I’m trying to run example from Celery documentation.
I run: celeryd --loglevel=INFO
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/celery/loaders/default.py:64: NotConfigured: No 'celeryconfig' module found! Please make sure it exists and is available to Python. "is available to Python." % (configname, ))) [2012-03-19 04:26:34,899: WARNING/MainProcess] -------------- <a href="https://getridbug.com/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="7d1e1811180f043d081f08130908">[email protected]</a> v2.5.1 ---- **** ----- --- * *** * -- [Configuration] -- * - **** --- . broker: amqp://<a href="https://getridbug.com/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="1f786a7a6c6b5f73707c7e7377706c6b">[email protected]</a>:5672// - ** ---------- . loader: celery.loaders.default.Loader - ** ---------- . logfile: [stderr]@INFO - ** ---------- . concurrency: 4 - ** ---------- . events: OFF - *** --- * --- . beat: OFF -- ******* ---- --- ***** ----- [Queues] -------------- . celery: exchange:celery (direct) binding:celery
tasks.py:
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
from celery.task import task
@task
def add(x, y):
return x + y
run_task.py:
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- from tasks import add result = add.delay(4, 4) print (result) print (result.ready()) print (result.get())
In same folder celeryconfig.py:
CELERY_IMPORTS = ("tasks", )
CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = "amqp"
BROKER_URL = "amqp://guest:<a href="https://getridbug.com/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="e38496869097a38f8c80828f8b8c9097">[email protected]</a>:5672//"
CELERY_TASK_RESULT_EXPIRES = 300
When I run “run_task.py”:
on python console
eb503f77-b5fc-44e2-ac0b-91ce6ddbf153 False
errors on celeryd server
[2012-03-19 04:34:14,913: ERROR/MainProcess] Received unregistered task of type 'tasks.add'.
The message has been ignored and discarded.
Did you remember to import the module containing this task?
Or maybe you are using relative imports?
Please see http://bit.ly/gLye1c for more information.
The full contents of the message body was:
{'retries': 0, 'task': 'tasks.add', 'utc': False, 'args': (4, 4), 'expires': None, 'eta': None, 'kwargs': {}, 'id': '841bc21f-8124-436b-92f1-e3b62cafdfe7'}
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/celery/worker/consumer.py", line 444, in receive_message
self.strategies[name](message, body, message.ack_log_error)
KeyError: 'tasks.add'
Please explain what’s the problem.
Answers:
Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
Method 1
I think you need to restart the worker server. I meet the same problem and solve it by restarting.
Method 2
I had the same problem:
The reason of "Received unregistered task of type.." was that celeryd service didn’t find and register the tasks on service start (btw their list is visible when you start
./manage.py celeryd --loglevel=info ).
These tasks should be declared in CELERY_IMPORTS = ("tasks", ) in settings file.
If you have a special celery_settings.py file it has to be declared on celeryd service start as --settings=celery_settings.py as digivampire wrote.
Method 3
You can see the current list of registered tasks in the celery.registry.TaskRegistry class. Could be that your celeryconfig (in the current directory) is not in PYTHONPATH so celery can’t find it and falls back to defaults. Simply specify it explicitly when starting celery.
celeryd --loglevel=INFO --settings=celeryconfig
You can also set --loglevel=DEBUG and you should probably see the problem immediately.
Method 4
Whether you use CELERY_IMPORTS or autodiscover_tasks, the important point is the tasks are able to be found and the name of the tasks registered in Celery should match the names the workers try to fetch.
When you launch the Celery, say celery worker -A project --loglevel=DEBUG, you should see the name of the tasks. For example, if I have a debug_task task in my celery.py.
[tasks] . project.celery.debug_task . celery.backend_cleanup . celery.chain . celery.chord . celery.chord_unlock . celery.chunks . celery.group . celery.map . celery.starmap
If you can’t see your tasks in the list, please check your celery configuration imports the tasks correctly, either in --setting, --config, celeryconfig or config_from_object.
If you are using celery beat, make sure the task name, task, you use in CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE matches the name in the celery task list.
Method 5
app = Celery('proj',
broker='amqp://',
backend='amqp://',
include=['proj.tasks'])
please include=[‘proj.tasks’]
You need go to the top directory, then execute this
celery -A app.celery_module.celeryapp worker --loglevel=info
not
celery -A celeryapp worker --loglevel=info
in your celeryconfig.py input imports = (“path.path.tasks”,)
please in other module invoke task!!!!!!!!
Method 6
I also had the same problem; I added
CELERY_IMPORTS=("mytasks")
in my celeryconfig.py file to solve it.
Method 7
Using –settings did not work for me. I had to use the following to get it all to work:
celery --config=celeryconfig --loglevel=INFO
Here is the celeryconfig file that has the CELERY_IMPORTS added:
# Celery configuration file
BROKER_URL = 'amqp://'
CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = 'amqp://'
CELERY_TASK_SERIALIZER = 'json'
CELERY_RESULT_SERIALIZER = 'json'
CELERY_TIMEZONE = 'America/Los_Angeles'
CELERY_ENABLE_UTC = True
CELERY_IMPORTS = ("tasks",)
My setup was a little bit more tricky because I’m using supervisor to launch celery as a daemon.
Method 8
For me this error was solved by ensuring the app containing the tasks was included under django’s INSTALLED_APPS setting.
Method 9
What worked for me, was to add explicit name to celery task decorator. I changed my task declaration from @app.tasks to @app.tasks(name='module.submodule.task')
Here is an example
At first my task was like:
# tasks/test_tasks.py
@celery.task
def test_task():
print("Celery Task !!!!")
I changed it to :
# tasks/test_tasks.py
@celery.task(name='tasks.test_tasks.test_task')
def test_task():
print("Celery Task !!!!")
This method is helpful when you don’t have a dedicated tasks.py file to include it in celery config.
Method 10
In my case the issue was, my project was not picking up autodiscover_tasks properly.
In celery.py file the code was for getting autodiscover_tasks was:
app.autodiscover_tasks(lambda: settings.INSTALLED_APPS)
I changed it to the following one:
from django.apps import apps app.autodiscover_tasks(lambda: [n.name for n in apps.get_app_configs()])
Best wishes to you.
Method 11
I had this problem mysteriously crop up when I added some signal handling to my django app. In doing so I converted the app to use an AppConfig, meaning that instead of simply reading as 'booking‘ in INSTALLED_APPS, it read 'booking.app.BookingConfig'.
Celery doesn’t understand what that means, so I added, INSTALLED_APPS_WITH_APPCONFIGS = ('booking',) to my django settings, and modified my celery.py from
app.autodiscover_tasks(lambda: settings.INSTALLED_APPS)
to
app.autodiscover_tasks(
lambda: settings.INSTALLED_APPS + settings.INSTALLED_APPS_WITH_APPCONFIGS
)
Method 12
I had the same problem running tasks from Celery Beat. Celery doesn’t like relative imports so in my celeryconfig.py, I had to explicitly set the full package name:
app.conf.beat_schedule = {
'add-every-30-seconds': {
'task': 'full.path.to.add',
'schedule': 30.0,
'args': (16, 16)
},
}
Method 13
Try importing the Celery task in a Python Shell – Celery might silently be failing to register your tasks because of a bad import statement.
I had an ImportError exception in my tasks.py file that was causing Celery to not register the tasks in the module. All other module tasks were registered correctly.
This error wasn’t evident until I tried importing the Celery task within a Python Shell. I fixed the bad import statement and then the tasks were successfully registered.
Method 14
This, strangely, can also be because of a missing package. Run pip to install all necessary packages:
pip install -r requirements.txt
autodiscover_tasks wasn’t picking up tasks that used missing packages.
Method 15
I did not have any issue with Django. But encountered this when I was using Flask. The solution was setting the config option.
celery worker -A app.celery --loglevel=DEBUG --config=settings
while with Django, I just had:
python manage.py celery worker -c 2 --loglevel=info
Method 16
I encountered this problem as well, but it is not quite the same, so just FYI. Recent upgrades causes this error message due to this decorator syntax.
ERROR/MainProcess] Received unregistered task of type 'my_server_check'.
@task('my_server_check')
Had to be change to just
@task()
No clue why.
Method 17
If you are using the apps config in installed apps like this:
LOCAL_APPS = [ 'apps.myapp.apps.MyAppConfig']
Then in your config app, import the task in ready method like this:
from django.apps import AppConfig
class MyAppConfig(AppConfig):
name = 'apps.myapp'
def ready(self):
try:
import apps.myapp.signals # noqa F401
import apps.myapp.tasks
except ImportError:
pass
Method 18
did you include your tasks.py file or wherever your async methods are stored?
app = Celery('APP_NAME', broker='redis://redis:6379/0', include=['app1.tasks', 'app2.tasks', ...])
Method 19
I have solved my problem, my ‘task’ is under a python package named ‘celery_task’,when i quit this package,and run the command celery worker -A celery_task.task --loglevel=info. It works.
Method 20
As some other answers have already pointed out, there are many reasons why celery would silently ignore tasks, including dependency issues but also any syntax or code problem.
One quick way to find them is to run:
./manage.py check
Many times, after fixing the errors that are reported, the tasks are recognized by celery.
Method 21
if you’re using Docker, like said @ here will kill your pain.
docker stop $(docker ps -a -q)
Method 22
If you are running into this kind of error, there are a number of possible causes but the solution I found was that my celeryd config file in /etc/defaults/celeryd was configured for standard use, not for my specific django project. As soon as I converted it to the format specified in the celery docs, all was well.
Method 23
The solution for me to add this line to /etc/default/celeryd
CELERYD_OPTS="-A tasks"
Because when I run these commands:
celery worker --loglevel=INFO celery worker -A tasks --loglevel=INFO
Only the latter command was showing task names at all.
I have also tried adding CELERY_APP line /etc/default/celeryd but that didn’t worked either.
CELERY_APP="tasks"
Method 24
I had the issue with PeriodicTask classes in django-celery, while their names showed up fine when starting the celery worker every execution triggered:
KeyError: u’my_app.tasks.run’
My task was a class named ‘CleanUp’, not just a method called ‘run’.
When I checked table ‘djcelery_periodictask’ I saw outdated entries and deleting them fixed the issue.
Method 25
Just to add my two cents for my case with this error…
My path is /vagrant/devops/test with app.py and __init__.py in it.
When I run cd /vagrant/devops/ && celery worker -A test.app.celery --loglevel=info I am getting this error.
But when I run it like cd /vagrant/devops/test && celery worker -A app.celery --loglevel=info everything is OK.
Method 26
I’ve found that one of our programmers added the following line to one of the imports:
os.chdir(<path_to_a_local_folder>)
This caused the Celery worker to change its working directory from the projects’ default working directory (where it could find the tasks) to a different directory (where it couldn’t find the tasks).
After removing this line of code, all tasks were found and registered.
Method 27
Celery doesn’t support relative imports so in my celeryconfig.py, you need absolute import.
CELERYBEAT_SCHEDULE = {
'add_num': {
'task': 'app.tasks.add_num.add_nums',
'schedule': timedelta(seconds=10),
'args': (1, 2)
}
}
Method 28
An additional item to a really useful list.
I have found Celery unforgiving in relation to errors in tasks (or at least I haven’t been able to trace the appropriate log entries) and it doesn’t register them. I have had a number of issues with running Celery as a service, which have been predominantly permissions related.
The latest related to permissions writing to a log file. I had no issues in development or running celery at the command line, but the service reported the task as unregistered.
I needed to change the log folder permissions to enable the service to write to it.
Method 29
My 2 cents
I was getting this in a docker image using alpine. The django settings referenced /dev/log for logging to syslog. The django app and celery worker were both based on the same image. The entrypoint of the django app image was launching syslogd on start, but the one for the celery worker was not. This was causing things like ./manage.py shell to fail because there wouldn’t be any /dev/log. The celery worker was not failing. Instead, it was silently just ignoring the rest of the app launch, which included loading shared_task entries from applications in the django project
Method 30
In my case the error was because one container created files in a folder that were mounted on the host file-system with docker-compose.
I just had to do remove the files created by the container on the host system and I was able to launch my project again.
sudo rm -Rf foldername
(I had to use sudo because the files were owned by the root user)
Docker version: 18.03.1
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