extending.rst 29 KB

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  1. .. _guide-extending:
  2. ==========================
  3. Extensions and Bootsteps
  4. ==========================
  5. .. contents::
  6. :local:
  7. :depth: 2
  8. .. _extending-custom-consumers:
  9. Custom Message Consumers
  10. ========================
  11. You may want to embed custom Kombu consumers to manually process your messages.
  12. For that purpose a special :class:`~celery.bootstep.ConsumerStep` bootstep class
  13. exists, where you only need to define the ``get_consumers`` method, which must
  14. return a list of :class:`kombu.Consumer` objects to start
  15. whenever the connection is established:
  16. .. code-block:: python
  17. from celery import Celery
  18. from celery import bootsteps
  19. from kombu import Consumer, Exchange, Queue
  20. my_queue = Queue('custom', Exchange('custom'), 'routing_key')
  21. app = Celery(broker='amqp://')
  22. class MyConsumerStep(bootsteps.ConsumerStep):
  23. def get_consumers(self, channel):
  24. return [Consumer(channel,
  25. queues=[my_queue],
  26. callbacks=[self.handle_message],
  27. accept=['json'])]
  28. def handle_message(self, body, message):
  29. print('Received message: {0!r}'.format(body))
  30. message.ack()
  31. app.steps['consumer'].add(MyConsumerStep)
  32. def send_me_a_message(self, who='world!', producer=None):
  33. with app.producer_or_acquire(producer) as producer:
  34. producer.publish(
  35. {'hello': who},
  36. serializer='json',
  37. exchange=my_queue.exchange,
  38. routing_key='routing_key',
  39. declare=[my_queue],
  40. retry=True,
  41. )
  42. if __name__ == '__main__':
  43. send_me_a_message('celery')
  44. .. note::
  45. Kombu Consumers can take use of two different message callback dispatching
  46. mechanisms. The first one is the ``callbacks`` argument which accepts
  47. a list of callbacks with a ``(body, message)`` signature,
  48. the second one is the ``on_message`` argument which takes a single
  49. callback with a ``(message,)`` signature. The latter will not
  50. automatically decode and deserialize the payload which is useful
  51. in many cases:
  52. .. code-block:: python
  53. def get_consumers(self, channel):
  54. return [Consumer(channel, queues=[my_queue],
  55. on_message=self.on_message)]
  56. def on_message(self, message):
  57. payload = message.decode()
  58. print(
  59. 'Received message: {0!r} {props!r} rawlen={s}'.format(
  60. payload, props=message.properties, s=len(message.body),
  61. ))
  62. message.ack()
  63. .. _extending-blueprints:
  64. Blueprints
  65. ==========
  66. Bootsteps is a technique to add functionality to the workers.
  67. A bootstep is a custom class that defines hooks to do custom actions
  68. at different stages in the worker. Every bootstep belongs to a blueprint,
  69. and the worker currently defines two blueprints: **Worker**, and **Consumer**
  70. ----------------------------------------------------------
  71. **Figure A:** Bootsteps in the Worker and Consumer blueprints. Starting
  72. from the bottom up the first step in the worker blueprint
  73. is the Timer, and the last step is to start the Consumer blueprint,
  74. which then establishes the broker connection and starts
  75. consuming messages.
  76. .. figure:: ../images/worker_graph_full.png
  77. ----------------------------------------------------------
  78. .. _extending-worker_blueprint:
  79. Worker
  80. ======
  81. The Worker is the first blueprint to start, and with it starts major components like
  82. the event loop, processing pool, and the timer used for ETA tasks and other
  83. timed events.
  84. When the worker is fully started it will continue to the Consumer blueprint,
  85. which sets up how tasks are to be executed, connects to the broker and starts
  86. the message consumers.
  87. The :class:`~celery.worker.WorkController` is the core worker implementation,
  88. and contains several methods and attributes that you can use in your bootstep.
  89. .. _extending-worker_blueprint-attributes:
  90. Attributes
  91. ----------
  92. .. _extending-worker-app:
  93. .. attribute:: app
  94. The current app instance.
  95. .. _extending-worker-hostname:
  96. .. attribute:: hostname
  97. The workers node name (e.g. `worker1@example.com`)
  98. .. _extending-worker-blueprint:
  99. .. attribute:: blueprint
  100. This is the worker :class:`~celery.bootsteps.Blueprint`.
  101. .. _extending-worker-hub:
  102. .. attribute:: hub
  103. Event loop object (:class:`~kombu.async.Hub`). You can use
  104. this to register callbacks in the event loop.
  105. This is only supported by async I/O enabled transports (amqp, redis),
  106. in which case the `worker.use_eventloop` attribute should be set.
  107. Your worker bootstep must require the Hub bootstep to use this:
  108. .. code-block:: python
  109. class WorkerStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  110. requires = ('celery.worker.components:Hub',)
  111. .. _extending-worker-pool:
  112. .. attribute:: pool
  113. The current process/eventlet/gevent/thread pool.
  114. See :class:`celery.concurrency.base.BasePool`.
  115. Your worker bootstep must require the Pool bootstep to use this:
  116. .. code-block:: python
  117. class WorkerStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  118. requires = ('celery.worker.components:Pool',)
  119. .. _extending-worker-timer:
  120. .. attribute:: timer
  121. :class:`~kombu.async.timer.Timer` used to schedule functions.
  122. Your worker bootstep must require the Timer bootstep to use this:
  123. .. code-block:: python
  124. class WorkerStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  125. requires = ('celery.worker.components:Timer',)
  126. .. _extending-worker-statedb:
  127. .. attribute:: statedb
  128. :class:`Database <celery.worker.state.Persistent>`` to persist state between
  129. worker restarts.
  130. This is only defined if the ``statedb`` argument is enabled.
  131. Your worker bootstep must require the ``Statedb`` bootstep to use this:
  132. .. code-block:: python
  133. class WorkerStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  134. requires = ('celery.worker.components:Statedb',)
  135. .. _extending-worker-autoreloader:
  136. .. attribute:: autoreloader
  137. :class:`~celery.worker.autoreloder.Autoreloader` used to automatically
  138. reload use code when the file-system changes.
  139. This is only defined if the ``autoreload`` argument is enabled.
  140. Your worker bootstep must require the `Autoreloader` bootstep to use this;
  141. .. code-block:: python
  142. class WorkerStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  143. requires = ('celery.worker.autoreloader:Autoreloader',)
  144. Example worker bootstep
  145. -----------------------
  146. An example Worker bootstep could be:
  147. .. code-block:: python
  148. from celery import bootsteps
  149. class ExampleWorkerStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  150. requires = ('Pool',)
  151. def __init__(self, worker, **kwargs):
  152. print('Called when the WorkController instance is constructed')
  153. print('Arguments to WorkController: {0!r}'.format(kwargs))
  154. def create(self, worker):
  155. # this method can be used to delegate the action methods
  156. # to another object that implements ``start`` and ``stop``.
  157. return self
  158. def start(self, worker):
  159. print('Called when the worker is started.')
  160. def stop(self, worker):
  161. print('Called when the worker shuts down.')
  162. def terminate(self, worker):
  163. print('Called when the worker terminates')
  164. Every method is passed the current ``WorkController`` instance as the first
  165. argument.
  166. Another example could use the timer to wake up at regular intervals:
  167. .. code-block:: python
  168. from celery import bootsteps
  169. class DeadlockDetection(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  170. requires = ('Timer',)
  171. def __init__(self, worker, deadlock_timeout=3600):
  172. self.timeout = deadlock_timeout
  173. self.requests = []
  174. self.tref = None
  175. def start(self, worker):
  176. # run every 30 seconds.
  177. self.tref = worker.timer.call_repeatedly(
  178. 30.0, self.detect, (worker,), priority=10,
  179. )
  180. def stop(self, worker):
  181. if self.tref:
  182. self.tref.cancel()
  183. self.tref = None
  184. def detect(self, worker):
  185. # update active requests
  186. for req in self.worker.active_requests:
  187. if req.time_start and time() - req.time_start > self.timeout:
  188. raise SystemExit()
  189. .. _extending-consumer_blueprint:
  190. Consumer
  191. ========
  192. The Consumer blueprint establishes a connection to the broker, and
  193. is restarted every time this connection is lost. Consumer bootsteps
  194. include the worker heartbeat, the remote control command consumer, and
  195. importantly, the task consumer.
  196. When you create consumer bootsteps you must take into account that it must
  197. be possible to restart your blueprint. An additional 'shutdown' method is
  198. defined for consumer bootsteps, this method is called when the worker is
  199. shutdown.
  200. .. _extending-consumer-attributes:
  201. Attributes
  202. ----------
  203. .. _extending-consumer-app:
  204. .. attribute:: app
  205. The current app instance.
  206. .. _extending-consumer-controller:
  207. .. attribute:: controller
  208. The parent :class:`~@WorkController` object that created this consumer.
  209. .. _extending-consumer-hostname:
  210. .. attribute:: hostname
  211. The workers node name (e.g. `worker1@example.com`)
  212. .. _extending-consumer-blueprint:
  213. .. attribute:: blueprint
  214. This is the worker :class:`~celery.bootsteps.Blueprint`.
  215. .. _extending-consumer-hub:
  216. .. attribute:: hub
  217. Event loop object (:class:`~kombu.async.Hub`). You can use
  218. this to register callbacks in the event loop.
  219. This is only supported by async I/O enabled transports (amqp, redis),
  220. in which case the `worker.use_eventloop` attribute should be set.
  221. Your worker bootstep must require the Hub bootstep to use this:
  222. .. code-block:: python
  223. class WorkerStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  224. requires = ('celery.worker:Hub',)
  225. .. _extending-consumer-connection:
  226. .. attribute:: connection
  227. The current broker connection (:class:`kombu.Connection`).
  228. A consumer bootstep must require the 'Connection' bootstep
  229. to use this:
  230. .. code-block:: python
  231. class Step(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  232. requires = ('celery.worker.consumer:Connection',)
  233. .. _extending-consumer-event_dispatcher:
  234. .. attribute:: event_dispatcher
  235. A :class:`@events.Dispatcher` object that can be used to send events.
  236. A consumer bootstep must require the `Events` bootstep to use this.
  237. .. code-block:: python
  238. class Step(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  239. requires = ('celery.worker.consumer:Events',)
  240. .. _extending-consumer-gossip:
  241. .. attribute:: gossip
  242. Worker to worker broadcast communication
  243. (:class:`~celery.worker.consumer.Gossip`).
  244. A consumer bootstep must require the `Gossip` bootstep to use this.
  245. .. code-block:: python
  246. class RatelimitStep(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  247. """Rate limit tasks based on the number of workers in the
  248. cluster."""
  249. requires = ('celery.worker.consumer:Gossip',)
  250. def start(self, c):
  251. self.c = c
  252. self.c.gossip.on.node_join.add(self.on_cluster_size_change)
  253. self.c.gossip.on.node_leave.add(self.on_cluster_size_change)
  254. self.c.gossip.on.node_lost.add(self.on_node_lost)
  255. self.tasks = [
  256. self.app.tasks['proj.tasks.add']
  257. self.app.tasks['proj.tasks.mul']
  258. ]
  259. self.last_size = None
  260. def on_cluster_size_change(self, worker):
  261. cluster_size = len(list(self.c.gossip.state.alive_workers()))
  262. if cluster_size != self.last_size:
  263. for task in self.tasks:
  264. task.rate_limit = 1.0 / cluster_size
  265. self.c.reset_rate_limits()
  266. self.last_size = cluster_size
  267. def on_node_lost(self, worker):
  268. # may have processed heartbeat too late, so wake up soon
  269. # in order to see if the worker recovered.
  270. self.c.timer.call_after(10.0, self.on_cluster_size_change)
  271. **Callbacks**
  272. - ``<set> gossip.on.node_join``
  273. Called whenever a new node joins the cluster, providing a
  274. :class:`~celery.events.state.Worker` instance.
  275. - ``<set> gossip.on.node_leave``
  276. Called whenever a new node leaves the cluster (shuts down),
  277. providing a :class:`~celery.events.state.Worker` instance.
  278. - ``<set> gossip.on.node_lost``
  279. Called whenever heartbeat was missed for a worker instance in the
  280. cluster (heartbeat not received or processed in time),
  281. providing a :class:`~celery.events.state.Worker` instance.
  282. This does not necessarily mean the worker is actually offline, so use a time
  283. out mechanism if the default heartbeat timeout is not sufficient.
  284. .. _extending-consumer-pool:
  285. .. attribute:: pool
  286. The current process/eventlet/gevent/thread pool.
  287. See :class:`celery.concurrency.base.BasePool`.
  288. .. _extending-consumer-timer:
  289. .. attribute:: timer
  290. :class:`Timer <celery.utils.timer2.Schedule` used to schedule functions.
  291. .. _extending-consumer-heart:
  292. .. attribute:: heart
  293. Responsible for sending worker event heartbeats
  294. (:class:`~celery.worker.heartbeat.Heart`).
  295. Your consumer bootstep must require the `Heart` bootstep to use this:
  296. .. code-block:: python
  297. class Step(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  298. requires = ('celery.worker.consumer:Heart',)
  299. .. _extending-consumer-task_consumer:
  300. .. attribute:: task_consumer
  301. The :class:`kombu.Consumer` object used to consume task messages.
  302. Your consumer bootstep must require the `Tasks` bootstep to use this:
  303. .. code-block:: python
  304. class Step(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  305. requires = ('celery.worker.consumer:Tasks',)
  306. .. _extending-consumer-strategies:
  307. .. attribute:: strategies
  308. Every registered task type has an entry in this mapping,
  309. where the value is used to execute an incoming message of this task type
  310. (the task execution strategy). This mapping is generated by the Tasks
  311. bootstep when the consumer starts:
  312. .. code-block:: python
  313. for name, task in app.tasks.items():
  314. strategies[name] = task.start_strategy(app, consumer)
  315. task.__trace__ = celery.app.trace.build_tracer(
  316. name, task, loader, hostname
  317. )
  318. Your consumer bootstep must require the `Tasks` bootstep to use this:
  319. .. code-block:: python
  320. class Step(bootsteps.StartStopStep):
  321. requires = ('celery.worker.consumer:Tasks',)
  322. .. _extending-consumer-task_buckets:
  323. .. attribute:: task_buckets
  324. A :class:`~collections.defaultdict` used to look-up the rate limit for
  325. a task by type.
  326. Entries in this dict may be None (for no limit) or a
  327. :class:`~kombu.utils.limits.TokenBucket` instance implementing
  328. ``consume(tokens)`` and ``expected_time(tokens)``.
  329. TokenBucket implements the `token bucket algorithm`_, but any algorithm
  330. may be used as long as it conforms to the same interface and defines the
  331. two methods above.
  332. .. _`token bucket algorithm`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Token_bucket
  333. .. _extending_consumer-qos:
  334. .. attribute:: qos
  335. The :class:`~kombu.common.QoS` object can be used to change the
  336. task channels current prefetch_count value, e.g:
  337. .. code-block:: python
  338. # increment at next cycle
  339. consumer.qos.increment_eventually(1)
  340. # decrement at next cycle
  341. consumer.qos.decrement_eventually(1)
  342. consumer.qos.set(10)
  343. Methods
  344. -------
  345. .. method:: consumer.reset_rate_limits()
  346. Updates the ``task_buckets`` mapping for all registered task types.
  347. .. method:: consumer.bucket_for_task(type, Bucket=TokenBucket)
  348. Creates rate limit bucket for a task using its ``task.rate_limit``
  349. attribute.
  350. .. method:: consumer.add_task_queue(name, exchange=None, exchange_type=None,
  351. routing_key=None, \*\*options):
  352. Adds new queue to consume from. This will persist on connection restart.
  353. .. method:: consumer.cancel_task_queue(name)
  354. Stop consuming from queue by name. This will persist on connection
  355. restart.
  356. .. method:: apply_eta_task(request)
  357. Schedule eta task to execute based on the ``request.eta`` attribute.
  358. (:class:`~celery.worker.request.Request`)
  359. .. _extending-bootsteps:
  360. Installing Bootsteps
  361. ====================
  362. ``app.steps['worker']`` and ``app.steps['consumer']`` can be modified
  363. to add new bootsteps:
  364. .. code-block:: pycon
  365. >>> app = Celery()
  366. >>> app.steps['worker'].add(MyWorkerStep) # < add class, do not instantiate
  367. >>> app.steps['consumer'].add(MyConsumerStep)
  368. >>> app.steps['consumer'].update([StepA, StepB])
  369. >>> app.steps['consumer']
  370. {step:proj.StepB{()}, step:proj.MyConsumerStep{()}, step:proj.StepA{()}
  371. The order of steps is not important here as the order is decided by the
  372. resulting dependency graph (``Step.requires``).
  373. To illustrate how you can install bootsteps and how they work, this is an example step that
  374. prints some useless debugging information.
  375. It can be added both as a worker and consumer bootstep:
  376. .. code-block:: python
  377. from celery import Celery
  378. from celery import bootsteps
  379. class InfoStep(bootsteps.Step):
  380. def __init__(self, parent, **kwargs):
  381. # here we can prepare the Worker/Consumer object
  382. # in any way we want, set attribute defaults and so on.
  383. print('{0!r} is in init'.format(parent))
  384. def start(self, parent):
  385. # our step is started together with all other Worker/Consumer
  386. # bootsteps.
  387. print('{0!r} is starting'.format(parent))
  388. def stop(self, parent):
  389. # the Consumer calls stop every time the consumer is restarted
  390. # (i.e. connection is lost) and also at shutdown. The Worker
  391. # will call stop at shutdown only.
  392. print('{0!r} is stopping'.format(parent))
  393. def shutdown(self, parent):
  394. # shutdown is called by the Consumer at shutdown, it's not
  395. # called by Worker.
  396. print('{0!r} is shutting down'.format(parent))
  397. app = Celery(broker='amqp://')
  398. app.steps['worker'].add(InfoStep)
  399. app.steps['consumer'].add(InfoStep)
  400. Starting the worker with this step installed will give us the following
  401. logs:
  402. .. code-block:: text
  403. <Worker: w@example.com (initializing)> is in init
  404. <Consumer: w@example.com (initializing)> is in init
  405. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,544: WARNING/MainProcess]
  406. <Worker: w@example.com (running)> is starting
  407. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,577: WARNING/MainProcess]
  408. <Consumer: w@example.com (running)> is starting
  409. <Consumer: w@example.com (closing)> is stopping
  410. <Worker: w@example.com (closing)> is stopping
  411. <Consumer: w@example.com (terminating)> is shutting down
  412. The ``print`` statements will be redirected to the logging subsystem after
  413. the worker has been initialized, so the "is starting" lines are time-stamped.
  414. You may notice that this does no longer happen at shutdown, this is because
  415. the ``stop`` and ``shutdown`` methods are called inside a *signal handler*,
  416. and it's not safe to use logging inside such a handler.
  417. Logging with the Python logging module is not :term:`reentrant`,
  418. which means that you cannot interrupt the function and
  419. call it again later. It's important that the ``stop`` and ``shutdown`` methods
  420. you write is also :term:`reentrant`.
  421. Starting the worker with :option:`--loglevel=debug <celery worker --loglevel>`
  422. will show us more information about the boot process:
  423. .. code-block:: text
  424. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,509: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Worker: Preparing bootsteps.
  425. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,511: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Worker: Building graph...
  426. <celery.apps.worker.Worker object at 0x101ad8410> is in init
  427. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,511: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Worker: New boot order:
  428. {Hub, Pool, Autoreloader, Timer, StateDB, InfoStep, Beat, Consumer}
  429. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,514: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Preparing bootsteps.
  430. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,514: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Building graph...
  431. <celery.worker.consumer.Consumer object at 0x101c2d8d0> is in init
  432. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,515: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: New boot order:
  433. {Connection, Mingle, Events, Gossip, InfoStep, Agent,
  434. Heart, Control, Tasks, event loop}
  435. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,522: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Worker: Starting Hub
  436. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,522: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  437. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,522: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Worker: Starting Pool
  438. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,542: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  439. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,543: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Worker: Starting InfoStep
  440. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,544: WARNING/MainProcess]
  441. <celery.apps.worker.Worker object at 0x101ad8410> is starting
  442. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,544: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  443. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,544: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Worker: Starting Consumer
  444. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,544: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting Connection
  445. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,559: INFO/MainProcess] Connected to amqp://guest@127.0.0.1:5672//
  446. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,560: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  447. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,560: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting Mingle
  448. [2013-05-29 16:18:20,560: INFO/MainProcess] mingle: searching for neighbors
  449. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,570: INFO/MainProcess] mingle: no one here
  450. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,570: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  451. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,571: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting Events
  452. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,572: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  453. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,572: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting Gossip
  454. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,577: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  455. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,577: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting InfoStep
  456. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,577: WARNING/MainProcess]
  457. <celery.worker.consumer.Consumer object at 0x101c2d8d0> is starting
  458. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,578: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  459. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,578: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting Heart
  460. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,579: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  461. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,579: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting Control
  462. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,583: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  463. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,583: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting Tasks
  464. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,606: DEBUG/MainProcess] basic.qos: prefetch_count->80
  465. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,606: DEBUG/MainProcess] ^-- substep ok
  466. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,606: DEBUG/MainProcess] | Consumer: Starting event loop
  467. [2013-05-29 16:18:21,608: WARNING/MainProcess] celery@example.com ready.
  468. .. _extending-programs:
  469. Command-line programs
  470. =====================
  471. .. _extending-commandoptions:
  472. Adding new command-line options
  473. -------------------------------
  474. .. _extending-command-options:
  475. Command-specific options
  476. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  477. You can add additional command-line options to the ``worker``, ``beat`` and
  478. ``events`` commands by modifying the :attr:`~@user_options` attribute of the
  479. application instance.
  480. Celery commands uses the :mod:`optparse` module to parse command-line
  481. arguments, and so you have to use :mod:`optparse` specific option instances created
  482. using :func:`optparse.make_option`. Please see the :mod:`optparse`
  483. documentation to read about the fields supported.
  484. Example adding a custom option to the :program:`celery worker` command:
  485. .. code-block:: python
  486. from celery import Celery
  487. from celery.bin import Option # <-- alias to optparse.make_option
  488. app = Celery(broker='amqp://')
  489. app.user_options['worker'].add(
  490. Option('--enable-my-option', action='store_true', default=False,
  491. help='Enable custom option.'),
  492. )
  493. All bootsteps will now receive this argument as a keyword argument to
  494. ``Bootstep.__init__``:
  495. .. code-block:: python
  496. from celery import bootsteps
  497. class MyBootstep(bootsteps.Step):
  498. def __init__(self, worker, enable_my_option=False, **options):
  499. if enable_my_option:
  500. party()
  501. app.steps['worker'].add(MyBootstep)
  502. .. _extending-preload_options:
  503. Preload options
  504. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  505. The :program:`celery` umbrella command supports the concept of 'preload
  506. options', which are special options passed to all sub-commands and parsed
  507. outside of the main parsing step.
  508. The list of default preload options can be found in the API reference:
  509. :mod:`celery.bin.base`.
  510. You can add new preload options too, e.g. to specify a configuration template:
  511. .. code-block:: python
  512. from celery import Celery
  513. from celery import signals
  514. from celery.bin import Option
  515. app = Celery()
  516. app.user_options['preload'].add(
  517. Option('-Z', '--template', default='default',
  518. help='Configuration template to use.'),
  519. )
  520. @signals.user_preload_options.connect
  521. def on_preload_parsed(options, **kwargs):
  522. use_template(options['template'])
  523. .. _extending-subcommands:
  524. Adding new :program:`celery` sub-commands
  525. -----------------------------------------
  526. New commands can be added to the :program:`celery` umbrella command by using
  527. `setuptools entry-points`_.
  528. .. _`setuptools entry-points`:
  529. http://reinout.vanrees.org/weblog/2010/01/06/zest-releaser-entry-points.html
  530. Entry-points is special meta-data that can be added to your packages ``setup.py`` program,
  531. and then after installation, read from the system using the :mod:`pkg_resources` module.
  532. Celery recognizes ``celery.commands`` entry-points to install additional
  533. sub-commands, where the value of the entry-point must point to a valid subclass
  534. of :class:`celery.bin.base.Command`. There is limited documentation,
  535. unfortunately, but you can find inspiration from the various commands in the
  536. :mod:`celery.bin` package.
  537. This is how the Flower_ monitoring extension adds the :program:`celery flower` command,
  538. by adding an entry-point in :file:`setup.py`:
  539. .. code-block:: python
  540. setup(
  541. name='flower',
  542. entry_points={
  543. 'celery.commands': [
  544. 'flower = flower.command:FlowerCommand',
  545. ],
  546. }
  547. )
  548. .. _Flower: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/flower
  549. The command definition is in two parts separated by the equal sign, where the
  550. first part is the name of the sub-command (flower), then the second part is
  551. the fully qualified symbol path to the class that implements the command:
  552. .. code-block:: text
  553. flower.command:FlowerCommand
  554. The module path and the name of the attribute should be separated by colon
  555. as above.
  556. In the module :file:`flower/command.py`, the command class is defined
  557. something like this:
  558. .. code-block:: python
  559. from celery.bin.base import Command, Option
  560. class FlowerCommand(Command):
  561. def get_options(self):
  562. return (
  563. Option('--port', default=8888, type='int',
  564. help='Webserver port',
  565. ),
  566. Option('--debug', action='store_true'),
  567. )
  568. def run(self, port=None, debug=False, **kwargs):
  569. print('Running our command')
  570. Worker API
  571. ==========
  572. :class:`~kombu.async.Hub` - The workers async event loop.
  573. ---------------------------------------------------------
  574. :supported transports: amqp, redis
  575. .. versionadded:: 3.0
  576. The worker uses asynchronous I/O when the amqp or redis broker transports are
  577. used. The eventual goal is for all transports to use the event-loop, but that
  578. will take some time so other transports still use a threading-based solution.
  579. .. method:: hub.add(fd, callback, flags)
  580. .. method:: hub.add_reader(fd, callback, \*args)
  581. Add callback to be called when ``fd`` is readable.
  582. The callback will stay registered until explicitly removed using
  583. :meth:`hub.remove(fd) <hub.remove>`, or the file descriptor is
  584. automatically discarded because it's no longer valid.
  585. Note that only one callback can be registered for any given
  586. file descriptor at a time, so calling ``add`` a second time will remove
  587. any callback that was previously registered for that file descriptor.
  588. A file descriptor is any file-like object that supports the ``fileno``
  589. method, or it can be the file descriptor number (int).
  590. .. method:: hub.add_writer(fd, callback, \*args)
  591. Add callback to be called when ``fd`` is writable.
  592. See also notes for :meth:`hub.add_reader` above.
  593. .. method:: hub.remove(fd)
  594. Remove all callbacks for file descriptor ``fd`` from the loop.
  595. Timer - Scheduling events
  596. -------------------------
  597. .. method:: timer.call_after(secs, callback, args=(), kwargs=(),
  598. priority=0)
  599. .. method:: timer.call_repeatedly(secs, callback, args=(), kwargs=(),
  600. priority=0)
  601. .. method:: timer.call_at(eta, callback, args=(), kwargs=(),
  602. priority=0)