26

This is probably a stupid question but its got me stumped coming from a Ruby background.

I have an object that looks like this when I try to print it.

print celery.AsyncResult.task_id
>>><property object at 0x10c383838>

I was expecting the actual value of the task_id property to be printed here. How do I get to the actual value?

UPDATE 1

@celery.task
def scan(host):
    print celery.AsyncResult.task_id
    cmd = 'ps -ef'
    cm = shlex.split(cmd)
    scan = subprocess.check_output(cm)
    return scan

Best Regards.

3
  • 5
    Create an instance of the class. propertys are descriptors that are used to provide attribute-like access to getter/setter methods, but they work at the instance level. When accessing them from the class you simply get the property wrapper.
    – Bakuriu
    Sep 18, 2013 at 12:56
  • 1
    @Bakuriu you should actually post this as an answer :)
    – alecxe
    Sep 18, 2013 at 12:57
  • From the letter-casing and output it looks like celery.AsyncResult must be the name of a class, not an instance of one, and task_id is a property attribute of that class -- which is what Bakuriu is saying I believe.
    – martineau
    Sep 18, 2013 at 14:35

3 Answers 3

27

Short story, within function scan, use scan.request.id.

See http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/userguide/tasks.html?highlight=request#task-request-info

5
  • Yes I think I tried that but it didn't work within the context of the worker. I'll try it again though! Sep 18, 2013 at 15:48
  • What version of Celery are you using? For older version (I think before 2.2) there was a different way to do it using keyword parameters. Sep 18, 2013 at 16:11
  • I'm using 3.0.23 (Chiastic Slide) Sep 18, 2013 at 16:41
  • Hmm - Well I'm blown! It works now! Thanks Chris! As simple as scan.request.id Sep 18, 2013 at 16:44
  • 9
    For me, using celery.current_task.request.id inside the task worked
    – FreshPow
    Aug 10, 2017 at 18:31
25

In order to make your tasks more "OO-like", you could use the bind argument to get a reference to self:

@celery.task(bind=True)
def scan(self, host):
  print self.request.id

Please note that self.request.id is actually an instance of AsyncTask. In order to have the task id as a string, you should do self.request.id.__str__().

From Celery's documentation (after the example):

The bind argument means that the function will be a “bound method” so that you can access attributes and methods on the task type instance.

1
  • 1
    self.request.id is a string, checked it right now with celery 5.2.1. The docs seem to agree.
    – bravmi
    Dec 16, 2021 at 6:49
17

You are accessing the property from the class, while task_id is a property of instances of AsyncResult.

To obtain the value of task_id you first have to create an instance of that class, afterwards accessing async_result_instance.task_id will return you the real id.

In your updated code:

@celery.task
def scan(host):
    print celery.AsyncResult.task_id
    # ...

Here you are accessing the class as I've already explained. What you want is an instance of the currently executing task. You might use celery.current_task to get the currently executing task-object:

@celery.task
def scan(host):
    print celery.current_task.task_id

Or, if you are interested in the unique id use the request attribute of the decorated function:

@celery.task
def scan(host):
    print scan.request.id
    cmd = 'ps -ef'
    cm = shlex.split(cmd)
    # IMPORTANT: Do *not* use "scan = ..."!
    result = subprocess.check_output(cm)
    return result

In this second case do not use any local variable called scan otherwise you'll an UnboundLocalError.

(Code not tested since I don't have celery installed.)


The propertys are descriptors used to provide attribute-like access to getter/setter methods, so that you can access data like:

instance.attribute
instance.attribute = value

But when the code is executed the setter or getter can control what's going on.

You can verify this with a dummy class:

>>> class Dummy(object):
...     @property
...     def a(self):
...             print("called the getter!")
...             return 1
... 
>>> Dummy.a
<property object at 0x7fdae86978e8>
>>> Dummy().a
called the getter!
1
1
  • Hmm..I tried your example above and it makes sense. However within the context of the Celery worker it does not work. I think because the celery.AsyncResult class has already been created. So I guess I need to use something like 'self' ? Sep 18, 2013 at 15:12

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