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A Docker implementation of Celery running on Flask, managed with supervisord.

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Celery Scheduler

A Docker implementation of Celery running on Flask, managed with supervisord.

A walkthrough of this setup is documented at this Medium article.

Why do I need this?

Celery Scheduler allows you to setup a powerful, distributed and fuss-free application task scheduler. Once you set it up on a server, it can reliably run scheduled tasks at regular defined intervals.

All you need to do is to define your task method, and the task schedule, and Celery Scheduler will handle the rest for you.

Some interesting uses for your own task scheduler include:

  • Home automation (IOT projects)
  • Data Workflow management for Business Intelligence (BI)
  • Triggering Email campaigns
  • Any other routine, periodic tasks

How does it work?

This is a scheduler application powered by Celery running on a minimal python web framework, Flask.

The application is process-managed by Supervisord which takes care of managing celery task workers, celerybeat and Redis as the message broker.

The deployment of the application is handled through Docker which isolates the application environment. It allows the application to run the same, whether locally, in staging or when deployed within a server.

Getting Started

Running this setup

This setup is built for deployment with Docker. You may also choose to run this setup without Docker however no script is provided. Setup instructions can be interpreted from the given Dockerfile.

Deployment with Docker is recommended for consistency of application environment.

  1. Clone the repository
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/channeng/celery-scheduler.git
cd celery-scheduler
  1. Install Docker
    • Mac or Windows
    • Ubuntu server
      • To install docker in Ubuntu, you may run the install script:
       sudo bash scripts/startup/ubuntu_docker_setup.sh

Note: You may need to run the following docker commands with sudo prefix if docker was set up to run with root.

  1. Build docker image
    docker build -t celery-scheduler .
  2. (Optional) Stop any containers running on existing docker image
    docker stop $(docker ps -f ancestor=celery-scheduler --format "{{.ID}}")
  3. Run supervisord with docker container
    docker run -p 3020:80 -d celery-scheduler /usr/bin/supervisord --nodaemon

Checking successful deployment

  • Enter bash terminal of running Docker container

     docker exec -i -t $(docker ps -f ancestor=celery-scheduler --format "{{.ID}}") /bin/bash
  • Check all required processes are running:

     ps aux

    You shoud see something like the following:

     USER       PID %CPU %MEM    VSZ   RSS TTY      STAT START   TIME COMMAND
     root         1  0.0  2.5  56492 12728 ?        Ss   Oct21   0:05 /usr/bin/python /usr/bin/supervisord --nodaemon
     root         7  0.0  0.5  31468  2616 ?        Sl   Oct21   0:30 /home/ubuntu/celery-scheduler/redis-3.2.1/src/redis-server *:6379
     root         8  0.0  8.3  98060 41404 ?        S    Oct21   0:00 /home/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/celery_env/bin/python2.7 /home/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/celery_env/bin/celery beat -A ap
     root         9  0.1  8.4  91652 41900 ?        S    Oct21   0:42 /home/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/celery_env/bin/python2.7 /home/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/celery_env/bin/celery worker -A
     root        20  0.0  9.3  99540 46820 ?        S    Oct21   0:00 /home/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/celery_env/bin/python2.7 /home/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/celery_env/bin/celery worker -A
    
  • Retrieving logs

     tail /var/log/redis/redis.log
     tail /var/log/celery/beat.log
     tail /var/log/celery/worker.log
     tail /var/log/supervisor/supervisord.log
  • If successfully deployed, supervisor logs should display:

     INFO success: redis entered RUNNING state, process has stayed up for > than 10 seconds (startsecs)
     INFO success: celerybeat entered RUNNING state, process has stayed up for > than 10 seconds (startsecs)
     INFO success: celery entered RUNNING state, process has stayed up for > than 10 seconds (startsecs)
  • You should also see the task print_hello running every minute in your worker.log

     tail -f /var/log/celery/worker.log

    Output:

     [2017-10-22 03:18:00,050: INFO/MainProcess] Received task: app.tasks.test.print_hello[aa1b7700-1665-4751-ada2-35aba5670d40]
     [2017-10-22 03:18:00,051: INFO/ForkPoolWorker-1] app.tasks.test.print_hello[aa1b7700-1665-4751-ada2-35aba5670d40]: Hello
     [2017-10-22 03:18:00,052: INFO/ForkPoolWorker-1] Task app.tasks.test.print_hello[aa1b7700-1665-4751-ada2-35aba5670d40] succeeded in 0.000455291003163s: None

Adding tasks to Celery

  • Task scripts should be written and stored in app/tasks.
  • Update celeryconfig.py for new tasks and trigger times.
  • Remember to rebuild the docker image after updating for new tasks.

Running adhoc tasks

  • Update manage.py for a manager command for the task to run on trigger
  • Run: python manage.py <manager_command>
  • Eg.
     source /home/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/celery_env/bin/activate
     python manage.py test

Terminating Supervisor within container

supervisorctl stop all

Contributing

Feel free to submit Pull Requests. For any other enquiries, you may contact me at [email protected].

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