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celery: use Celery 3 config settings instead of deprecated
As warned by:
The 'CELERYD_LOG_LEVEL' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.4 and removal in version v4.0. Use the --loglevel argument instead
remove celeryd.log.file and celeryd.log.level from the ini file.
Instead, use:
paster celeryd my.ini --loglevel=DEBUG --logfile=my.log
or, in the future:
gearbox celeryd -c my.ini -- --loglevel=DEBUG --logfile=my.log
As warned by:
The 'BROKER_VHOST' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_HOST' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_USER' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_PASSWORD' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_PORT' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
change the .ini template to use:
broker.url = amqp://rabbitmq:qewqew@localhost:5672/rabbitmqhost
As warned by:
Starting from version 3.2 Celery will refuse to accept pickle by default.
The pickle serializer is a security concern as it may give attackers
the ability to execute any command. It's important to secure
your broker from unauthorized access when using pickle, so we think
that enabling pickle should require a deliberate action and not be
the default choice.
If you depend on pickle then you should set a setting to disable this
warning and to be sure that everything will continue working
when you upgrade to Celery 3.2::
CELERY_ACCEPT_CONTENT = ['pickle', 'json', 'msgpack', 'yaml']
You must only enable the serializers that you will actually use.
change the .ini template to use:
celery.accept.content = pickle
(Note: The warning is there for a reason. It would probably be nice to change
from pickle to something like json. That is left as an exercise.)
As warned by:
The 'CELERYD_LOG_LEVEL' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.4 and removal in version v4.0. Use the --loglevel argument instead
remove celeryd.log.file and celeryd.log.level from the ini file.
Instead, use:
paster celeryd my.ini --loglevel=DEBUG --logfile=my.log
or, in the future:
gearbox celeryd -c my.ini -- --loglevel=DEBUG --logfile=my.log
As warned by:
The 'BROKER_VHOST' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_HOST' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_USER' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_PASSWORD' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
The 'BROKER_PORT' setting is scheduled for deprecation in version 2.5 and removal in version v4.0. Use the BROKER_URL setting instead
change the .ini template to use:
broker.url = amqp://rabbitmq:qewqew@localhost:5672/rabbitmqhost
As warned by:
Starting from version 3.2 Celery will refuse to accept pickle by default.
The pickle serializer is a security concern as it may give attackers
the ability to execute any command. It's important to secure
your broker from unauthorized access when using pickle, so we think
that enabling pickle should require a deliberate action and not be
the default choice.
If you depend on pickle then you should set a setting to disable this
warning and to be sure that everything will continue working
when you upgrade to Celery 3.2::
CELERY_ACCEPT_CONTENT = ['pickle', 'json', 'msgpack', 'yaml']
You must only enable the serializers that you will actually use.
change the .ini template to use:
celery.accept.content = pickle
(Note: The warning is there for a reason. It would probably be nice to change
from pickle to something like json. That is left as an exercise.)
aa17c7a1b8a5 aa17c7a1b8a5 8d065db04909 8d065db04909 8d065db04909 aa17c7a1b8a5 5ae8e644aa88 8d065db04909 03bbd33bc084 03bbd33bc084 5ae8e644aa88 5ae8e644aa88 8d065db04909 aa17c7a1b8a5 5ae8e644aa88 8d065db04909 aa17c7a1b8a5 8d065db04909 5ae8e644aa88 8d065db04909 aa17c7a1b8a5 8d065db04909 8d065db04909 5ae8e644aa88 8d065db04909 aa17c7a1b8a5 8d065db04909 8d065db04909 | .. _locking:
==================
Repository locking
==================
Kallithea has a *repository locking* feature, disabled by default. When
enabled, every initial clone and every pull gives users (with write permission)
the exclusive right to do a push.
When repository locking is enabled, repositories get a ``locked`` flag.
The hg/git commands ``hg/git clone``, ``hg/git pull``,
and ``hg/git push`` influence this state:
- A ``clone`` or ``pull`` action locks the target repository
if the user has write/admin permissions on this repository.
- Kallithea will remember the user who locked the repository so only this
specific user can unlock the repo by performing a ``push``
command.
- Every other command on a locked repository from this user and every command
from any other user will result in an HTTP return code 423 (Locked).
Additionally, the HTTP error will mention the user that locked the repository
(e.g., “repository <repo> locked by user <user>”).
Each repository can be manually unlocked by an administrator from the
repository settings menu.
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