To get a quick overview of what you can do with zaku
, check out the following:
- take a look at the basic tutorial or the tutorial for robotics:
- or try to take a look at the example gallery here
Install zaku --- the latest version is {VERSION}
on pypi.
pip install -U 'zaku[all]=={VERSION}'
Running tests is the best way to learn how to use a library. To run the tests in the ./specs folder, first download and setup redis-stack-server
. Then start a zaku task queue server at local port 9000
.
- install zaku and look at the options:
pip install -U 'zaku[all]=={VERSION}' zaku -h
- install and run the
redis-stack-server
:brew install redis-stack-server redis-stack-server
- run the zaku task queue at port
9000
:zaku --port 9000 --verbose
Now you can run the tests by running
make test
In pycharm, you should see the following:
Adding Jobs:
Supposed you have a TaskServer running at localhost:9000
.
from zaku import TaskQ
queue = TaskQ(name="my-test-queue", uri="http://localhost:9000")
for i in range(100):
queue.add_job({"job_id": i, "seed": i * 100})
Retrieving Jobs:
from zaku import TaskQ
queue = TaskQ(name="my-test-queue", uri="http://localhost:9000")
job_id, job = queue.take()
Now, after you have finished the job, you need to mark the job for completion. The way we do so is by calling
queue.mark_done(job_id)
Sometimes when you worker responsible for completeing the job encounters a failure, you need to also put the job back into the queue so that other workers can retry. You can do so by calling
queue.mark_reset()
Now, we offer a context manager TaskQ.pop
, which automatically catches exceptions and resets the job (or marks it complete).
from zaku import TaskQ
queue = TaskQ(name="my-test-queue", uri="http://localhost:9000")
with queue.pop() as job:
if job is None:
print("No job available")
print("Retrieved job:", job)
First, git clone this repo, and install it in editable mode plus dependencies relevant for building the documentations:
git clone https://github.com/geyang/zaku.git
cd zaku
pip install -e '.[dev]'
We use sphinx
to generate the documentation. To get started, make sure you install the dev dependencies. This should already be included if you installed zaku via the zaku[dev]
flag. Take a look at ./docs/requirements.txt to see what packages are required for development.
When editing the documentation, you can use a preview server that automatically refreshes the browser upon changes in source. Simply do
make preview
Note: restarts are required, when the page index is changes. This includes adding and removing new pages.
To run the full build, call
make docs
Built with ❤️ by @episodeyang. Distributed under the MIT license. See LICENSE
for more information.