I have been reading the doc and searching but cannot seem to find a straight answer:
Can you cancel an already executing task? (as in the task has started, takes a w
revoke cancels the task execution. If a task is revoked, the workers ignore the task and do not execute it. If you don't use persistent revokes your task can be executed after worker's restart.
http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/userguide/workers.html#worker-persistent-revokes
revoke has an terminate option which is False by default. If you need to kill the executing task you need to set terminate to True.
>>> from celery.task.control import revoke
>>> revoke(task_id, terminate=True)
http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/userguide/workers.html#revoke-revoking-tasks
@0x00mh's answer is correct, however recent celery docs say that using the terminate
option is "a last resort for administrators" because you may accidentally terminate another task which started executing in the meantime. Possibly a better solution is combining terminate=True
with signal='SIGUSR1'
(which causes the SoftTimeLimitExceeded exception to be raised in the task).
In addition, unsatisfactory, there is another way(abort task) to stop the task, but there are many unreliability, more details, see: http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/reference/celery.contrib.abortable.html
See the following options for tasks: time_limit, soft_time_limit (or you can set it for workers). If you want to control not only time of execution, then see expires argument of apply_async method.
In Celery 3.1, the API of revoking tasks is changed.
According to the Celery FAQ, you should use result.revoke:
>>> result = add.apply_async(args=[2, 2], countdown=120)
>>> result.revoke()
or if you only have the task id:
>>> from proj.celery import app
>>> app.control.revoke(task_id)