Skip to main content

A simple app that provides django integration for RQ (Redis Queue)

Project description

Django-RQ

https://secure.travis-ci.org/ui/django-rq.png

Django integration with RQ, a Redis based Python queuing library. Django-RQ is a simple app that allows you to configure your queues in django’s settings.py and easily use them in your project.

Requirements

Installation

  • Install django-rq (or download from PyPI):

    pip install django-rq
  • Add django_rq to INSTALLED_APPS in settings.py:

    INSTALLED_APPS = (
        # other apps
        "django_rq",
    )
  • Configure your queues in django’s settings.py (syntax based on Django’s database config)

    RQ_QUEUES = {
        'default': {
            'HOST': 'localhost',
            'PORT': 6379,
            'DB': 0,
            'PASSWORD': 'some-password',
        },
        'high': {
            'URL': os.getenv('REDISTOGO_URL', 'redis://localhost:6379'), # If you're on Heroku
            'DB': 0,
        },
        'low': {
            'HOST': 'localhost',
            'PORT': 6379,
            'DB': 0,
        }
    }
  • Include django_rq.urls in your urls.py:

    urlpatterns += patterns('',
        (r'^admin/django_rq/', include('django_rq.urls')),
    )

Usage

Putting jobs in the queue

Django-RQ allows you to easily put jobs into any of the queues defined in settings.py. It comes with a few utility functions:

  • enqueue - push a job to the default queue:

    import django_rq
    django_rq.enqueue(func, foo, bar=baz)
  • get_queue - accepts a single queue name argument (defaults to “default”) and returns an RQ Queue instance for you to queue jobs into:

    import django_rq
    queue = django_rq.get_queue('high')
    queue.enqueue(func, foo, bar=baz)
  • get_connection - accepts a single queue name argument (defaults to “default”) and returns a connection to the queue’s Redis server:

    import django_rq
    redis_conn = django_rq.get_connection('high')
  • get_worker - accepts optional queue names and returns a new RQ Worker instance for specified queues (or default queue):

    import django_rq
    worker = django_rq.get_worker() # Returns a worker for "default" queue
    worker.run()
    worker = django_rq.get_worker('low', 'high') # Returns a worker for "low" and "high"

@job decorator

To easily turn a callable into an RQ task, you can also use the @job decorator that comes with django_rq:

from django_rq import job

@job
def long_running_func():
    pass
long_running_func.delay() # Enqueue function in "default" queue

@job('high')
def long_running_func():
    pass
long_running_func.delay() # Enqueue function in "high" queue

Running workers

django_rq provides a management command that starts a worker for every queue specified as arguments:

python manage.py rqworker high default low

Support for RQ Scheduler

If you have RQ Scheduler installed, you can also use the get_scheduler function to return a Scheduler instance for queues defined in settings.py’s RQ_QUEUES. For example:

import django_rq
scheduler = django_rq.get_scheduler('default')
job = scheduler.enqueue_at(datetime(2020, 10, 10), func)

Queue statistics

django_rq also provides a very simple dashboard to monitor the status of your queues at /admin/django_rq/.

If you need a more sophisticated monitoring tool for RQ, you could also try rq-dashboard.

Testing tip

For an easier testing process, you can run a worker synchronously this way:

from django.test impor TestCase
from django_rq import get_worker

class MyTest(TestCase):
    def test_something_that_creates_jobs(self):
        ...                      # Stuff that init jobs.
        get_worker().work(burst=True)  # Processes all jobs then stop.
        ...                      # Asserts that the job stuff is done.

Running Tests

To run django_rq’s test suite:

django-admin.py test django_rq --settings=django_rq.tests.settings --pythonpath=.

Changelog

Version 0.4.1

More improvements to /admin/django_rq/:

  • Views now require staff permission

  • Now you can delete jobs from queue

  • Failed jobs’ tracebacks are better formatted

Version 0.4.0

Greatly improved /admin/django_rq/, now you can:

  • See jobs in each queue, including failed queue

  • See each job’s detailed information

Version 0.3.2

  • Simplified @job decorator syntax for enqueuing to “default” queue.

Version 0.3.1

  • Queues can now be configured using the URL parameter in settings.py.

Version 0.3.0

  • Added support for RQ’s @job decorator

  • Added get_worker command

Version 0.2.2

  • “PASSWORD” key in RQ_QUEUES will now be used when connecting to Redis.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

django-rq-0.4.1.tar.gz (10.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file django-rq-0.4.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: django-rq-0.4.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 10.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for django-rq-0.4.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 21f30dfdebca9a900d56e3171f18a80f5c19b7b69132b607eb10a94013304edf
MD5 a71a143fcaa23cf6bc0c5c995acee161
BLAKE2b-256 a7cead3edd1771ace87fe28c2a8cd292427b8e410acedccd0dd33db4bc7f06a0

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page