FAQ 18 KB

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  1. ============================
  2. Frequently Asked Questions
  3. ============================
  4. Misconceptions
  5. ==============
  6. Is celery dependent on pickle?
  7. ------------------------------
  8. **Answer:** No.
  9. Celery can support any serialization scheme and has support for JSON/YAML and
  10. Pickle by default. You can even send one task using pickle, and another one
  11. with JSON seamlessly, this is because every task is associated with a
  12. content-type. The default serialization scheme is pickle because it's the most
  13. used, and it has support for sending complex objects as task arguments.
  14. You can set a global default serializer, the default serializer for a
  15. particular Task, and even what serializer to use when sending a single task
  16. instance.
  17. Is celery for Django only?
  18. --------------------------
  19. **Answer:** No.
  20. While django itself is a dependency, you can still use all of celerys features
  21. outside of a django project.
  22. Do I have to use AMQP/RabbitMQ?
  23. -------------------------------
  24. **Answer**: No.
  25. You can also use Redis or an SQL database, for instructions see `Using other
  26. queues`_.
  27. .. _`Using other queues`:
  28. http://ask.github.com/celery/tutorials/otherqueues.html
  29. Redis or a database won't meet up to the standards
  30. of an AMQP broker. If you have strict reliability requirements you are
  31. encouraged to use RabbitMQ or another AMQP broker. Redis/database also uses
  32. pulling, so they are likely to consume more resources. However, if you for
  33. some reason is not able to use AMQP, feel free to use these alternatives.
  34. They will probably work fine for most use cases, and note that the above
  35. points are not specific to celery; If using Redis/database as a queue worked
  36. fine for you before, it probably will now. And you can always upgrade later.
  37. Is celery multi-lingual?
  38. ------------------------
  39. **Answer:** Yes.
  40. celeryd is an implementation of celery in python. If the language has an AMQP
  41. client, there shouldn't be much work to create a worker in your language.
  42. A celery worker is just a program connecting to the broker to consume
  43. messages. There's no other communication involved.
  44. Also, there's another way to be language indepedent, and that is to use REST
  45. tasks, instead of your tasks being functions, they're URLs. With this
  46. information you can even create simple web servers that enable preloading of
  47. code. For more information about REST tasks see: `User Guide: Remote Tasks`_.
  48. .. _`User Guide: Remote Tasks`:
  49. http://ask.github.com/celery/userguide/remote-tasks.html
  50. Troubleshooting
  51. ===============
  52. MySQL is throwing deadlock errors, what can I do?
  53. -------------------------------------------------
  54. **Answer:** MySQL has default isolation level set to ``REPEATABLE-READ``,
  55. if you don't really need that, set it to ``READ-COMMITTED``.
  56. You can do that by adding the following to your ``my.cnf``::
  57. [mysqld]
  58. transaction-isolation = READ-COMMITTED
  59. For more information about InnoDBs transaction model see `MySQL - The InnoDB
  60. Transaction Model and Locking`_ in the MySQL user manual.
  61. (Thanks to Honza Kral and Anton Tsigularov for this solution)
  62. .. _`MySQL - The InnoDB Transaction Model and Locking`: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/innodb-transaction-model.html
  63. celeryd is not doing anything, just hanging
  64. --------------------------------------------
  65. **Answer:** See `MySQL is throwing deadlock errors, what can I do?`_.
  66. or `Why is Task.delay/apply\* just hanging?`.
  67. Why is Task.delay/apply\*/celeryd just hanging?
  68. -----------------------------------------------
  69. **Answer:** There is a bug in some AMQP clients that will make it hang if
  70. it's not able to authenticate the current user, the password doesn't match or
  71. the user does not have access to the virtual host specified. Be sure to check
  72. your broker logs (for RabbitMQ that is ``/var/log/rabbitmq/rabbit.log`` on
  73. most systems), it usually contains a message describing the reason.
  74. Why won't celeryd run on FreeBSD?
  75. ---------------------------------
  76. **Answer:** multiprocessing.Pool requires a working POSIX semaphore
  77. implementation which isn't enabled in FreeBSD by default. You have to enable
  78. POSIX semaphores in the kernel and manually recompile multiprocessing.
  79. Luckily, Viktor Petersson has written a tutorial to get you started with
  80. Celery on FreeBSD here:
  81. http://www.playingwithwire.com/2009/10/how-to-get-celeryd-to-work-on-freebsd/
  82. I'm having ``IntegrityError: Duplicate Key`` errors. Why?
  83. ----------------------------------------------------------
  84. **Answer:** See `MySQL is throwing deadlock errors, what can I do?`_.
  85. Thanks to howsthedotcom.
  86. Why isn't my tasks processed?
  87. -----------------------------
  88. **Answer:** With RabbitMQ you can see how many consumers are currently
  89. receiving tasks by running the following command::
  90. $ rabbitmqctl list_queues -p <myvhost> name messages consumers
  91. Listing queues ...
  92. celery 2891 2
  93. This shows that there's 2891 messages waiting to be processed in the task
  94. queue, and there are two consumers processing them.
  95. One reason that the queue is never emptied could be that you have a stale
  96. celery process taking the messages hostage. This could happen if celeryd
  97. wasn't properly shut down.
  98. When a message is recieved by a worker the broker waits for it to be
  99. acknowledged before marking the message as processed. The broker will not
  100. re-send that message to another consumer until the consumer is shutdown
  101. properly.
  102. If you hit this problem you have to kill all workers manually and restart
  103. them::
  104. ps auxww | grep celeryd | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill
  105. You might have to wait a while until all workers has finished the work they're
  106. doing, if it's still hanging after a long time you can kill them by force
  107. with::
  108. ps auxww | grep celeryd | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9
  109. Why won't my Task run?
  110. ----------------------
  111. **Answer:** Did you register the task in the applications ``tasks.py`` module?
  112. (or in some other module Django loads by default, like ``models.py``?).
  113. Also there might be syntax errors preventing the tasks module being imported.
  114. You can find out if celery is able to run the task by executing the
  115. task manually:
  116. >>> from myapp.tasks import MyPeriodicTask
  117. >>> MyPeriodicTask.delay()
  118. Watch celeryds logfile to see if it's able to find the task, or if some
  119. other error is happening.
  120. Why won't my Periodic Task run?
  121. -------------------------------
  122. **Answer:** See `Why won't my Task run?`_.
  123. How do I discard all waiting tasks?
  124. ------------------------------------
  125. **Answer:** Use ``celery.task.discard_all()``, like this:
  126. >>> from celery.task import discard_all
  127. >>> discard_all()
  128. 1753
  129. The number ``1753`` is the number of messages deleted.
  130. You can also start celeryd with the ``--discard`` argument which will
  131. accomplish the same thing.
  132. I've discarded messages, but there are still messages left in the queue?
  133. ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  134. **Answer:** Tasks are acknowledged (removed from the queue) as soon
  135. as they are actually executed. After the worker has received a task, it will
  136. take some time until it is actually executed, especially if there are a lot
  137. of tasks already waiting for execution. Messages that are not acknowledged are
  138. hold on to by the worker until it closes the connection to the broker (AMQP
  139. server). When that connection is closed (e.g because the worker was stopped)
  140. the tasks will be re-sent by the broker to the next available worker (or the
  141. same worker when it has been restarted), so to properly purge the queue of
  142. waiting tasks you have to stop all the workers, and then discard the tasks
  143. using ``discard_all``.
  144. Brokers
  145. =======
  146. Can I use celery with ActiveMQ/STOMP?
  147. -------------------------------------
  148. **Answer**: Yes. But this is somewhat experimental for now.
  149. It is certainly working ok for me in a test configuration, but it has not
  150. been tested in production like RabbitMQ. If you have any problems with
  151. using STOMP and celery, please report the bugs to the issue tracker:
  152. http://github.com/ask/celery/issues/
  153. First you have to use the ``master`` branch of ``celery``::
  154. $ git clone git://github.com/ask/celery.git
  155. $ cd celery
  156. $ sudo python setup.py install
  157. $ cd ..
  158. Then you need to install the ``stompbackend`` branch of ``carrot``::
  159. $ git clone git://github.com/ask/carrot.git
  160. $ cd carrot
  161. $ git checkout stompbackend
  162. $ sudo python setup.py install
  163. $ cd ..
  164. And my fork of ``python-stomp`` which adds non-blocking support::
  165. $ hg clone http://bitbucket.org/asksol/python-stomp/
  166. $ cd python-stomp
  167. $ sudo python setup.py install
  168. $ cd ..
  169. In this example we will use a queue called ``celery`` which we created in
  170. the ActiveMQ web admin interface.
  171. **Note**: For ActiveMQ the queue name has to have ``"/queue/"`` prepended to
  172. it. i.e. the queue ``celery`` becomes ``/queue/celery``.
  173. Since a STOMP queue is a single named entity and it doesn't have the
  174. routing capabilities of AMQP you need to set both the ``queue``, and
  175. ``exchange`` settings to your queue name. This is a minor inconvenience since
  176. carrot needs to maintain the same interface for both AMQP and STOMP (obviously
  177. the one with the most capabilities won).
  178. Use the following specific settings in your ``settings.py``:
  179. .. code-block:: python
  180. # Makes python-stomp the default backend for carrot.
  181. CARROT_BACKEND = "stomp"
  182. # STOMP hostname and port settings.
  183. BROKER_HOST = "localhost"
  184. BROKER_PORT = 61613
  185. # The queue name to use (both queue and exchange must be set to the
  186. # same queue name when using STOMP)
  187. CELERY_DEFAULT_QUEUE = "/queue/celery"
  188. CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE = "/queue/celery"
  189. CELERY_QUEUES = {
  190. "/queue/celery": {"exchange": "/queue/celery"}
  191. }
  192. Now you can go on reading the tutorial in the README, ignoring any AMQP
  193. specific options.
  194. Which features are not supported when using STOMP?
  195. --------------------------------------------------
  196. This is a (possible incomplete) list of features not available when
  197. using the STOMP backend:
  198. * routing keys
  199. * exchange types (direct, topic, headers, etc)
  200. * immediate
  201. * mandatory
  202. Features
  203. ========
  204. Can I send some tasks to only some servers?
  205. --------------------------------------------
  206. **Answer:** Yes. You can route tasks to an arbitrary server using AMQP,
  207. and a worker can bind to as many queues as it wants.
  208. Say you have two servers, ``x``, and ``y`` that handles regular tasks,
  209. and one server ``z``, that only handles feed related tasks, you can use this
  210. configuration:
  211. * Servers ``x`` and ``y``: settings.py:
  212. .. code-block:: python
  213. CELERY_DEFAULT_QUEUE = "regular_tasks"
  214. CELERY_QUEUES = {
  215. "regular_tasks": {
  216. "binding_key": "task.#",
  217. },
  218. }
  219. CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE = "tasks"
  220. CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE_TYPE = "topic"
  221. CELERY_DEFAULT_ROUTING_KEY = "task.regular"
  222. * Server ``z``: settings.py:
  223. .. code-block:: python
  224. CELERY_DEFAULT_QUEUE = "feed_tasks"
  225. CELERY_QUEUES = {
  226. "feed_tasks": {
  227. "binding_key": "feed.#",
  228. },
  229. }
  230. CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE = "tasks"
  231. CELERY_DEFAULT_ROUTING_KEY = "task.regular"
  232. CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE_TYPE = "topic"
  233. ``CELERY_QUEUES`` is a map of queue names and their exchange/type/binding_key,
  234. if you don't set exchange or exchange type, they will be taken from the
  235. ``CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE``/``CELERY_DEFAULT_EXCHANGE_TYPE`` settings.
  236. Now to make a Task run on the ``z`` server you need to set its
  237. ``routing_key`` attribute so it starts with the words ``"task.feed."``:
  238. .. code-block:: python
  239. from feedaggregator.models import Feed
  240. from celery.decorators import task
  241. @task(routing_key="feed.importer")
  242. def import_feed(feed_url):
  243. Feed.objects.import_feed(feed_url)
  244. or if subclassing the ``Task`` class directly:
  245. .. code-block:: python
  246. class FeedImportTask(Task):
  247. routing_key = "feed.importer"
  248. def run(self, feed_url):
  249. Feed.objects.import_feed(feed_url)
  250. You can also override this using the ``routing_key`` argument to
  251. :func:`celery.task.apply_async`:
  252. >>> from myapp.tasks import RefreshFeedTask
  253. >>> RefreshFeedTask.apply_async(args=["http://cnn.com/rss"],
  254. ... routing_key="feed.importer")
  255. If you want, you can even have your feed processing worker handle regular
  256. tasks as well, maybe in times when there's a lot of work to do.
  257. Just add a new queue to server ``z``'s ``CELERY_QUEUES``:
  258. .. code-block:: python
  259. CELERY_QUEUES = {
  260. "feed_tasks": {
  261. "binding_key": "feed.#",
  262. },
  263. "regular_tasks": {
  264. "binding_key": "task.#",
  265. },
  266. }
  267. Since the default exchange is ``tasks``, they will both use the same
  268. exchange.
  269. If you have another queue but on another exchange you want to add,
  270. just specify a custom exchange and exchange type:
  271. .. code-block:: python
  272. CELERY_QUEUES = {
  273. "feed_tasks": {
  274. "binding_key": "feed.#",
  275. },
  276. "regular_tasks": {
  277. "binding_key": "task.#",
  278. }
  279. "image_tasks": {
  280. "binding_key": "image.compress",
  281. "exchange": "mediatasks",
  282. "exchange_type": "direct",
  283. },
  284. }
  285. Easy? No? If you're confused about these terms, you should read up on
  286. AMQP and RabbitMQ. It might be hard to grok the concepts of
  287. queues, exchanges and routing/binding keys at first, but it's all very simple,
  288. I assure you.
  289. Can I use celery without Django?
  290. --------------------------------
  291. **Answer:** Yes.
  292. Celery uses something called loaders to read/setup configuration, import
  293. modules that registers tasks and to decide what happens when a task is
  294. executed. Currently there are two loaders, the default loader and the Django
  295. loader. If you want to use celery without a Django project, you either have to
  296. use the default loader, or write a loader of your own.
  297. The rest of this answer describes how to use the default loader.
  298. First of all, installation. You need to get the development version of
  299. celery from github::
  300. $ git clone git://github.com/ask/celery.git
  301. $ cd celery
  302. # python setup.py install # as root
  303. While it is possible to use celery from outside of Django, we still need
  304. Django itself to run, this is to use the ORM and cache-framework, etc.
  305. Duplicating these features would be time consuming and mostly pointless, so
  306. we decided that having a dependency on Django itself was a good thing.
  307. Install Django using your favorite install tool, ``easy_install``, ``pip``, or
  308. whatever::
  309. # easy_install django # as root
  310. You need a configuration file named ``celeryconfig.py``, either in the
  311. directory you run ``celeryd`` in, or in a Python library path where it is
  312. able to find it. The configuration file can contain any of the settings
  313. described in :mod:`celery.conf`, and in additional if you're using the
  314. database backend you have to configure the database. Here is an example
  315. configuration using the database backend with MySQL:
  316. .. code-block:: python
  317. # Broker configuration
  318. BROKER_HOST = "localhost"
  319. BROKER_PORT = "5672"
  320. BROKER_VHOST = "celery"
  321. BROKER_USER = "celery"
  322. BROKER_PASSWORD = "celerysecret"
  323. CARROT_BACKEND="amqp"
  324. # Using the database backend.
  325. CELERY_BACKEND = "database"
  326. DATABASE_ENGINE = "mysql" # see Django docs for a description of these.
  327. DATABASE_NAME = "mydb"
  328. DATABASE_HOST = "mydb.example.org"
  329. DATABASE_USER = "myuser"
  330. DATABASE_PASSWORD = "mysecret"
  331. # Number of processes that processes tasks simultaneously.
  332. CELERYD_CONCURRENCY = 8
  333. # Modules to import when celeryd starts.
  334. # This must import every module where you register tasks so celeryd
  335. # is able to find and run them.
  336. CELERY_IMPORTS = ("mytaskmodule1", "mytaskmodule2")
  337. Now with this configuration file in the current directory you have to
  338. run ``celeryinit`` to create the database tables::
  339. $ celeryinit
  340. Then you should be able to successfully run ``celeryd``::
  341. $ celeryd --loglevel=INFO
  342. and send a task from a python shell (note that it must be able to import
  343. ``celeryconfig.py``):
  344. >>> from celery.task.builtins import PingTask
  345. >>> result = PingTask.apply_async()
  346. >>> result.get()
  347. 'pong'
  348. The celery test-suite is failing
  349. --------------------------------
  350. **Answer**: You're running tests from your own Django applicaiton, and celerys
  351. tests are failing and celerys tests are failing in that context?
  352. If so, read on for a trick, if not please report the test failure to our issue
  353. tracker at GitHub.
  354. http://github.com/ask/celery/issues/
  355. That Django is running tests for all applications in ``INSTALLED_APPS``
  356. is a pet peeve of mine. You should use a test runner that either
  357. 1) Explicitly lists the apps you want to run tests for, or
  358. 2) make a test runner that skips tests for apps you don't want to run.
  359. For example this test runner that celery is using:
  360. http://bit.ly/NVKep
  361. To use this add the following to your settings.py:
  362. .. code-block:: python
  363. TEST_RUNNER = "celery.tests.runners.run_tests"
  364. TEST_APPS = (
  365. "app1",
  366. "app2",
  367. "app3",
  368. "app4",
  369. )
  370. If you just want to skip celery you could use:
  371. .. code-block:: python
  372. INSTALLED_APPS = (.....)
  373. TEST_RUNNER = "celery.tests.runners.run_tests"
  374. TEST_APPS = filter(lambda k: k != "celery", INSTALLED_APPS)
  375. Can I change the interval of a periodic task at runtime?
  376. --------------------------------------------------------
  377. **Answer**: Yes. You can override ``PeriodicTask.is_due`` or turn
  378. ``PeriodicTask.run_every`` into a property:
  379. .. code-block:: python
  380. class MyPeriodic(PeriodicTask):
  381. def run(self):
  382. # ...
  383. @property
  384. def run_every(self):
  385. return get_interval_from_database(...)