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Flask-Celery-Helper

Even though the Flask documentation says Celery extensions are unnecessary now, I found that I still need an extension to properly use Celery in large Flask applications. Specifically I need an init_app() method to initialize Celery after I instantiate it.

This extension also comes with a single_instance method.

  • Python 2.6, 2.7, PyPy, 3.3, and 3.4 supported on Linux and OS X.
  • Python 2.7, 3.3, and 3.4 supported on Windows (both 32 and 64 bit versions of Python).

Build Status Windows

Build Status

Coverage Status

Latest Version

Attribution

Single instance decorator inspired by Ryan Roemer.

Supported Libraries

Quickstart

Install:

pip install Flask-Celery-Helper

Examples

Basic Example

# example.py
from flask import Flask
from flask_celery import Celery

app = Flask('example')
app.config['CELERY_BROKER_URL'] = 'redis://localhost'
app.config['CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND'] = 'redis://localhost'
celery = Celery(app)

@celery.task()
def add_together(a, b):
    return a + b

if __name__ == '__main__':
    result = add_together.delay(23, 42)
    print(result.get())

Run these two commands in separate terminals:

celery -A example.celery worker
python example.py

Factory Example

# extensions.py
from flask_celery import Celery

celery = Celery()
# application.py
from flask import Flask
from extensions import celery

def create_app():
    app = Flask(__name__)
    app.config['CELERY_IMPORTS'] = ('tasks.add_together', )
    app.config['CELERY_BROKER_URL'] = 'redis://localhost'
    app.config['CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND'] = 'redis://localhost'
    celery.init_app(app)
    return app
# tasks.py
from extensions import celery

@celery.task()
def add_together(a, b):
    return a + b
# manage.py
from application import create_app

app = create_app()
app.run()

Single Instance Example

# example.py
import time
from flask import Flask
from flask_celery import Celery, single_instance
from flask_redis import Redis

app = Flask('example')
app.config['REDIS_URL'] = 'redis://localhost'
app.config['CELERY_BROKER_URL'] = 'redis://localhost'
app.config['CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND'] = 'redis://localhost'
celery = Celery(app)
Redis(app)

@celery.task(bind=True)
@single_instance
def sleep_one_second(a, b):
    time.sleep(1)
    return a + b

if __name__ == '__main__':
    task1 = sleep_one_second.delay(23, 42)
    time.sleep(0.1)
    task2 = sleep_one_second.delay(20, 40)
    results1 = task1.get(propagate=False)
    results2 = task2.get(propagate=False)
    print(results1)  # 65
    if isinstance(results2, Exception) and str(results2) == 'Failed to acquire lock.':
        print('Another instance is already running.')
    else:
        print(results2)  # Should not happen.

Changelog

This project adheres to Semantic Versioning.

Unreleased

Changed
  • Supporting Flask 0.12, switching from flask.ext.celery to flask_celery import recommendation.

1.1.0 - 2014-12-28

Added
  • Windows support.
  • single_instance supported on SQLite/MySQL/PostgreSQL in addition to Redis.
Changed
  • CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND no longer mandatory.
  • Breaking changes: flask.ext.celery.CELERY_LOCK moved to flask.ext.celery._LockManagerRedis.CELERY_LOCK.

1.0.0 - 2014-11-01

Added
  • Support for non-Redis backends.

0.2.2 - 2014-08-11

Added
  • Python 2.6 and 3.x support.

0.2.1 - 2014-06-18

Fixed
  • single_instance arguments with functools.

0.2.0 - 2014-06-18

Added
  • include_args argument to single_instance.

0.1.0 - 2014-06-01

  • Initial release.

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Celery support for Flask without breaking PyCharm inspections.

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