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							- .. _whatsnew-3.1:
 
- ===========================================
 
-  What's new in Celery 3.1 (Cipater)
 
- ===========================================
 
- .. sidebar:: Change history
 
-     What's new documents describes the changes in major versions,
 
-     we also have a :ref:`changelog` that lists the changes in bugfix
 
-     releases (0.0.x), while older series are archived under the :ref:`history`
 
-     section.
 
- 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.
 
- This version is officially supported on CPython 2.6, 2.7, 3.2 and 3.3,
 
- as well as PyPy and Jython.
 
- Highlights
 
- ==========
 
- .. topic:: Overview
 
-     - XXX1
 
-         YYY1
 
-     - XXX2
 
-     - XXX3
 
-         YYY3
 
- .. _`website`: http://celeryproject.org/
 
- .. _`django-celery changelog`:
 
-     http://github.com/celery/django-celery/tree/master/Changelog
 
- .. _`django-celery 3.0`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/django-celery/
 
- .. contents::
 
-     :local:
 
-     :depth: 2
 
- .. _v310-important:
 
- Important Notes
 
- ===============
 
- XXX
 
- ---
 
- YYY
 
- .. _v310-news:
 
- News
 
- ====
 
- XXX
 
- ---
 
- YYY
 
- In Other News
 
- -------------
 
- - No longer supports Python 2.5
 
-     From this version Celery requires Python 2.6 or later.
 
- - No longer depends on ``python-dateutil``
 
-     Instead a dependency on :mod:`pytz` has been added, which was already
 
-     recommended in the documentation for accurate timezone support.
 
-     This also means that dependencies are on the same on both Python 2 and
 
-     Python 3, and that the :file:`requirements/default-py3k.txt` file has
 
-     been removed.
 
- - Time limits can now be set by the client for individual tasks (Issue #802).
 
-     You can set both hard and soft time limits using the ``timeout`` and
 
-     ``soft_timeout`` calling options:
 
-     .. code-block:: python
 
-         >>> res = add.apply_async((2, 2), timeout=10, soft_timeout=8)
 
-         >>> res = add.subtask((2, 2), timeout=10, soft_timeout=8)()
 
-         >>> res = add.s(2, 2).set(timeout=10, soft_timeout=8)()
 
-     Contributed by Mher Movsisyan.
 
- - Old command-line programs removed and deprecated
 
-     The goal is that everyone should move the new :program:`celery` umbrella
 
-     command, so with this version we deprecate the old command names,
 
-     and remove commands that are not used in init scripts.
 
-     +-------------------+--------------+-------------------------------------+
 
-     | Program           | New Status   | Replacement                         |
 
-     +===================+==============+=====================================+
 
-     | ``celeryd``       | *DEPRECATED* | :program:`celery worker`            |
 
-     +-------------------+--------------+-------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``celerybeat``    | *DEPRECATED* | :program:`celery beat`              |
 
-     +-------------------+--------------+-------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``celeryd-multi`` | *DEPRECATED* | :program:`celery multi`             |
 
-     +-------------------+--------------+-------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``celeryctl``     | **REMOVED**  | :program:`celery`                   |
 
-     +-------------------+--------------+-------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``celeryev``      | **REMOVED**  | :program:`celery events`            |
 
-     +-------------------+--------------+-------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``camqadm``       | **REMOVED**  | :program:`celery amqp`              |
 
-     +-------------------+--------------+-------------------------------------+
 
-     Please see :program:`celery --help` for help using the umbrella command.
 
- - Celery now support Django out of the box.
 
-     The fixes and improvements applied by the django-celery library is now
 
-     automatically applied by core Celery when it detects that
 
-     the :envvar:`DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE` environment setting is set.
 
-     The distribution ships with a new example project using Django
 
-     in :file:`examples/django`:
 
-     http://github.com/celery/celery/tree/master/examples/django
 
-     There are cases where you would want to use django-celery still
 
-     as:
 
-         - Celery does not implement the Django database or cache backends.
 
-         - Celery does not automatically read configuration from Django settings.
 
-         - Celery does not ship with the database-based periodic task
 
-           scheduler.
 
-     If you are using django-celery then it is crucial that you have
 
-     ``djcelery.setup_loader()`` in your settings module, as this
 
-     no longer happens as a side-effect of importing the :mod:`djcelery`
 
-     module.
 
- - The consumer part of the worker has been rewritten to use Bootsteps.
 
-     By writing bootsteps you can now easily extend the consumer part
 
-     of the worker to add additional features, or even message consumers.
 
-     See the :ref:`guide-extending` guide for more information.
 
- - New Bootsteps implementation.
 
-     The bootsteps and namespaces have been refactored for the better,
 
-     sadly this means that bootsteps written for older versions will
 
-     not be compatible with this version.
 
-     Bootsteps were never publicly documented and was considered
 
-     experimental, so chances are no one has ever implemented custom
 
-     bootsteps, but if you did please contact the mailing-list
 
-     and we'll help you port them.
 
-     - Module ``celery.worker.bootsteps`` renamed to :mod:`celery.bootsteps`
 
-     - The name of a bootstep no longer contain the name of the namespace.
 
-     - A bootstep can now be part of multiple namespaces.
 
-     - Namespaces must instantiate individual bootsteps, and
 
-       there's no global registry of bootsteps.
 
- - New result backend with RPC semantics (``rpc``).
 
-     This version of the ``amqp`` result backend is a very good alternative
 
-     to use in classical RPC scenarios, where the process that initiates
 
-     the task is always the process to retrieve the result.
 
-     It uses Kombu to send and retrieve results, and each client
 
-     will create a unique queue for replies to be sent to. Avoiding
 
-     the significant overhead of the original amqp backend which creates
 
-     one queue per task, but it's important to consider that it will
 
-     not be possible to retrieve the result from another process,
 
-     and that results sent using this backend is not persistent and so will
 
-     not survive a broker restart.
 
-     It has only been tested with the AMQP and Redis transports.
 
- - App instances can now add additional command line options
 
-   to the worker and beat programs.
 
-     The :attr:`@Celery.user_options` attribute can be used
 
-     to add additional command-line arguments, and expects
 
-     optparse-style options:
 
-     .. code-block:: python
 
-         from celery import Celery
 
-         from optparse import make_option as Option
 
-         celery = Celery()
 
-         celery.user_options['worker'].add(
 
-             Option('--my-argument'),
 
-         )
 
-     See :ref:`guide-extending` for more information.
 
- - Events are now ordered using logical time.
 
-     Timestamps are not a reliable way to order events in a distributed system,
 
-     for one the floating point value does not have enough precision, but
 
-     also it's impossible to keep physical clocks in sync.
 
-     Celery event messages have included a logical clock value for some time,
 
-     but starting with this version that field is also used to order them
 
-     (if the monitor is using ``celery.events.state``).
 
-     The logical clock is currently implemented using Lamport timestamps,
 
-     which does not have a high degree of accuracy, but should be good
 
-     enough to casually order the events.
 
- - All events now include a ``pid`` field, which is the process id of the
 
-   process that sent the event.
 
- - Events now supports timezones.
 
-     A new ``utcoffset`` field is now sent with every event.  This is a
 
-     signed integer telling the difference from UTC time in hours,
 
-     so e.g. an even sent from the Europe/London timezone in daylight savings
 
-     time will have an offset of 1.
 
-     :class:`@events.Receiver` will automatically convert the timestamps
 
-     to the destination timezone.
 
- - Event heartbeats are now calculated based on the time when the event
 
-   was received by the monitor, and not the time reported by the worker.
 
-     This means that a worker with an out-of-sync clock will no longer
 
-     show as 'Offline' in monitors.
 
-     A warning is now emitted if the difference between the senders
 
-     time and the internal time is greater than 15 seconds, suggesting
 
-     that the clocks are out of sync.
 
- - :program:`celery worker` now supports a ``--detach`` argument to start
 
-   the worker as a daemon in the background.
 
- - :class:`@events.Receiver` now sets a ``local_received`` field for incoming
 
-   events, which is set to the time of when the event was received.
 
- - :class:`@events.Dispatcher` now accepts a ``groups`` argument
 
-   which decides a whitelist of event groups that will be sent.
 
-     The type of an event is a string separated by '-', where the part
 
-     before the first '-' is the group.  Currently there are only
 
-     two groups: ``worker`` and ``task``.
 
-     A dispatcher instantiated as follows:
 
-     .. code-block:: python
 
-         app.events.Dispatcher(connection, groups=['worker'])
 
-     will only send worker related events and silently drop any attempts
 
-     to send events related to any other group.
 
- - Better support for link and link_error tasks for chords.
 
-     Contributed by Steeve Morin.
 
- - There's a now an 'inspect clock' command which will collect the current
 
-   logical clock value from workers.
 
- - `celery inspect stats` now contains the process id of the worker's main
 
-   process.
 
-     Contributed by Mher Movsisyan.
 
- - New remote control command to dump a workers configuration.
 
-     Example:
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         $ celery inspect conf
 
-     Configuration values will be converted to values supported by JSON
 
-     where possible.
 
-     Contributed by Mher Movisyan.
 
- - Now supports Setuptools extra requirements.
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | Extension   | Requirement entry       | Type                      |
 
-     +=============+=========================+===========================+
 
-     | Redis       | ``celery[redis]``       | transport, result backend |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | MongoDB``   | ``celery[mongodb]``     | transport, result backend |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | CouchDB     | ``celery[couchdb]``     | transport                 |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | Beanstalk   | ``celery[beanstalk]``   | transport                 |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | ZeroMQ      | ``celery[zeromq]``      | transport                 |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | Zookeeper   | ``celery[zookeeper]``   | transport                 |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | SQLAlchemy  | ``celery[sqlalchemy]``  | transport, result backend |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     | librabbitmq | ``celery[librabbitmq]`` | transport (C amqp client) |
 
-     +-------------+-------------------------+---------------------------+
 
-     Examples using :program:`pip install`:
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         pip install celery[redis]
 
-         pip install celery[librabbitmq]
 
-         pip install celery[redis,librabbitmq]
 
-         pip install celery[mongodb]
 
-         pip install celery[couchdb]
 
-         pip install celery[beanstalk]
 
-         pip install celery[zeromq]
 
-         pip install celery[zookeeper]
 
-         pip install celery[sqlalchemy]
 
- - Worker node names now consists of a name and a hostname separated by '@'.
 
-     This change is to more easily identify multiple instances running
 
-     on the same machine.
 
-     If a custom name is not specified then the
 
-     worker will use the name 'celery' in default, resulting in a
 
-     fully qualified node name of 'celery@hostname':
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         $ celery worker -n example.com
 
-         celery@example.com
 
-     To set the name you must include the @:
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         $ celery worker -n worker1@example.com
 
-         worker1@example.com
 
-     This also means that the worker will identify itself using the full
 
-     nodename in events and broadcast messages, so where before
 
-     a worker would identify as 'worker1.example.com', it will now
 
-     use 'celery@worker1.example.com'.
 
-     Remember that the ``-n`` argument also supports simple variable
 
-     substitutions, so if the current hostname is *jerry.example.com*
 
-     then ``%h`` will expand into that:
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         $ celery worker -n worker1@%h
 
-         worker1@jerry.example.com
 
-     The table of substitutions is as follows:
 
-     +---------------+---------------------------------------+
 
-     | Variable      | Substitution                          |
 
-     +===============+=======================================+
 
-     | ``%h``        | Full hostname (including domain name) |
 
-     +---------------+---------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``%d``        | Domain name only                      |
 
-     +---------------+---------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``%n``        | Hostname only (without domain name)   |
 
-     +---------------+---------------------------------------+
 
-     | ``%%``        | The character ``%``                   |
 
-     +---------------+---------------------------------------+
 
- - Workers now synchronizes revoked tasks with its neighbors.
 
-     This happens at startup and causes a one second startup delay
 
-     to collect broadcast responses from other workers.
 
- - Workers logical clock value is now persisted so that the clock
 
-   is not reset when a worker restarts.
 
-     The logical clock is also synchronized with other nodes
 
-     in the same cluster (neighbors), so this means that the logical
 
-     epoch will start at the point when the first worker in the cluster
 
-     starts.
 
-     You may notice that the logical clock is an integer value and increases
 
-     very rapidly. It will take several millennia before the clock overflows 64 bits,
 
-     so this is not a concern.
 
- - Message expires value is now forwarded at retry (Issue #980).
 
-     The value is forwarded at is, so the expiry time will not change.
 
-     To update the expiry time you would have to pass the expires
 
-     argument to ``retry()``.
 
- - Worker now crashes if a channel error occurs.
 
-     Channel errors are transport specific and is the list of exceptions
 
-     returned by ``Connection.channel_errors``.
 
-     For RabbitMQ this means that Celery will crash if the equivalence
 
-     checks for one of the queues in :setting:`CELERY_QUEUES` mismatches, which
 
-     makes sense since this is a scenario where manual intervention is
 
-     required.
 
- - Calling ``AsyncResult.get()`` on a chain now propagates errors for previous
 
-   tasks (Issue #1014).
 
- - The parent attribute of ``AsyncResult`` is now reconstructed when using JSON
 
-   serialization (Issue #1014).
 
- - Worker disconnection logs are now logged with severity warning instead of
 
-   error.
 
-     Contributed by Chris Adams.
 
- - The logger named ``celery.concurrency`` has been renamed to ``celery.pool``.
 
- - New command line utility ``celery graph``
 
-     This utility creates graphs in GraphViz dot format.
 
-     You can create graphs from the currently installed bootsteps:
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         # Create graph of currently installed bootsteps in both the worker
 
-         # and consumer namespaces.
 
-         $ celery graph bootsteps | dot -T png -o steps.png
 
-         # Graph of the consumer namespace only.
 
-         $ celery graph bootsteps consumer | dot -T png -o consumer_only.png
 
-         # Graph of the worker namespace only.
 
-         $ celery graph bootsteps worker | dot -T png -o worker_only.png
 
-     Or graphs of workers in a cluster:
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         # Create graph from the current cluster
 
-         $ celery graph workers | dot -T png -o workers.png
 
-         # Create graph from a specified list of workers
 
-         $ celery graph workers nodes:w1,w2,w3 | dot -T png workers.png
 
-         # also specify the number of threads in each worker
 
-         $ celery graph workers nodes:w1,w2,w3 threads:2,4,6
 
-         # ...also specify the broker and backend URLs shown in the graph
 
-         $ celery graph workers broker:amqp:// backend:redis://
 
-         # ...also specify the max number of workers/threads shown (wmax/tmax),
 
-         # enumerating anything that exceeds that number.
 
-         $ celery graph workers wmax:10 tmax:3
 
- - Ability to trace imports for debugging purposes.
 
-     The :envvar:`C_IMPDEBUG` can be set to trace imports as they
 
-     occur:
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         $ C_IMDEBUG=1 celery worker -l info
 
-     .. code-block:: bash
 
-         $ C_IMPDEBUG=1 celery shell
 
- - :class:`celery.apps.worker.Worker` has been refactored as a subclass of
 
-   :class:`celery.worker.WorkController`.
 
-     This removes a lot of duplicate functionality.
 
- - :class:`@events.Receiver` is now a :class:`kombu.mixins.ConsumerMixin`
 
-   subclass.
 
- - ``celery.platforms.PIDFile`` renamed to :class:`celery.platforms.Pidfile`.
 
- - ``celery.results.BaseDictBackend`` has been removed, replaced by
 
-   :class:``celery.results.BaseBackend``.
 
- .. _v310-experimental:
 
- Experimental
 
- ============
 
- XXX
 
- ---
 
- YYY
 
- .. _v310-removals:
 
- Scheduled Removals
 
- ==================
 
- - The ``BROKER_INSIST`` setting is no longer supported.
 
- - The ``CELERY_AMQP_TASK_RESULT_CONNECTION_MAX`` setting is no longer
 
-   supported.
 
-     Use :setting:`BROKER_POOL_LIMIT` instead.
 
- - The ``CELERY_TASK_ERROR_WHITELIST`` setting is no longer supported.
 
-     You should set the :class:`~celery.utils.mail.ErrorMail` attribute
 
-     of the task class instead.  You can also do this using
 
-     :setting:`CELERY_ANNOTATIONS`:
 
-         .. code-block:: python
 
-             from celery import Celery
 
-             from celery.utils.mail import ErrorMail
 
-             class MyErrorMail(ErrorMail):
 
-                 whitelist = (KeyError, ImportError)
 
-                 def should_send(self, context, exc):
 
-                     return isinstance(exc, self.whitelist)
 
-             app = Celery()
 
-             app.conf.CELERY_ANNOTATIONS = {
 
-                 '*': {
 
-                     'ErrorMail': MyErrorMails,
 
-                 }
 
-             }
 
- - The ``CELERY_AMQP_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES`` setting is no longer supported.
 
-     Use :setting:`CELERY_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES` instead.
 
- - Functions that establishes broker connections no longer
 
-   supports the ``connect_timeout`` argument.
 
-     This can now only be set using the :setting:`BROKER_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT`
 
-     setting.  This is because function rarely establish connections directly,
 
-     but instead acquire connections from the connection pool.
 
- .. _v310-deprecations:
 
- Deprecations
 
- ============
 
- See the :ref:`deprecation-timeline`.
 
- - XXX
 
-     YYY
 
- .. _v310-fixes:
 
- Fixes
 
- =====
 
- - XXX
 
 
  |