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In order to solve issue 702 we have to check whether a work-horse terminated unexpectedly (by inspecting the exit code of the work-horse process). If it exited unexpectedly we check if the job has either been marked as finished, failed or other valid states. If it's not in any valid state we mark it as failed and move it to the failed queue. Since the process was terminated unexpectedly (think OOM) we do not have any exception context and we can't run any custom exception handlers. There is still a chance that the job will finish successfully but the work-horse process will be killed before the job is marked as finished and we will erroneously mark it as failed. The users should take care to write idempotent jobs. |
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examples | 11 years ago | |
rq | 9 years ago | |
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CHANGES.md | 9 years ago | |
LICENSE | 13 years ago | |
MANIFEST.in | 12 years ago | |
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README.md | 9 years ago | |
dev-requirements.txt | 11 years ago | |
py26-requirements.txt | 12 years ago | |
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README.md
RQ (Redis Queue) is a simple Python library for queueing jobs and processing them in the background with workers. It is backed by Redis and it is designed to have a low barrier to entry. It should be integrated in your web stack easily.
RQ requires Redis >= 2.7.0.
Full documentation can be found here.
Getting started
First, run a Redis server, of course:
$ redis-server
To put jobs on queues, you don't have to do anything special, just define your typically lengthy or blocking function:
import requests
def count_words_at_url(url):
"""Just an example function that's called async."""
resp = requests.get(url)
return len(resp.text.split())
You do use the excellent requests package, don't you?
Then, create an RQ queue:
from redis import Redis
from rq import Queue
q = Queue(connection=Redis())
And enqueue the function call:
from my_module import count_words_at_url
result = q.enqueue(count_words_at_url, 'http://nvie.com')
For a more complete example, refer to the docs. But this is the essence.
The worker
To start executing enqueued function calls in the background, start a worker from your project's directory:
$ rq worker
*** Listening for work on default
Got count_words_at_url('http://nvie.com') from default
Job result = 818
*** Listening for work on default
That's about it.
Installation
Simply use the following command to install the latest released version:
pip install rq
If you want the cutting edge version (that may well be broken), use this:
pip install -e git+git@github.com:nvie/rq.git@master#egg=rq
Project history
This project has been inspired by the good parts of Celery, Resque and this snippet, and has been created as a lightweight alternative to the heaviness of Celery or other AMQP-based queueing implementations.