport://userid:password@localhost:port//',
  670. 'transport://userid:password@hostname:port//'
  671. ]
  672. The brokers will then be used in the :setting:`BROKER_FAILOVER_STRATEGY`.
  673. See :ref:`kombu:connection-urls` in the Kombu documentation for more
  674. information.
  675. .. setting:: BROKER_HEARTBEAT
  676. BROKER_HEARTBEAT
  677. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  678. :transports supported: ``pyamqp``
  679. It's not always possible to detect connection loss in a timely
  680. manner using TCP/IP alone, so AMQP defines something called heartbeats
  681. that's is used both by the client and the broker to detect if
  682. a connection was closed.
  683. Heartbeats are disabled by default.
  684. If the heartbeat value is 10 seconds, then
  685. the heartbeat will be monitored at the interval specified
  686. by the :setting:`BROKER_HEARTBEAT_CHECKRATE` setting, which by default is
  687. double the rate of the heartbeat value
  688. (so for the default 10 seconds, the heartbeat is checked every 5 seconds).
  689. .. setting:: BROKER_HEARTBEAT_CHECKRATE
  690. BROKER_HEARTBEAT_CHECKRATE
  691. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  692. :transports supported: ``pyamqp``
  693. At intervals the worker will monitor that the broker has not missed
  694. too many heartbeats. The rate at which this is checked is calculated
  695. by dividing the :setting:`BROKER_HEARTBEAT` value with this value,
  696. so if the heartbeat is 10.0 and the rate is the default 2.0, the check
  697. will be performed every 5 seconds (twice the heartbeat sending rate).
  698. .. setting:: BROKER_USE_SSL
  699. BROKER_USE_SSL
  700. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  701. :transports supported: ``pyamqp``
  702. Toggles SSL usage on broker connection and SSL settings.
  703. If ``True`` the connection will use SSL with default SSL settings.
  704. If set to a dict, will configure SSL connection according to the specified
  705. policy. The format used is python `ssl.wrap_socket()
  706. options <https://docs.python.org/3/library/ssl.html#ssl.wrap_socket>`_.
  707. Default is ``False`` (no SSL).
  708. Note that SSL socket is generally served on a separate port by the broker.
  709. Example providing a client cert and validating the server cert against a custom
  710. certificate authority:
  711. .. code-block:: python
  712. import ssl
  713. BROKER_USE_SSL = {
  714. 'keyfile': '/var/ssl/private/worker-key.pem',
  715. 'certfile': '/var/ssl/amqp-server-cert.pem',
  716. 'ca_certs': '/var/ssl/myca.pem',
  717. 'cert_reqs': ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
  718. }
  719. .. warning::
  720. Be careful using ``BROKER_USE_SSL=True``. It is possible that your default
  721. configuration will not validate the server cert at all. Please read Python
  722. `ssl module security
  723. considerations <https://docs.python.org/3/library/ssl.html#ssl-security>`_.
  724. .. setting:: BROKER_POOL_LIMIT
  725. BROKER_POOL_LIMIT
  726. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  727. .. versionadded:: 2.3
  728. The maximum number of connections that can be open in the connection pool.
  729. The pool is enabled by default since version 2.5, with a default limit of ten
  730. connections. This number can be tweaked depending on the number of
  731. threads/greenthreads (eventlet/gevent) using a connection. For example
  732. running eventlet with 1000 greenlets that use a connection to the broker,
  733. contention can arise and you should consider increasing the limit.
  734. If set to :const:`None` or 0 the connection pool will be disabled and
  735. connections will be established and closed for every use.
  736. Default (since 2.5) is to use a pool of 10 connections.
  737. .. setting:: BROKER_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT
  738. BROKER_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT
  739. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  740. The default timeout in seconds before we give up establishing a connection
  741. to the AMQP server. Default is 4 seconds.
  742. .. setting:: BROKER_CONNECTION_RETRY
  743. BROKER_CONNECTION_RETRY
  744. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  745. Automatically try to re-establish the connection to the AMQP broker if lost.
  746. The time between retries is increased for each retry, and is
  747. not exhausted before :setting:`BROKER_CONNECTION_MAX_RETRIES` is
  748. exceeded.
  749. This behavior is on by default.
  750. .. setting:: BROKER_CONNECTION_MAX_RETRIES
  751. BROKER_CONNECTION_MAX_RETRIES
  752. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  753. Maximum number of retries before we give up re-establishing a connection
  754. to the AMQP broker.
  755. If this is set to :const:`0` or :const:`None`, we will retry forever.
  756. Default is 100 retries.
  757. .. setting:: BROKER_LOGIN_METHOD
  758. BROKER_LOGIN_METHOD
  759. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  760. Set custom amqp login method, default is ``AMQPLAIN``.
  761. .. setting:: BROKER_TRANSPORT_OPTIONS
  762. BROKER_TRANSPORT_OPTIONS
  763. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  764. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  765. A dict of additional options passed to the underlying transport.
  766. See your transport user manual for supported options (if any).
  767. Example setting the visibility timeout (supported by Redis and SQS
  768. transports):
  769. .. code-block:: python
  770. BROKER_TRANSPORT_OPTIONS = {'visibility_timeout': 18000} # 5 hours
  771. .. _conf-task-execution:
  772. Task execution settings
  773. -----------------------
  774. .. setting:: CELERY_ALWAYS_EAGER
  775. CELERY_ALWAYS_EAGER
  776. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  777. If this is :const:`True`, all tasks will be executed locally by blocking until
  778. the task returns. ``apply_async()`` and ``Task.delay()`` will return
  779. an :class:`~celery.result.EagerResult` instance, which emulates the API
  780. and behavior of :class:`~celery.result.AsyncResult`, except the result
  781. is already evaluated.
  782. That is, tasks will be executed locally instead of being sent to
  783. the queue.
  784. .. setting:: CELERY_EAGER_PROPAGATES_EXCEPTIONS
  785. CELERY_EAGER_PROPAGATES_EXCEPTIONS
  786. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  787. If this is :const:`True`, eagerly executed tasks (applied by `task.apply()`,
  788. or when the :setting:`CELERY_ALWAYS_EAGER` setting is enabled), will
  789. propagate exceptions.
  790. It's the same as always running ``apply()`` with ``throw=True``.
  791. .. setting:: CELERY_IGNORE_RESULT
  792. CELERY_IGNORE_RESULT
  793. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  794. Whether to store the task return values or not (tombstones).
  795. If you still want to store errors, just not successful return values,
  796. you can set :setting:`CELERY_STORE_ERRORS_EVEN_IF_IGNORED`.
  797. .. setting:: CELERY_MESSAGE_COMPRESSION
  798. CELERY_MESSAGE_COMPRESSION
  799. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  800. Default compression used for task messages.
  801. Can be ``gzip``, ``bzip2`` (if available), or any custom
  802. compression schemes registered in the Kombu compression registry.
  803. The default is to send uncompressed messages.
  804. .. setting:: CELERY_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES
  805. CELERY_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES
  806. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  807. Time (in seconds, or a :class:`~datetime.timedelta` object) for when after
  808. stored task tombstones will be deleted.
  809. A built-in periodic task will delete the results after this time
  810. (:class:`celery.task.backend_cleanup`).
  811. A value of :const:`None` or 0 means results will never expire (depending
  812. on backend specifications).
  813. Default is to expire after 1 day.
  814. .. note::
  815. For the moment this only works with the amqp, database, cache, redis and MongoDB
  816. backends.
  817. When using the database or MongoDB backends, `celery beat` must be
  818. running for the results to be expired.
  819. .. setting:: CELERY_MAX_CACHED_RESULTS
  820. CELERY_MAX_CACHED_RESULTS
  821. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  822. Result backends caches ready results used by the client.
  823. This is the total number of results to cache before older results are evicted.
  824. The default is 100. 0 or None means no limit, and a value of :const:`-1`
  825. will disable the cache.
  826. .. setting:: CELERY_CHORD_PROPAGATES
  827. CELERY_CHORD_PROPAGATES
  828. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  829. .. versionadded:: 3.0.14
  830. This setting defines what happens when a task part of a chord raises an
  831. exception:
  832. - If propagate is True the chord callback will change state to FAILURE
  833. with the exception value set to a :exc:`~@ChordError`
  834. instance containing information about the error and the task that failed.
  835. This is the default behavior in Celery 3.1+
  836. - If propagate is False the exception value will instead be forwarded
  837. to the chord callback.
  838. This was the default behavior before version 3.1.
  839. .. setting:: CELERY_TRACK_STARTED
  840. CELERY_TRACK_STARTED
  841. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  842. If :const:`True` the task will report its status as "started" when the
  843. task is executed by a worker. The default value is :const:`False` as
  844. the normal behaviour is to not report that level of granularity. Tasks
  845. are either pending, finished, or waiting to be retried. Having a "started"
  846. state can be useful for when there are long running tasks and there is a
  847. need to report which task is currently running.
  848. .. setting:: CELERY_TASK_SERIALIZER
  849. CELERY_TASK_SERIALIZER
  850. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  851. A string identifying the default serialization method to use. Can be
  852. `pickle` (default), `json`, `yaml`, `msgpack` or any custom serialization
  853. methods that have been registered with :mod:`kombu.serialization.registry`.
  854. .. seealso::
  855. :ref:`calling-serializers`.
  856. .. setting:: CELERY_TASK_PUBLISH_RETRY
  857. CELERY_TASK_PUBLISH_RETRY
  858. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  859. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  860. Decides if publishing task messages will be retried in the case
  861. of connection loss or other connection errors.
  862. See also :setting:`CELERY_TASK_PUBLISH_RETRY_POLICY`.
  863. Enabled by default.
  864. .. setting:: CELERY_TASK_PUBLISH_RETRY_POLICY
  865. CELERY_TASK_PUBLISH_RETRY_POLICY
  866. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  867. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  868. Defines the default policy when retrying publishing a task message in
  869. the case of connection loss or other connection errors.
  870. See :ref:`calling-retry` for more information.
  871. .. setting:: CELERY_DEFAULT_RATE_LIMIT
  872. CELERY_DEFAULT_RATE_LIMIT
  873. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  874. The global default rate limit for tasks.
  875. This value is used for tasks that does not have a custom rate limit
  876. The default is no rate limit.
  877. .. setting:: CELERY_DISABLE_RATE_LIMITS
  878. CELERY_DISABLE_RATE_LIMITS
  879. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  880. Disable all rate limits, even if tasks has explicit rate limits set.
  881. .. setting:: CELERY_ACKS_LATE
  882. CELERY_ACKS_LATE
  883. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  884. Late ack means the task messages will be acknowledged **after** the task
  885. has been executed, not *just before*, which is the default behavior.
  886. .. seealso::
  887. FAQ: :ref:`faq-acks_late-vs-retry`.
  888. .. _conf-worker:
  889. Worker
  890. ------
  891. .. setting:: CELERY_IMPORTS
  892. CELERY_IMPORTS
  893. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  894. A sequence of modules to import when the worker starts.
  895. This is used to specify the task modules to import, but also
  896. to import signal handlers and additional remote control commands, etc.
  897. The modules will be imported in the original order.
  898. .. setting:: CELERY_INCLUDE
  899. CELERY_INCLUDE
  900. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  901. Exact same semantics as :setting:`CELERY_IMPORTS`, but can be used as a means
  902. to have different import categories.
  903. The modules in this setting are imported after the modules in
  904. :setting:`CELERY_IMPORTS`.
  905. .. setting:: CELERYD_WORKER_LOST_WAIT
  906. CELERYD_WORKER_LOST_WAIT
  907. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  908. In some cases a worker may be killed without proper cleanup,
  909. and the worker may have published a result before terminating.
  910. This value specifies how long we wait for any missing results before
  911. raising a :exc:`@WorkerLostError` exception.
  912. Default is 10.0
  913. .. setting:: CELERYD_MAX_TASKS_PER_CHILD
  914. CELERYD_MAX_TASKS_PER_CHILD
  915. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  916. Maximum number of tasks a pool worker process can execute before
  917. it's replaced with a new one. Default is no limit.
  918. .. setting:: CELERYD_TASK_TIME_LIMIT
  919. CELERYD_TASK_TIME_LIMIT
  920. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  921. Task hard time limit in seconds. The worker processing the task will
  922. be killed and replaced with a new one when this is exceeded.
  923. .. setting:: CELERYD_TASK_SOFT_TIME_LIMIT
  924. CELERYD_TASK_SOFT_TIME_LIMIT
  925. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  926. Task soft time limit in seconds.
  927. The :exc:`~@SoftTimeLimitExceeded` exception will be
  928. raised when this is exceeded. The task can catch this to
  929. e.g. clean up before the hard time limit comes.
  930. Example:
  931. .. code-block:: python
  932. from celery.exceptions import SoftTimeLimitExceeded
  933. @app.task
  934. def mytask():
  935. try:
  936. return do_work()
  937. except SoftTimeLimitExceeded:
  938. cleanup_in_a_hurry()
  939. .. setting:: CELERY_STORE_ERRORS_EVEN_IF_IGNORED
  940. CELERY_STORE_ERRORS_EVEN_IF_IGNORED
  941. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  942. If set, the worker stores all task errors in the result store even if
  943. :attr:`Task.ignore_result <celery.task.base.Task.ignore_result>` is on.
  944. .. setting:: CELERYD_STATE_DB
  945. CELERYD_STATE_DB
  946. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  947. Name of the file used to stores persistent worker state (like revoked tasks).
  948. Can be a relative or absolute path, but be aware that the suffix `.db`
  949. may be appended to the file name (depending on Python version).
  950. Can also be set via the :option:`--statedb` argument to
  951. :mod:`~celery.bin.worker`.
  952. Not enabled by default.
  953. .. setting:: CELERYD_TIMER_PRECISION
  954. CELERYD_TIMER_PRECISION
  955. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  956. Set the maximum time in seconds that the ETA scheduler can sleep between
  957. rechecking the schedule. Default is 1 second.
  958. Setting this value to 1 second means the schedulers precision will
  959. be 1 second. If you need near millisecond precision you can set this to 0.1.
  960. .. setting:: CELERY_ENABLE_REMOTE_CONTROL
  961. CELERY_ENABLE_REMOTE_CONTROL
  962. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  963. Specify if remote control of the workers is enabled.
  964. Default is :const:`True`.
  965. .. _conf-error-mails:
  966. Error E-Mails
  967. -------------
  968. .. setting:: CELERY_SEND_TASK_ERROR_EMAILS
  969. CELERY_SEND_TASK_ERROR_EMAILS
  970. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  971. The default value for the `Task.send_error_emails` attribute, which if
  972. set to :const:`True` means errors occurring during task execution will be
  973. sent to :setting:`ADMINS` by email.
  974. Disabled by default.
  975. .. setting:: ADMINS
  976. ADMINS
  977. ~~~~~~
  978. List of `(name, email_address)` tuples for the administrators that should
  979. receive error emails.
  980. .. setting:: SERVER_EMAIL
  981. SERVER_EMAIL
  982. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  983. The email address this worker sends emails from.
  984. Default is celery@localhost.
  985. .. setting:: EMAIL_HOST
  986. EMAIL_HOST
  987. ~~~~~~~~~~
  988. The mail server to use. Default is ``localhost``.
  989. .. setting:: EMAIL_HOST_USER
  990. EMAIL_HOST_USER
  991. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  992. User name (if required) to log on to the mail server with.
  993. .. setting:: EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD
  994. EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD
  995. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  996. Password (if required) to log on to the mail server with.
  997. .. setting:: EMAIL_PORT
  998. EMAIL_PORT
  999. ~~~~~~~~~~
  1000. The port the mail server is listening on. Default is `25`.
  1001. .. setting:: EMAIL_USE_SSL
  1002. EMAIL_USE_SSL
  1003. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1004. Use SSL when connecting to the SMTP server. Disabled by default.
  1005. .. setting:: EMAIL_USE_TLS
  1006. EMAIL_USE_TLS
  1007. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1008. Use TLS when connecting to the SMTP server. Disabled by default.
  1009. .. setting:: EMAIL_TIMEOUT
  1010. EMAIL_TIMEOUT
  1011. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1012. Timeout in seconds for when we give up trying to connect
  1013. to the SMTP server when sending emails.
  1014. The default is 2 seconds.
  1015. .. _conf-example-error-mail-config:
  1016. Example E-Mail configuration
  1017. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1018. This configuration enables the sending of error emails to
  1019. george@vandelay.com and kramer@vandelay.com:
  1020. .. code-block:: python
  1021. # Enables error emails.
  1022. CELERY_SEND_TASK_ERROR_EMAILS = True
  1023. # Name and email addresses of recipients
  1024. ADMINS = (
  1025. ('George Costanza', 'george@vandelay.com'),
  1026. ('Cosmo Kramer', 'kosmo@vandelay.com'),
  1027. )
  1028. # Email address used as sender (From field).
  1029. SERVER_EMAIL = 'no-reply@vandelay.com'
  1030. # Mailserver configuration
  1031. EMAIL_HOST = 'mail.vandelay.com'
  1032. EMAIL_PORT = 25
  1033. # EMAIL_HOST_USER = 'servers'
  1034. # EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD = 's3cr3t'
  1035. .. _conf-events:
  1036. Events
  1037. ------
  1038. .. setting:: CELERY_SEND_EVENTS
  1039. CELERY_SEND_EVENTS
  1040. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1041. Send events so the worker can be monitored by tools like `celerymon`.
  1042. .. setting:: CELERY_SEND_TASK_SENT_EVENT
  1043. CELERY_SEND_TASK_SENT_EVENT
  1044. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1045. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  1046. If enabled, a :event:`task-sent` event will be sent for every task so tasks can be
  1047. tracked before they are consumed by a worker.
  1048. Disabled by default.
  1049. .. setting:: CELERY_EVENT_QUEUE_TTL
  1050. CELERY_EVENT_QUEUE_TTL
  1051. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1052. :transports supported: ``amqp``
  1053. Message expiry time in seconds (int/float) for when messages sent to a monitor clients
  1054. event queue is deleted (``x-message-ttl``)
  1055. For example, if this value is set to 10 then a message delivered to this queue
  1056. will be deleted after 10 seconds.
  1057. Disabled by default.
  1058. .. setting:: CELERY_EVENT_QUEUE_EXPIRES
  1059. CELERY_EVENT_QUEUE_EXPIRES
  1060. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1061. :transports supported: ``amqp``
  1062. Expiry time in seconds (int/float) for when a monitor clients
  1063. event queue will be deleted (``x-expires``).
  1064. Default is never, relying on the queue autodelete setting.
  1065. .. setting:: CELERY_EVENT_SERIALIZER
  1066. CELERY_EVENT_SERIALIZER
  1067. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1068. Message serialization format used when sending event messages.
  1069. Default is ``json``. See :ref:`calling-serializers`.
  1070. .. _conf-broadcast:
  1071. Broadcast Commands
  1072. ------------------
  1073. .. setting:: CELERY_BROADCAST_QUEUE
  1074. CELERY_BROADCAST_QUEUE
  1075. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1076. Name prefix for the queue used when listening for broadcast messages.
  1077. The workers host name will be appended to the prefix to create the final
  1078. queue name.
  1079. Default is ``celeryctl``.
  1080. .. setting:: CELERY_BROADCAST_EXCHANGE
  1081. CELERY_BROADCAST_EXCHANGE
  1082. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1083. Name of the exchange used for broadcast messages.
  1084. Default is ``celeryctl``.
  1085. .. setting:: CELERY_BROADCAST_EXCHANGE_TYPE
  1086. CELERY_BROADCAST_EXCHANGE_TYPE
  1087. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1088. Exchange type used for broadcast messages. Default is ``fanout``.
  1089. .. _conf-logging:
  1090. Logging
  1091. -------
  1092. .. setting:: CELERYD_HIJACK_ROOT_LOGGER
  1093. CELERYD_HIJACK_ROOT_LOGGER
  1094. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1095. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  1096. By default any previously configured handlers on the root logger will be
  1097. removed. If you want to customize your own logging handlers, then you
  1098. can disable this behavior by setting
  1099. `CELERYD_HIJACK_ROOT_LOGGER = False`.
  1100. .. note::
  1101. Logging can also be customized by connecting to the
  1102. :signal:`celery.signals.setup_logging` signal.
  1103. .. setting:: CELERYD_LOG_COLOR
  1104. CELERYD_LOG_COLOR
  1105. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1106. Enables/disables colors in logging output by the Celery apps.
  1107. By default colors are enabled if
  1108. 1) the app is logging to a real terminal, and not a file.
  1109. 2) the app is not running on Windows.
  1110. .. setting:: CELERYD_LOG_FORMAT
  1111. CELERYD_LOG_FORMAT
  1112. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1113. The format to use for log messages.
  1114. Default is `[%(asctime)s: %(levelname)s/%(processName)s] %(message)s`
  1115. See the Python :mod:`logging` module for more information about log
  1116. formats.
  1117. .. setting:: CELERYD_TASK_LOG_FORMAT
  1118. CELERYD_TASK_LOG_FORMAT
  1119. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1120. The format to use for log messages logged in tasks. Can be overridden using
  1121. the :option:`--loglevel` option to :mod:`~celery.bin.worker`.
  1122. Default is::
  1123. [%(asctime)s: %(levelname)s/%(processName)s]
  1124. [%(task_name)s(%(task_id)s)] %(message)s
  1125. See the Python :mod:`logging` module for more information about log
  1126. formats.
  1127. .. setting:: CELERY_REDIRECT_STDOUTS
  1128. CELERY_REDIRECT_STDOUTS
  1129. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1130. If enabled `stdout` and `stderr` will be redirected
  1131. to the current logger.
  1132. Enabled by default.
  1133. Used by :program:`celery worker` and :program:`celery beat`.
  1134. .. setting:: CELERY_REDIRECT_STDOUTS_LEVEL
  1135. CELERY_REDIRECT_STDOUTS_LEVEL
  1136. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1137. The log level output to `stdout` and `stderr` is logged as.
  1138. Can be one of :const:`DEBUG`, :const:`INFO`, :const:`WARNING`,
  1139. :const:`ERROR` or :const:`CRITICAL`.
  1140. Default is :const:`WARNING`.
  1141. .. _conf-security:
  1142. Security
  1143. --------
  1144. .. setting:: CELERY_SECURITY_KEY
  1145. CELERY_SECURITY_KEY
  1146. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1147. .. versionadded:: 2.5
  1148. The relative or absolute path to a file containing the private key
  1149. used to sign messages when :ref:`message-signing` is used.
  1150. .. setting:: CELERY_SECURITY_CERTIFICATE
  1151. CELERY_SECURITY_CERTIFICATE
  1152. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1153. .. versionadded:: 2.5
  1154. The relative or absolute path to an X.509 certificate file
  1155. used to sign messages when :ref:`message-signing` is used.
  1156. .. setting:: CELERY_SECURITY_CERT_STORE
  1157. CELERY_SECURITY_CERT_STORE
  1158. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1159. .. versionadded:: 2.5
  1160. The directory containing X.509 certificates used for
  1161. :ref:`message-signing`. Can be a glob with wildcards,
  1162. (for example :file:`/etc/certs/*.pem`).
  1163. .. _conf-custom-components:
  1164. Custom Component Classes (advanced)
  1165. -----------------------------------
  1166. .. setting:: CELERYD_POOL
  1167. CELERYD_POOL
  1168. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1169. Name of the pool class used by the worker.
  1170. .. admonition:: Eventlet/Gevent
  1171. Never use this option to select the eventlet or gevent pool.
  1172. You must use the `-P` option to :program:`celery worker` instead, to
  1173. ensure the monkey patches are not applied too late, causing things
  1174. to break in strange ways.
  1175. Default is ``celery.concurrency.prefork:TaskPool``.
  1176. .. setting:: CELERYD_POOL_RESTARTS
  1177. CELERYD_POOL_RESTARTS
  1178. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1179. If enabled the worker pool can be restarted using the
  1180. :control:`pool_restart` remote control command.
  1181. Disabled by default.
  1182. .. setting:: CELERYD_AUTOSCALER
  1183. CELERYD_AUTOSCALER
  1184. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1185. .. versionadded:: 2.2
  1186. Name of the autoscaler class to use.
  1187. Default is ``celery.worker.autoscale:Autoscaler``.
  1188. .. setting:: CELERYD_AUTORELOADER
  1189. CELERYD_AUTORELOADER
  1190. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1191. Name of the autoreloader class used by the worker to reload
  1192. Python modules and files that have changed.
  1193. Default is: ``celery.worker.autoreload:Autoreloader``.
  1194. .. setting:: CELERYD_CONSUMER
  1195. CELERYD_CONSUMER
  1196. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1197. Name of the consumer class used by the worker.
  1198. Default is :class:`celery.worker.consumer.Consumer`
  1199. .. setting:: CELERYD_TIMER
  1200. CELERYD_TIMER
  1201. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1202. Name of the ETA scheduler class used by the worker.
  1203. Default is :class:`celery.utils.timer2.Timer`, or one overrided
  1204. by the pool implementation.
  1205. .. _conf-celerybeat:
  1206. Periodic Task Server: celery beat
  1207. ---------------------------------
  1208. .. setting:: CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE
  1209. CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE
  1210. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1211. The periodic task schedule used by :mod:`~celery.bin.beat`.
  1212. See :ref:`beat-entries`.
  1213. .. setting:: CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULER
  1214. CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULER
  1215. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1216. The default scheduler class. Default is ``celery.beat:PersistentScheduler``.
  1217. Can also be set via the :option:`-S` argument to
  1218. :mod:`~celery.bin.beat`.
  1219. .. setting:: CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE_FILENAME
  1220. CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE_FILENAME
  1221. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1222. Name of the file used by `PersistentScheduler` to store the last run times
  1223. of periodic tasks. Can be a relative or absolute path, but be aware that the
  1224. suffix `.db` may be appended to the file name (depending on Python version).
  1225. Can also be set via the :option:`--schedule` argument to
  1226. :mod:`~celery.bin.beat`.
  1227. .. setting:: CELERYBEAT_SYNC_EVERY
  1228. CELERYBEAT_SYNC_EVERY
  1229. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1230. The number of periodic tasks that can be called before another database sync
  1231. is issued.
  1232. Defaults to 0 (sync based on timing - default of 3 minutes as determined by
  1233. scheduler.sync_every). If set to 1, beat will call sync after every task
  1234. message sent.
  1235. .. setting:: CELERYBEAT_MAX_LOOP_INTERVAL
  1236. CELERYBEAT_MAX_LOOP_INTERVAL
  1237. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1238. The maximum number of seconds :mod:`~celery.bin.beat` can sleep
  1239. between checking the schedule.
  1240. The default for this value is scheduler specific.
  1241. For the default celery beat scheduler the value is 300 (5 minutes),
  1242. but for e.g. the django-celery database scheduler it is 5 seconds
  1243. because the schedule may be changed externally, and so it must take
  1244. changes to the schedule into account.
  1245. Also when running celery beat embedded (:option:`-B`) on Jython as a thread
  1246. the max interval is overridden and set to 1 so that it's possible
  1247. to shut down in a timely manner.
  1248. .. _conf-celerymon:
  1249. Monitor Server: celerymon
  1250. -------------------------
  1251. .. setting:: CELERYMON_LOG_FORMAT
  1252. CELERYMON_LOG_FORMAT
  1253. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1254. The format to use for log messages.
  1255. Default is `[%(asctime)s: %(levelname)s/%(processName)s] %(message)s`
  1256. See the Python :mod:`logging` module for more information about log
  1257. formats.