### 0.3.0 (not released) - `.enqueue()` does not consume the `timeout` kwarg anymore. Instead, to pass RQ a timeout value while enqueueing a function, use the explicit invocation instead: q.enqueue(do_something, args=(1, 2), kwargs={'a': 1}, timeout=30) - Add a `@job` decorator, which can be used to do Celery-style delayed invocations: from redis import Redis from rq.decorators import job # Connect to Redis redis = Redis() @job('high', timeout=10, connection=redis) def some_work(x, y): return x + y Then, in another module, you can call `some_work`: from foo.bar import some_work some_work.delay(2, 3) ### 0.2.2 (August 1st, 2012) - Fix bug where return values that couldn't be pickled crashed the worker ### 0.2.1 (July 20th, 2012) - Fix important bug where result data wasn't restored from Redis correctly (affected non-string results only). ### 0.2.0 (July 18th, 2012) - `q.enqueue()` accepts instance methods now, too. Objects will be pickle'd along with the instance method, so beware. - `q.enqueue()` accepts string specification of functions now, too. Example: `q.enqueue("my.math.lib.fibonacci", 5)`. Useful if the worker and the submitter of work don't share code bases. - Job can be assigned custom attrs and they will be pickle'd along with the rest of the job's attrs. Can be used when writing RQ extensions. - Workers can now accept explicit connections, like Queues. - Various bug fixes. ### 0.1.2 (May 15, 2012) - Fix broken PyPI deployment. ### 0.1.1 (May 14, 2012) - Thread-safety by using context locals - Register scripts as console_scripts, for better portability - Various bugfixes. ### 0.1.0: (March 28, 2012) - Initially released version.