Redis and RabbitMQ may be the go-to brokers when using Celery, but when you're developing locally they can feel like overkill. The documentation for Celery 5.4 mentions that you can use SQLite as an experimental broker for local development. However, when you navigate to Celery's backends and brokers page, the only mentions of SQL are for the SQLAlchemybackend. Thankfully, the page notes that, "this section is not comprehensive of backends and brokers."
This post will show you how to implement an SQLite broker (or any SQL!) for Celery in a Django project. This post willnotteach you to use Celery: check out the official Celery documentation for that.
For the purposes of this post, we will assume that you already have an existing Django project with Celery installed using the steps from Celery's official "First steps with Django" guide. A Celery backend is notrequired, but you may want to follow the guide's steps for installing and configuring django-celery-results. If you're unclear on what the difference is betweenbackendsandbrokers, check out my article "Understanding tasks, brokers, workers, and backends in Celery."
All links to source documentation will be for current versions of Django, Celery, and SQLAlchemy at the time of publication (July, 2024), except where explicitly stated otherwise. If you're reading this in the distant future, things may have changed.
While Celery manages tasks and queues, it delegates to another library called Kombu for exchanging messages with the broker. RabbitMQ and Redis are Kombu's most feature-complete transports (brokers), but it also has virtual transports for Amazon SQS, ZooKeeper, and MongoDB.
Tucked away in the far corners of Kombu's documentation, there is an SQLAlchemy Transport Model that supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite. Once upon a time the SQLAlchemy broker was even documented on Celery's website, but it has since been removed from the docs in newer versions of the library. Nonetheless, it still works well enough for local development.
To use a sequel database as a Celery broker in your Django app, first install SQLAlchemy:
pip install SQLAlchemy
Within your Django project's settings.py file, you can set your broker's backend using the CELERY_BROKER_URL setting:
# BASE_DIR is the directory of your project's main directory. CELERY_BROKER_URL = f"sqlalchemy+sqlite:////{BASE_DIR}/broker.sqlite3"
The SQLAlchemybroker URLconsists of 3 parts:
Connection strings are different for SQLite on Mac/Unix and Windows:
# MacOS/Unix CELERY_BROKER_URL = "sqla+sqlite:////your/project/path/broker.sqlite3" # Windows CELERY_BROKER_URL = "sqla+sqlite:///C:your\\project\\path\\broker.sqlite3"
You can also use Postgres as a Celery broker, or you can just as easily use MySQL as a Celery broker:
# MySQL CELERY_BROKER_URL = "sqlalchemy+mysql://scott:tiger@localhost/foo" # PostgreSQL CELERY_BROKER_URL = "sqla+postgresql://scott:tiger@localhost/mydatabase" # PosgreSQL connecting using pg8000 CELERY_BROKER_URL = "sqla+postgresql+pg8000://scott:tiger@localhost/mydatabase"
You may need to install other libraries to connect to MySQL or PostgreSQL, and what library you install may affect the SQLAlchemy connection string. Check the SQLAlchemy Database URL docs for more details.
Regardless of which database you choose, you may want to consider storing the broker URL in an environment variable to make it easy to change in different environments:
CELERY_BROKER_URL = os.getenv("CELERY_BROKER_URL")
The SQLAlchemy transport is likely considered experimental, and therefore it would not be intended for production usage. Data loss may occur, or messages could be delivered multiple times. Consider switching to a more robust broker that's listed on Celery's Brokers and Backends page.
That said, it might be fine for local development, or even small side projects. But I wouldn't be shocked if the ability to use SQLAlchemy as a broker went away in the future.
With Celery running locally, you may begin working on your queue-powered application. However, you may find its lack of automatic reloading to be a point of friction. If you want to set up automatic Celery reloading in your Django application, read my post "Automatically reload Celery workers with a custom Django command."
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