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An open source asynchronous task queue/job queue based on distributed message passing. It is focused on real-time operation, but supports scheduling as well. The execution units, called tasks, are executed concurrently on one or more worker nodes using multiprocessing, Eventlet or gevent. Tasks can execute asynchronously (in the background) or synchronously (wait until ready). Celery is used in production systems to process millions of tasks a day. Celery is written in Python, but the protocol can be implemented in any language. It can also operate with other languages using web hooks. The recommended message broker is RabbitMQ, but limited support for Redis, Beanstalk, MongoDB, CouchDB and databases (using SQLAlchemy or the Django ORM) is also available.
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Python 3 Certifi is a carefully curated collection of Root Certificates for validating the trustworthiness of SSL certificates while verifying the identity of TLS hosts. It has been extracted from the Requests project. Please note that this Fedora package links to the bundle certificates of ca-certificates.
Certifi is a carefully curated collection of Root Certificates for validating the trustworthiness of SSL certificates while verifying the identity of TLS hosts. It has been extracted from the Requests project. Please note that this Fedora package does not actually include a certificate collection at all. It reads the system shared certificate trust collection instead. For more details on this system, see the ca-certificates package. This package provides the Python 3 certifi library.
A simple python tool for creating certificate authorities and certificates on the fly.Introduction Certipy was made to simplify the certificate creation process. To that end, Certipy exposes methods for creating and managing certificate authorities, certificates, signing and building trust bundles. Behind the scenes Certipy:- Manages records of all certificates it creates - External certs can...
Foreign Function Interface for Python, providing a convenient and reliable way of calling existing C code from Python. The interface is based on LuaJIT’s FFI.