| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869 | .. _glossary:Glossary========.. glossary::    :sorted:    acknowledged        Workers acknowledge messages to signify that a message has been        handled.  Failing to acknowledge a message        will cause the message to be redelivered.   Exactly when a        transaction is considered a failure varies by transport.  In AMQP the        transaction fails when the connection/channel is closed (or lost),        but in Redis/SQS the transaction times out after a configurable amount        of time (the ``visibility_timeout``).    ack        Short for :term:`acknowledged`.    request        Task messages are converted to *requests* within the worker.        The request information is also available as the task's        :term:`context` (the ``task.request`` attribute).    calling        Sends a task message so that the task function is        :term:`executed <executing>` by a worker.    kombu        Python messaging library used by Celery to send and receive messages.    billiard        Fork of the Python multiprocessing library containing improvements        required by Celery.    executing        Workers *execute* task :term:`requests <request>`.    apply        Originally a synonym to :term:`call <calling>` but used to signify        that a function is executed by the current process.    context        The context of a task contains information like the id of the task,        it's arguments and what queue it was delivered to.        It can be accessed as the tasks ``request`` attribute.        See :ref:`task-request-info`    idempotent        Idempotence is a mathematical property that describes a function that        can be called multiple times without changing the result.        Practically it means that a function can be repeated many times without        unintented effects, but not necessarily side-effect free in the pure        sense (compare to :term:`nullipotent`).    nullipotent        describes a function that will have the same effect, and give the same        result, even if called zero or multiple times (side-effect free).        A stronger version of :term:`idempotent`.    reentrant        describes a function that can be interrupted in the middle of        execution (e.g. by hardware interrupt or signal) and then safely        called again later.  Reentrancy is not the same as        :term:`idempotence <idempotent>` as the return value does not have to        be the same given the same inputs, and a reentrant function may have        side effects as long as it can be interrupted;  An idempotent function        is always reentrant, but the reverse may not be true.
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