faq.rst 27 KB

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  1. .. _faq:
  2. ============================
  3. Frequently Asked Questions
  4. ============================
  5. .. contents::
  6. :local:
  7. .. _faq-general:
  8. General
  9. =======
  10. .. _faq-when-to-use:
  11. What kinds of things should I use Celery for?
  12. ---------------------------------------------
  13. **Answer:** `Queue everything and delight everyone`_ is a good article
  14. describing why you would use a queue in a web context.
  15. .. _`Queue everything and delight everyone`:
  16. http://decafbad.com/blog/2008/07/04/queue-everything-and-delight-everyone
  17. These are some common use cases:
  18. * Running something in the background. For example, to finish the web request
  19. as soon as possible, then update the users page incrementally.
  20. This gives the user the impression of good performance and "snappiness", even
  21. though the real work might actually take some time.
  22. * Running something after the web request has finished.
  23. * Making sure something is done, by executing it asynchronously and using
  24. retries.
  25. * Scheduling periodic work.
  26. And to some degree:
  27. * Distributed computing.
  28. * Parallel execution.
  29. .. _faq-misconceptions:
  30. Misconceptions
  31. ==============
  32. .. _faq-loc:
  33. Does Celery really consist of 50.000 lines of code?
  34. ---------------------------------------------------
  35. **Answer:** No, this and similarly large numbers have
  36. been reported at various locations.
  37. The numbers as of this writing are:
  38. - core: 7,141 lines of code.
  39. - tests: 14,209 lines.
  40. - backends, contrib, compat utilities: 9,032 lines.
  41. Lines of code is not a useful metric, so
  42. even if Celery did consist of 50k lines of code you would not
  43. be able to draw any conclusions from such a number.
  44. Does Celery have many dependencies?
  45. -----------------------------------
  46. A common criticism is that Celery uses too many dependencies.
  47. The rationale behind such a fear is hard to imagine, especially considering
  48. code reuse as the established way to combat complexity in modern software
  49. development, and that the cost of adding dependencies is very low now
  50. that package managers like pip and PyPI makes the hassle of installing
  51. and maintaining dependencies a thing of the past.
  52. Celery has replaced several dependencies along the way, and
  53. the current list of dependencies are:
  54. celery
  55. ~~~~~~
  56. - `kombu`_
  57. Kombu is part of the Celery ecosystem and is the library used
  58. to send and receive messages. It is also the library that enables
  59. us to support many different message brokers. It is also used by the
  60. OpenStack project, and many others, validating the choice to separate
  61. it from the Celery codebase.
  62. .. _`kombu`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/kombu
  63. - `billiard`_
  64. Billiard is a fork of the Python multiprocessing module containing
  65. many performance and stability improvements. It is an eventual goal
  66. that these improvements will be merged back into Python one day.
  67. It is also used for compatibility with older Python versions
  68. that don't come with the multiprocessing module.
  69. .. _`billiard`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/billiard
  70. - `pytz`
  71. The pytz module provides timezone definitions and related tools.
  72. .. _`pytz`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pytz
  73. django-celery
  74. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  75. If you use django-celery then you don't have to install celery separately,
  76. as it will make sure that the required version is installed.
  77. django-celery does not have any other dependencies.
  78. kombu
  79. ~~~~~
  80. Kombu depends on the following packages:
  81. - `amqp`_
  82. The underlying pure-Python amqp client implementation. AMQP being the default
  83. broker this is a natural dependency.
  84. .. _`amqp`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/amqp
  85. .. note::
  86. To handle the dependencies for popular configuration
  87. choices Celery defines a number of "bundle" packages,
  88. see :ref:`bundles`.
  89. .. _faq-heavyweight:
  90. Is Celery heavy-weight?
  91. -----------------------
  92. Celery poses very little overhead both in memory footprint and
  93. performance.
  94. But please note that the default configuration is not optimized for time nor
  95. space, see the :ref:`guide-optimizing` guide for more information.
  96. .. _faq-serializion-is-a-choice:
  97. Is Celery dependent on pickle?
  98. ------------------------------
  99. **Answer:** No.
  100. Celery can support any serialization scheme and has built-in support for
  101. JSON, YAML, Pickle and msgpack. Also, as every task is associated with a
  102. content type, you can even send one task using pickle, and another using JSON.
  103. The default serialization format is pickle simply because it is
  104. convenient (it supports sending complex Python objects as task arguments).
  105. If you need to communicate with other languages you should change
  106. to a serialization format that is suitable for that.
  107. You can set a global default serializer, the default serializer for a
  108. particular Task, or even what serializer to use when sending a single task
  109. instance.
  110. .. _faq-is-celery-for-django-only:
  111. Is Celery for Django only?
  112. --------------------------
  113. **Answer:** No.
  114. You can use Celery with any framework, web or otherwise.
  115. .. _faq-is-celery-for-rabbitmq-only:
  116. Do I have to use AMQP/RabbitMQ?
  117. -------------------------------
  118. **Answer**: No.
  119. Although using RabbitMQ is recommended you can also use Redis. There are also
  120. experimental transports available such as MongoDB, Beanstalk, CouchDB, or using
  121. SQL databases. See :ref:`brokers` for more information.
  122. The experimental transports may have reliability problems and
  123. limited broadcast and event functionality.
  124. For example remote control commands only works with AMQP and Redis.
  125. Redis or a database won't perform as well as
  126. an AMQP broker. If you have strict reliability requirements you are
  127. encouraged to use RabbitMQ or another AMQP broker. Some transports also uses
  128. polling, so they are likely to consume more resources. However, if you for
  129. some reason are not able to use AMQP, feel free to use these alternatives.
  130. They will probably work fine for most use cases, and note that the above
  131. points are not specific to Celery; If using Redis/database as a queue worked
  132. fine for you before, it probably will now. You can always upgrade later
  133. if you need to.
  134. .. _faq-is-celery-multilingual:
  135. Is Celery multilingual?
  136. ------------------------
  137. **Answer:** Yes.
  138. :mod:`~celery.bin.worker` is an implementation of Celery in Python. If the
  139. language has an AMQP client, there shouldn't be much work to create a worker
  140. in your language. A Celery worker is just a program connecting to the broker
  141. to process messages.
  142. Also, there's another way to be language independent, and that is to use REST
  143. tasks, instead of your tasks being functions, they're URLs. With this
  144. information you can even create simple web servers that enable preloading of
  145. code. See: :ref:`User Guide: Remote Tasks <guide-webhooks>`.
  146. .. _faq-troubleshooting:
  147. Troubleshooting
  148. ===============
  149. .. _faq-mysql-deadlocks:
  150. MySQL is throwing deadlock errors, what can I do?
  151. -------------------------------------------------
  152. **Answer:** MySQL has default isolation level set to `REPEATABLE-READ`,
  153. if you don't really need that, set it to `READ-COMMITTED`.
  154. You can do that by adding the following to your :file:`my.cnf`::
  155. [mysqld]
  156. transaction-isolation = READ-COMMITTED
  157. For more information about InnoDB`s transaction model see `MySQL - The InnoDB
  158. Transaction Model and Locking`_ in the MySQL user manual.
  159. (Thanks to Honza Kral and Anton Tsigularov for this solution)
  160. .. _`MySQL - The InnoDB Transaction Model and Locking`: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/innodb-transaction-model.html
  161. .. _faq-worker-hanging:
  162. The worker is not doing anything, just hanging
  163. ----------------------------------------------
  164. **Answer:** See `MySQL is throwing deadlock errors, what can I do?`_.
  165. or `Why is Task.delay/apply\* just hanging?`.
  166. .. _faq-results-unreliable:
  167. Task results aren't reliably returning
  168. --------------------------------------
  169. **Answer:** If you're using the database backend for results, and in particular
  170. using MySQL, see `MySQL is throwing deadlock errors, what can I do?`_.
  171. .. _faq-publish-hanging:
  172. Why is Task.delay/apply\*/the worker just hanging?
  173. --------------------------------------------------
  174. **Answer:** There is a bug in some AMQP clients that will make it hang if
  175. it's not able to authenticate the current user, the password doesn't match or
  176. the user does not have access to the virtual host specified. Be sure to check
  177. your broker logs (for RabbitMQ that is :file:`/var/log/rabbitmq/rabbit.log` on
  178. most systems), it usually contains a message describing the reason.
  179. .. _faq-worker-on-freebsd:
  180. Does it work on FreeBSD?
  181. ------------------------
  182. **Answer:** Depends
  183. When using the RabbitMQ (AMQP) and Redis transports it should work
  184. out of the box.
  185. For other transports the compatibility prefork pool is
  186. used which requires a working POSIX semaphore implementation, and this isn't
  187. enabled in FreeBSD by default. You have to enable
  188. POSIX semaphores in the kernel and manually recompile billiard.
  189. Luckily, Viktor Petersson has written a tutorial to get you started with
  190. Celery on FreeBSD here:
  191. http://www.playingwithwire.com/2009/10/how-to-get-celeryd-to-work-on-freebsd/
  192. .. _faq-duplicate-key-errors:
  193. I'm having `IntegrityError: Duplicate Key` errors. Why?
  194. ---------------------------------------------------------
  195. **Answer:** See `MySQL is throwing deadlock errors, what can I do?`_.
  196. Thanks to howsthedotcom.
  197. .. _faq-worker-stops-processing:
  198. Why aren't my tasks processed?
  199. ------------------------------
  200. **Answer:** With RabbitMQ you can see how many consumers are currently
  201. receiving tasks by running the following command:
  202. .. code-block:: bash
  203. $ rabbitmqctl list_queues -p <myvhost> name messages consumers
  204. Listing queues ...
  205. celery 2891 2
  206. This shows that there's 2891 messages waiting to be processed in the task
  207. queue, and there are two consumers processing them.
  208. One reason that the queue is never emptied could be that you have a stale
  209. worker process taking the messages hostage. This could happen if the worker
  210. wasn't properly shut down.
  211. When a message is received by a worker the broker waits for it to be
  212. acknowledged before marking the message as processed. The broker will not
  213. re-send that message to another consumer until the consumer is shut down
  214. properly.
  215. If you hit this problem you have to kill all workers manually and restart
  216. them::
  217. ps auxww | grep celeryd | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill
  218. You might have to wait a while until all workers have finished the work they're
  219. doing. If it's still hanging after a long time you can kill them by force
  220. with::
  221. ps auxww | grep celeryd | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9
  222. .. _faq-task-does-not-run:
  223. Why won't my Task run?
  224. ----------------------
  225. **Answer:** There might be syntax errors preventing the tasks module being imported.
  226. You can find out if Celery is able to run the task by executing the
  227. task manually:
  228. >>> from myapp.tasks import MyPeriodicTask
  229. >>> MyPeriodicTask.delay()
  230. Watch the workers log file to see if it's able to find the task, or if some
  231. other error is happening.
  232. .. _faq-periodic-task-does-not-run:
  233. Why won't my periodic task run?
  234. -------------------------------
  235. **Answer:** See `Why won't my Task run?`_.
  236. .. _faq-purge-the-queue:
  237. How do I purge all waiting tasks?
  238. ---------------------------------
  239. **Answer:** You can use the ``celery purge`` command to purge
  240. all configured task queues:
  241. .. code-block:: bash
  242. $ celery -A proj purge
  243. or programatically:
  244. .. code-block:: python
  245. >>> from proj.celery import app
  246. >>> app.control.purge()
  247. 1753
  248. If you only want to purge messages from a specific queue
  249. you have to use the AMQP API or the :program:`celery amqp` utility:
  250. .. code-block:: bash
  251. $ celery -A proj amqp queue.purge <queue name>
  252. The number 1753 is the number of messages deleted.
  253. You can also start :mod:`~celery.bin.worker` with the
  254. :option:`--purge` argument, to purge messages when the worker starts.
  255. .. _faq-messages-left-after-purge:
  256. I've purged messages, but there are still messages left in the queue?
  257. ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  258. **Answer:** Tasks are acknowledged (removed from the queue) as soon
  259. as they are actually executed. After the worker has received a task, it will
  260. take some time until it is actually executed, especially if there are a lot
  261. of tasks already waiting for execution. Messages that are not acknowledged are
  262. held on to by the worker until it closes the connection to the broker (AMQP
  263. server). When that connection is closed (e.g. because the worker was stopped)
  264. the tasks will be re-sent by the broker to the next available worker (or the
  265. same worker when it has been restarted), so to properly purge the queue of
  266. waiting tasks you have to stop all the workers, and then purge the tasks
  267. using :func:`celery.control.purge`.
  268. .. _faq-results:
  269. Results
  270. =======
  271. .. _faq-get-result-by-task-id:
  272. How do I get the result of a task if I have the ID that points there?
  273. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  274. **Answer**: Use `task.AsyncResult`::
  275. >>> result = my_task.AsyncResult(task_id)
  276. >>> result.get()
  277. This will give you a :class:`~celery.result.AsyncResult` instance
  278. using the tasks current result backend.
  279. If you need to specify a custom result backend, or you want to use
  280. the current application's default backend you can use
  281. :class:`@AsyncResult`:
  282. >>> result = app.AsyncResult(task_id)
  283. >>> result.get()
  284. .. _faq-security:
  285. Security
  286. ========
  287. Isn't using `pickle` a security concern?
  288. ----------------------------------------
  289. **Answer**: Yes, indeed it is.
  290. You are right to have a security concern, as this can indeed be a real issue.
  291. It is essential that you protect against unauthorized
  292. access to your broker, databases and other services transmitting pickled
  293. data.
  294. For the task messages you can set the :setting:`CELERY_TASK_SERIALIZER`
  295. setting to "json" or "yaml" instead of pickle. There is
  296. currently no alternative solution for task results (but writing a
  297. custom result backend using JSON is a simple task)
  298. Note that this is not just something you should be aware of with Celery, for
  299. example also Django uses pickle for its cache client.
  300. Can messages be encrypted?
  301. --------------------------
  302. **Answer**: Some AMQP brokers supports using SSL (including RabbitMQ).
  303. You can enable this using the :setting:`BROKER_USE_SSL` setting.
  304. It is also possible to add additional encryption and security to messages,
  305. if you have a need for this then you should contact the :ref:`mailing-list`.
  306. Is it safe to run :program:`celery worker` as root?
  307. ---------------------------------------------------
  308. **Answer**: No!
  309. We're not currently aware of any security issues, but it would
  310. be incredibly naive to assume that they don't exist, so running
  311. the Celery services (:program:`celery worker`, :program:`celery beat`,
  312. :program:`celeryev`, etc) as an unprivileged user is recommended.
  313. .. _faq-brokers:
  314. Brokers
  315. =======
  316. Why is RabbitMQ crashing?
  317. -------------------------
  318. **Answer:** RabbitMQ will crash if it runs out of memory. This will be fixed in a
  319. future release of RabbitMQ. please refer to the RabbitMQ FAQ:
  320. http://www.rabbitmq.com/faq.html#node-runs-out-of-memory
  321. .. note::
  322. This is no longer the case, RabbitMQ versions 2.0 and above
  323. includes a new persister, that is tolerant to out of memory
  324. errors. RabbitMQ 2.1 or higher is recommended for Celery.
  325. If you're still running an older version of RabbitMQ and experience
  326. crashes, then please upgrade!
  327. Misconfiguration of Celery can eventually lead to a crash
  328. on older version of RabbitMQ. Even if it doesn't crash, this
  329. can still consume a lot of resources, so it is very
  330. important that you are aware of the common pitfalls.
  331. * Events.
  332. Running :mod:`~celery.bin.worker` with the :option:`-E`/:option:`--events`
  333. option will send messages for events happening inside of the worker.
  334. Events should only be enabled if you have an active monitor consuming them,
  335. or if you purge the event queue periodically.
  336. * AMQP backend results.
  337. When running with the AMQP result backend, every task result will be sent
  338. as a message. If you don't collect these results, they will build up and
  339. RabbitMQ will eventually run out of memory.
  340. Results expire after 1 day by default. It may be a good idea
  341. to lower this value by configuring the :setting:`CELERY_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES`
  342. setting.
  343. If you don't use the results for a task, make sure you set the
  344. `ignore_result` option:
  345. .. code-block python
  346. @app.task(ignore_result=True)
  347. def mytask():
  348. class MyTask(Task):
  349. ignore_result = True
  350. .. _faq-use-celery-with-stomp:
  351. Can I use Celery with ActiveMQ/STOMP?
  352. -------------------------------------
  353. **Answer**: No. It used to be supported by Carrot,
  354. but is not currently supported in Kombu.
  355. .. _faq-non-amqp-missing-features:
  356. What features are not supported when not using an AMQP broker?
  357. --------------------------------------------------------------
  358. This is an incomplete list of features not available when
  359. using the virtual transports:
  360. * Remote control commands (supported only by Redis).
  361. * Monitoring with events may not work in all virtual transports.
  362. * The `header` and `fanout` exchange types
  363. (`fanout` is supported by Redis).
  364. .. _faq-tasks:
  365. Tasks
  366. =====
  367. .. _faq-tasks-connection-reuse:
  368. How can I reuse the same connection when calling tasks?
  369. -------------------------------------------------------
  370. **Answer**: See the :setting:`BROKER_POOL_LIMIT` setting.
  371. The connection pool is enabled by default since version 2.5.
  372. .. _faq-sudo-subprocess:
  373. Sudo in a :mod:`subprocess` returns :const:`None`
  374. -------------------------------------------------
  375. There is a sudo configuration option that makes it illegal for process
  376. without a tty to run sudo::
  377. Defaults requiretty
  378. If you have this configuration in your :file:`/etc/sudoers` file then
  379. tasks will not be able to call sudo when the worker is running as a daemon.
  380. If you want to enable that, then you need to remove the line from sudoers.
  381. See: http://timelordz.com/wiki/Apache_Sudo_Commands
  382. .. _faq-deletes-unknown-tasks:
  383. Why do workers delete tasks from the queue if they are unable to process them?
  384. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  385. **Answer**:
  386. The worker rejects unknown tasks, messages with encoding errors and messages
  387. that don't contain the proper fields (as per the task message protocol).
  388. If it did not reject them they could be redelivered again and again,
  389. causing a loop.
  390. Recent versions of RabbitMQ has the ability to configure a dead-letter
  391. queue for exchange, so that rejected messages is moved there.
  392. .. _faq-execute-task-by-name:
  393. Can I call a task by name?
  394. -----------------------------
  395. **Answer**: Yes. Use :meth:`@send_task`.
  396. You can also call a task by name from any language
  397. that has an AMQP client.
  398. >>> app.send_task('tasks.add', args=[2, 2], kwargs={})
  399. <AsyncResult: 373550e8-b9a0-4666-bc61-ace01fa4f91d>
  400. .. _faq-get-current-task-id:
  401. How can I get the task id of the current task?
  402. ----------------------------------------------
  403. **Answer**: The current id and more is available in the task request::
  404. @app.task(bind=True)
  405. def mytask(self):
  406. cache.set(self.request.id, "Running")
  407. For more information see :ref:`task-request-info`.
  408. .. _faq-custom-task-ids:
  409. Can I specify a custom task_id?
  410. -------------------------------
  411. **Answer**: Yes. Use the `task_id` argument to :meth:`Task.apply_async`::
  412. >>> task.apply_async(args, kwargs, task_id='…')
  413. Can I use decorators with tasks?
  414. --------------------------------
  415. **Answer**: Yes. But please see note in the sidebar at :ref:`task-basics`.
  416. .. _faq-natural-task-ids:
  417. Can I use natural task ids?
  418. ---------------------------
  419. **Answer**: Yes, but make sure it is unique, as the behavior
  420. for two tasks existing with the same id is undefined.
  421. The world will probably not explode, but at the worst
  422. they can overwrite each others results.
  423. .. _faq-task-callbacks:
  424. How can I run a task once another task has finished?
  425. ----------------------------------------------------
  426. **Answer**: You can safely launch a task inside a task.
  427. Also, a common pattern is to add callbacks to tasks:
  428. .. code-block:: python
  429. from celery.utils.log import get_task_logger
  430. logger = get_task_logger(__name__)
  431. @app.task
  432. def add(x, y):
  433. return x + y
  434. @app.task(ignore_result=True)
  435. def log_result(result):
  436. logger.info("log_result got: %r", result)
  437. Invocation::
  438. >>> (add.s(2, 2) | log_result.s()).delay()
  439. See :doc:`userguide/canvas` for more information.
  440. .. _faq-cancel-task:
  441. Can I cancel the execution of a task?
  442. -------------------------------------
  443. **Answer**: Yes. Use `result.revoke`::
  444. >>> result = add.apply_async(args=[2, 2], countdown=120)
  445. >>> result.revoke()
  446. or if you only have the task id::
  447. >>> from proj.celery import app
  448. >>> app.control.revoke(task_id)
  449. .. _faq-node-not-receiving-broadcast-commands:
  450. Why aren't my remote control commands received by all workers?
  451. --------------------------------------------------------------
  452. **Answer**: To receive broadcast remote control commands, every worker node
  453. uses its host name to create a unique queue name to listen to,
  454. so if you have more than one worker with the same host name, the
  455. control commands will be received in round-robin between them.
  456. To work around this you can explicitly set the nodename for every worker
  457. using the :option:`-n` argument to :mod:`~celery.bin.worker`:
  458. .. code-block:: bash
  459. $ celery -A proj worker -n worker1@%h
  460. $ celery -A proj worker -n worker2@%h
  461. where ``%h`` is automatically expanded into the current hostname.
  462. .. _faq-task-routing:
  463. Can I send some tasks to only some servers?
  464. --------------------------------------------
  465. **Answer:** Yes. You can route tasks to an arbitrary server using AMQP,
  466. and a worker can bind to as many queues as it wants.
  467. See :doc:`userguide/routing` for more information.
  468. .. _faq-change-periodic-task-interval-at-runtime:
  469. Can I change the interval of a periodic task at runtime?
  470. --------------------------------------------------------
  471. **Answer**: Yes. You can use the Django database scheduler, or you can
  472. create a new schedule subclass and override
  473. :meth:`~celery.schedules.schedule.is_due`:
  474. .. code-block:: python
  475. from celery.schedules import schedule
  476. class my_schedule(schedule):
  477. def is_due(self, last_run_at):
  478. return …
  479. .. _faq-task-priorities:
  480. Does celery support task priorities?
  481. ------------------------------------
  482. **Answer**: No. In theory, yes, as AMQP supports priorities. However
  483. RabbitMQ doesn't implement them yet.
  484. The usual way to prioritize work in Celery, is to route high priority tasks
  485. to different servers. In the real world this may actually work better than per message
  486. priorities. You can use this in combination with rate limiting to achieve a
  487. highly responsive system.
  488. .. _faq-acks_late-vs-retry:
  489. Should I use retry or acks_late?
  490. --------------------------------
  491. **Answer**: Depends. It's not necessarily one or the other, you may want
  492. to use both.
  493. `Task.retry` is used to retry tasks, notably for expected errors that
  494. is catchable with the `try:` block. The AMQP transaction is not used
  495. for these errors: **if the task raises an exception it is still acknowledged!**.
  496. The `acks_late` setting would be used when you need the task to be
  497. executed again if the worker (for some reason) crashes mid-execution.
  498. It's important to note that the worker is not known to crash, and if
  499. it does it is usually an unrecoverable error that requires human
  500. intervention (bug in the worker, or task code).
  501. In an ideal world you could safely retry any task that has failed, but
  502. this is rarely the case. Imagine the following task:
  503. .. code-block:: python
  504. @app.task
  505. def process_upload(filename, tmpfile):
  506. # Increment a file count stored in a database
  507. increment_file_counter()
  508. add_file_metadata_to_db(filename, tmpfile)
  509. copy_file_to_destination(filename, tmpfile)
  510. If this crashed in the middle of copying the file to its destination
  511. the world would contain incomplete state. This is not a critical
  512. scenario of course, but you can probably imagine something far more
  513. sinister. So for ease of programming we have less reliability;
  514. It's a good default, users who require it and know what they
  515. are doing can still enable acks_late (and in the future hopefully
  516. use manual acknowledgement)
  517. In addition `Task.retry` has features not available in AMQP
  518. transactions: delay between retries, max retries, etc.
  519. So use retry for Python errors, and if your task is idempotent
  520. combine that with `acks_late` if that level of reliability
  521. is required.
  522. .. _faq-schedule-at-specific-time:
  523. Can I schedule tasks to execute at a specific time?
  524. ---------------------------------------------------
  525. .. module:: celery.task.base
  526. **Answer**: Yes. You can use the `eta` argument of :meth:`Task.apply_async`.
  527. Or to schedule a periodic task at a specific time, use the
  528. :class:`celery.schedules.crontab` schedule behavior:
  529. .. code-block:: python
  530. from celery.schedules import crontab
  531. from celery.task import periodic_task
  532. @periodic_task(run_every=crontab(hour=7, minute=30, day_of_week="mon"))
  533. def every_monday_morning():
  534. print("This is run every Monday morning at 7:30")
  535. .. _faq-safe-worker-shutdown:
  536. How can I safely shut down the worker?
  537. --------------------------------------
  538. **Answer**: Use the :sig:`TERM` signal, and the worker will finish all currently
  539. executing jobs and shut down as soon as possible. No tasks should be lost.
  540. You should never stop :mod:`~celery.bin.worker` with the :sig:`KILL` signal
  541. (:option:`-9`), unless you've tried :sig:`TERM` a few times and waited a few
  542. minutes to let it get a chance to shut down. As if you do tasks may be
  543. terminated mid-execution, and they will not be re-run unless you have the
  544. `acks_late` option set (`Task.acks_late` / :setting:`CELERY_ACKS_LATE`).
  545. .. seealso::
  546. :ref:`worker-stopping`
  547. .. _faq-daemonizing:
  548. How do I run the worker in the background on [platform]?
  549. --------------------------------------------------------
  550. **Answer**: Please see :ref:`daemonizing`.
  551. .. _faq-django:
  552. Django
  553. ======
  554. .. _faq-django-database-tables:
  555. What purpose does the database tables created by django-celery have?
  556. --------------------------------------------------------------------
  557. Several database tables are created by default, these relate to
  558. * Monitoring
  559. When you use the django-admin monitor, the cluster state is written
  560. to the ``TaskState`` and ``WorkerState`` models.
  561. * Periodic tasks
  562. When the database-backed schedule is used the periodic task
  563. schedule is taken from the ``PeriodicTask`` model, there are
  564. also several other helper tables (``IntervalSchedule``,
  565. ``CrontabSchedule``, ``PeriodicTasks``).
  566. * Task results
  567. The database result backend is enabled by default when using django-celery
  568. (this is for historical reasons, and thus for backward compatibility).
  569. The results are stored in the ``TaskMeta`` and ``TaskSetMeta`` models.
  570. *these tables are not created if another result backend is configured*.
  571. .. _faq-windows:
  572. Windows
  573. =======
  574. .. _faq-windows-worker-embedded-beat:
  575. The `-B` / `--beat` option to worker doesn't work?
  576. ----------------------------------------------------------------
  577. **Answer**: That's right. Run `celery beat` and `celery worker` as separate
  578. services instead.