966 Commits (95c2bf8e11b62e5201f498c4c3f3255a99d234db)
 

Author SHA1 Message Date
Vincent Driessen 227e107a82 Oops, fix some old references to current_connection. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen d721f0708b Refactor the whole Redis connection stuff to be just as easy as in RDB. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 5c4163400e Update README.md 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 5be9a41f3d Getting the facts right, here. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 9b51083fd2 Add example and README updates. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 05e83c5231 Add a very minor beginning to the test cases. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 518db8c24b Add better connection management.
To start using RQ, push a Redis connection up its stack, like so:

    from rq import push_connection
    push_connection(Redis())
13 years ago
Vincent Driessen d8d388c841 Log the results of jobs. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen f21b2af2b6 Make it an actual PyPI-managable Python package. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen c45e056786 Add some project meta stuff. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 5eadd5ef52 Factor out a Queue object.
It might be useful to add some methods to that object, later.
13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 834a79814e Rename task -> job.
Just a gift from a non-mainframe guy to a mainframe guy.  Love is all
about giving ;)
13 years ago
Vincent Driessen a5a8925608 Add an actual awesome worker structure.
To put messages on queues, use this:

    @job('normal')
    def foo(x, y):
        return x + y

    foo.delay(4, 5)

To run workers, start any number of these:

    $ python runworker.py high normal low

You can give arbitrary queue names, they are not limited to these
priority-based names.  They just serve as a useful example.
13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 606f7f7cb3 Fix expire call. 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 374c95f7a2 It ain't *that* naive ;) 13 years ago
Vincent Driessen 3aae096ac2 Made a beginning to a Python module structure to support Redis queue.
@henrikuiper: Go ahead and experiment with this setup ;)
13 years ago