sqs.rst 4.5 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158
  1. .. _broker-sqs:
  2. ==================
  3. Using Amazon SQS
  4. ==================
  5. .. _broker-sqs-installation:
  6. Installation
  7. ============
  8. For the Amazon SQS support you have to install the `boto`_ library:
  9. .. code-block:: console
  10. $ pip install -U boto
  11. .. _boto:
  12. http://pypi.python.org/pypi/boto
  13. .. _broker-sqs-configuration:
  14. Configuration
  15. =============
  16. You have to specify SQS in the broker URL::
  17. broker_url = 'sqs://ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRST:ZYXK7NiynGlTogH8Nj+P9nlE73sq3@'
  18. where the URL format is:
  19. .. code-block:: text
  20. sqs://aws_access_key_id:aws_secret_access_key@
  21. you must *remember to include the "@" at the end*.
  22. The login credentials can also be set using the environment variables
  23. :envvar:`AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID` and :envvar:`AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY`,
  24. in that case the broker URL may only be ``sqs://``.
  25. .. note::
  26. If you specify AWS credentials in the broker URL, then please keep in mind
  27. that the secret access key may contain unsafe characters that needs to be
  28. URL encoded.
  29. Options
  30. =======
  31. Region
  32. ------
  33. The default region is ``us-east-1`` but you can select another region
  34. by configuring the :setting:`broker_transport_options` setting::
  35. broker_transport_options = {'region': 'eu-west-1'}
  36. .. seealso::
  37. An overview of Amazon Web Services regions can be found here:
  38. http://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/globalinfrastructure/
  39. Visibility Timeout
  40. ------------------
  41. The visibility timeout defines the number of seconds to wait
  42. for the worker to acknowledge the task before the message is redelivered
  43. to another worker. Also see caveats below.
  44. This option is set via the :setting:`broker_transport_options` setting::
  45. broker_transport_options = {'visibility_timeout': 3600} # 1 hour.
  46. The default visibility timeout is 30 seconds.
  47. Polling Interval
  48. ----------------
  49. The polling interval decides the number of seconds to sleep between
  50. unsuccessful polls. This value can be either an int or a float.
  51. By default the value is 1 second, which means that the worker will
  52. sleep for one second whenever there are no more messages to read.
  53. You must note that **more frequent polling is also more expensive, so increasing
  54. the polling interval can save you money**.
  55. The polling interval can be set via the :setting:`broker_transport_options`
  56. setting::
  57. broker_transport_options = {'polling_interval': 0.3}
  58. Very frequent polling intervals can cause *busy loops*, which results in the
  59. worker using a lot of CPU time. If you need sub-millisecond precision you
  60. should consider using another transport, like `RabbitMQ <broker-amqp>`,
  61. or `Redis <broker-redis>`.
  62. Queue Prefix
  63. ------------
  64. By default Celery won't assign any prefix to the queue names,
  65. If you have other services using SQS you can configure it do so
  66. using the :setting:`broker_transport_options` setting::
  67. broker_transport_options = {'queue_name_prefix': 'celery-'}
  68. .. _sqs-caveats:
  69. Caveats
  70. =======
  71. - If a task isn't acknowledged within the ``visibility_timeout``,
  72. the task will be redelivered to another worker and executed.
  73. This causes problems with ETA/countdown/retry tasks where the
  74. time to execute exceeds the visibility timeout; in fact if that
  75. happens it will be executed again, and again in a loop.
  76. So you have to increase the visibility timeout to match
  77. the time of the longest ETA you're planning to use.
  78. Note that Celery will redeliver messages at worker shutdown,
  79. so having a long visibility timeout will only delay the redelivery
  80. of 'lost' tasks in the event of a power failure or forcefully terminated
  81. workers.
  82. Periodic tasks won't be affected by the visibility timeout,
  83. as it is a concept separate from ETA/countdown.
  84. The maximum visibility timeout supported by AWS as of this writing
  85. is 12 hours (43200 seconds)::
  86. broker_transport_options = {'visibility_timeout': 43200}
  87. - SQS doesn't yet support worker remote control commands.
  88. - SQS doesn't yet support events, and so cannot be used with
  89. :program:`celery events`, :program:`celerymon` or the Django Admin
  90. monitor.
  91. .. _sqs-results-configuration:
  92. Results
  93. -------
  94. Multiple products in the Amazon Web Services family could be a good candidate
  95. to store or publish results with, but there's no such result backend included
  96. at this point.
  97. .. warning::
  98. Don't use the ``amqp`` result backend with SQS.
  99. It will create one queue for every task, and the queues will
  100. not be collected. This could cost you money that would be better
  101. spent contributing an AWS result store backend back to Celery :)