Apache Airflow (Incubating)
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Jarek Potiuk 543194d015
Eager upgrade works also in editable mode. (#13589)
The recent change #13409 introduced common installation script
but one case turned out to be not working. Installing Airflow
in editable mode with eager upgrade fails on building production
image (the CI image effectively did not have airflow installed
in editable mode, which it should).

This PR fixes that.
2021-01-09 20:00:24 +01:00
.github Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
airflow Minor grammar fix in OpenAPI YAML (#13586) 2021-01-09 09:47:49 +00:00
chart Support external Redis in Helm Chart (#12010) 2021-01-09 15:29:02 +01:00
clients Enable Markdownlint rule MD003/heading-style/header-style (#12427) 2020-11-18 07:31:15 +01:00
dags Move dummy_operator.py to dummy.py (#11178) (#11293) 2020-12-08 19:19:46 +00:00
dev Reduce the number of variables in Bash scripts (#13572) 2021-01-08 22:48:42 +00:00
docker-context-files Production images on CI are now built from packages (#12685) 2020-12-06 23:36:33 +01:00
docs Fix Link in Upgrading to 2.0 guide (#13584) 2021-01-09 10:55:58 +08:00
empty
hooks
images Developers Quick Guide (#13417) 2021-01-01 06:08:59 +01:00
kubernetes_tests Fix imagePullPolicy missing in tests (#13316) 2020-12-26 01:44:38 +01:00
license-templates
licenses
manifests
metastore_browser
provider_packages
scripts Eager upgrade works also in editable mode. (#13589) 2021-01-09 20:00:24 +01:00
tests Stop Log Spamming when `[core] lazy_load_plugins` is False (#13578) 2021-01-08 22:46:44 +00:00
.asf.yaml Enable v1-10-stable branch protection (#12525) 2020-11-20 16:52:56 -08:00
.bash_completion
.coveragerc
.dockerignore Production images on CI are now built from packages (#12685) 2020-12-06 23:36:33 +01:00
.editorconfig
.flake8
.gitignore Download inventories only once (#12989) 2020-12-10 21:43:53 +01:00
.hadolint.yaml
.mailmap
.markdownlint.yml Enable Markdownlint rule MD003/heading-style/header-style (#12427) 2020-11-18 07:31:15 +01:00
.pre-commit-config.yaml Upgrade pre-commit hooks (#13465) 2021-01-04 21:13:24 +00:00
.rat-excludes Add missing licences. (#12922) 2020-12-08 17:32:29 +01:00
.readthedocs.yml Fix build on RTD (#12551) 2020-11-23 09:52:24 +01:00
BREEZE.rst Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
CHANGELOG.txt Fix brokend master (#13201) 2020-12-21 10:17:16 +01:00
CI.rst Production image can also be upgraded to newer dependencies (#13345) 2020-12-28 20:08:18 +01:00
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
CONTRIBUTING.rst Add Guidelines to become an Airflow Committer (#13236) 2021-01-08 20:07:04 +00:00
CONTRIBUTORS_QUICK_START.rst Developers Quick Guide (#13417) 2021-01-01 06:08:59 +01:00
Dockerfile Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
Dockerfile.ci Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
IMAGES.rst Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
INSTALL Forces unistalling providers in editable mode. (#13439) 2021-01-08 13:48:03 +01:00
INTHEWILD.md Add Fleek Fashion to the list of Airflow users (#13372) 2020-12-29 22:40:53 +00:00
LICENSE
LOCAL_VIRTUALENV.rst Forces unistalling providers in editable mode. (#13439) 2021-01-08 13:48:03 +01:00
MANIFEST.in Adds customized_form_field_behaviours.schema.json to MANIFEST.in (#13031) 2020-12-12 09:21:43 +00:00
NOTICE
PULL_REQUEST_WORKFLOW.rst Fix selective checks for changes outside of airflow .py files (#13430) 2021-01-02 12:33:03 +01:00
README.md Fix Formatting and link for Installing Backport Providers (#13582) 2021-01-09 08:35:27 +08:00
STATIC_CODE_CHECKS.rst Add pre-commit hook limiting hook name length (#13319) 2020-12-26 11:24:27 +01:00
TESTING.rst Add integration tests for Apache Pinot (#13195) 2020-12-30 13:29:40 +01:00
UPDATING.md Fix Grammar in PIP warning (#13380) 2020-12-30 09:05:19 +01:00
breeze Reduce the number of variables in Bash scripts (#13572) 2021-01-08 22:48:42 +00:00
breeze-complete Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
codecov.yml Fix Code Coverage (#13092) 2020-12-15 21:33:39 +00:00
confirm
pylintrc Update pylint to 2.6.0 (#13174) 2020-12-20 18:16:18 +01:00
pyproject.toml Add missing licences. (#12922) 2020-12-08 17:32:29 +01:00
pytest.ini
setup.cfg Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
setup.py Removes provider-imposed requirements from setup.cfg (#13409) 2021-01-08 20:11:35 +01:00
yamllint-config.yml

README.md

Apache Airflow

PyPI version GitHub Build Coverage Status License PyPI - Python Version Docker Pulls Docker Stars PyPI - Downloads Code style: black Twitter Follow Slack Status

Apache Airflow (or simply Airflow) is a platform to programmatically author, schedule, and monitor workflows.

When workflows are defined as code, they become more maintainable, versionable, testable, and collaborative.

Use Airflow to author workflows as directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) of tasks. The Airflow scheduler executes your tasks on an array of workers while following the specified dependencies. Rich command line utilities make performing complex surgeries on DAGs a snap. The rich user interface makes it easy to visualize pipelines running in production, monitor progress, and troubleshoot issues when needed.

Table of contents

Project Focus

Airflow works best with workflows that are mostly static and slowly changing. When DAG structure is similar from one run to the next, it allows for clarity around unit of work and continuity. Other similar projects include Luigi, Oozie and Azkaban.

Airflow is commonly used to process data, but has the opinion that tasks should ideally be idempotent (i.e. results of the task will be the same, and will not create duplicated data in a destination system), and should not pass large quantities of data from one task to the next (though tasks can pass metadata using Airflow's Xcom feature). For high-volume, data-intensive tasks, a best practice is to delegate to external services that specialize on that type of work.

Airflow is not a streaming solution, but it is often used to process real-time data, pulling data off streams in batches.

Principles

  • Dynamic: Airflow pipelines are configuration as code (Python), allowing for dynamic pipeline generation. This allows for writing code that instantiates pipelines dynamically.
  • Extensible: Easily define your own operators, executors and extend the library so that it fits the level of abstraction that suits your environment.
  • Elegant: Airflow pipelines are lean and explicit. Parameterizing your scripts is built into the core of Airflow using the powerful Jinja templating engine.
  • Scalable: Airflow has a modular architecture and uses a message queue to orchestrate an arbitrary number of workers.

Requirements

Apache Airflow is tested with:

Master version (dev) Stable version (2.0.0) Previous version (1.10.14)
Python 3.6, 3.7, 3.8 3.6, 3.7, 3.8 2.7, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8
PostgreSQL 9.6, 10, 11, 12, 13 9.6, 10, 11, 12, 13 9.6, 10, 11, 12, 13
MySQL 5.7, 8 5.7, 8 5.6, 5.7
SQLite 3.15.0+ 3.15.0+ 3.15.0+
Kubernetes 1.16.9, 1.17.5, 1.18.6 1.16.9, 1.17.5, 1.18.6 1.16.9, 1.17.5, 1.18.6

Note: MySQL 5.x versions are unable to or have limitations with running multiple schedulers -- please see the "Scheduler" docs. MariaDB is not tested/recommended.

Note: SQLite is used in Airflow tests. Do not use it in production. We recommend using the latest stable version of SQLite for local development.

Support for Python versions

As of Airflow 2.0 we agreed to certain rules we follow for Python support. They are based on the official release schedule of Python, nicely summarized in the Python Developer's Guide

  1. We finish support for python versions when they reach EOL (For python 3.6 it means that we will remove it from being supported on 23.12.2021).

  2. The "oldest" supported version of Python is the default one. "Default" is only meaningful in terms of "smoke tests" in CI PRs which are run using this default version.

  3. We support a new version of Python after it is officially released, as soon as we manage to make it works in our CI pipeline (which might not be immediate) and release a new version of Airflow (non-Patch version) based on this CI set-up.

Additional notes on Python version requirements

  • Previous version requires at least Python 3.5.3 when using Python 3

Getting started

Visit the official Airflow website documentation (latest stable release) for help with installing Airflow, getting started, or walking through a more complete tutorial.

Note: If you're looking for documentation for master branch (latest development branch): you can find it on s.apache.org/airflow-docs.

For more information on Airflow's Roadmap or Airflow Improvement Proposals (AIPs), visit the Airflow Wiki.

Official Docker (container) images for Apache Airflow are described in IMAGES.rst.

Installing from PyPI

We publish Apache Airflow as apache-airflow package in PyPI. Installing it however might be sometimes tricky because Airflow is a bit of both a library and application. Libraries usually keep their dependencies open and applications usually pin them, but we should do neither and both at the same time. We decided to keep our dependencies as open as possible (in setup.py) so users can install different versions of libraries if needed. This means that from time to time plain pip install apache-airflow will not work or will produce unusable Airflow installation.

In order to have repeatable installation, however, introduced in Airflow 1.10.10 and updated in Airflow 1.10.12 we also keep a set of "known-to-be-working" constraint files in the orphan constraints-master, constraints-2-0 and constraints-1-10 branches. We keep those "known-to-be-working" constraints files separately per major/minor python version. You can use them as constraint files when installing Airflow from PyPI. Note that you have to specify correct Airflow tag/version/branch and python versions in the URL.

  1. Installing just Airflow:

NOTE!!!

On November 2020, new version of PIP (20.3) has been released with a new, 2020 resolver. This resolver does not yet work with Apache Airflow and might lead to errors in installation - depends on your choice of extras. In order to install Airflow you need to either downgrade pip to version 20.2.4 pip install --upgrade pip==20.2.4 or, in case you use Pip 20.3, you need to add option --use-deprecated legacy-resolver to your pip install command.

pip install apache-airflow==2.0.0 \
 --constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-2.0.0/constraints-3.7.txt"
  1. Installing with extras (for example postgres,google)
pip install apache-airflow[postgres,google]==2.0.0 \
 --constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-2.0.0/constraints-3.7.txt"

For information on installing backport providers check backport-providers.rst.

Official source code

Apache Airflow is an Apache Software Foundation (ASF) project, and our official source code releases:

Following the ASF rules, the source packages released must be sufficient for a user to build and test the release provided they have access to the appropriate platform and tools.

Convenience packages

There are other ways of installing and using Airflow. Those are "convenience" methods - they are not "official releases" as stated by the ASF Release Policy, but they can be used by the users who do not want to build the software themselves.

Those are - in the order of most common ways people install Airflow:

  • PyPI releases to install Airflow using standard pip tool
  • Docker Images to install airflow via docker tool, use them in Kubernetes, Helm Charts, docker-compose, docker swarm etc. You can read more about using, customising, and extending the images in the Latest docs, and learn details on the internals in the IMAGES.rst document.
  • Tags in GitHub to retrieve the git project sources that were used to generate official source packages via git

All those artifacts are not official releases, but they are prepared using officially released sources. Some of those artifacts are "development" or "pre-release" ones, and they are clearly marked as such following the ASF Policy.

User Interface

  • DAGs: Overview of all DAGs in your environment.

    DAGs

  • Tree View: Tree representation of a DAG that spans across time.

    Tree View

  • Graph View: Visualization of a DAG's dependencies and their current status for a specific run.

    Graph View

  • Task Duration: Total time spent on different tasks over time.

    Task Duration

  • Gantt View: Duration and overlap of a DAG.

    Gantt View

  • Code View: Quick way to view source code of a DAG.

    Code View

Contributing

Want to help build Apache Airflow? Check out our contributing documentation.

Who uses Apache Airflow?

More than 350 organizations are using Apache Airflow in the wild.

Who Maintains Apache Airflow?

Airflow is the work of the community, but the core committers/maintainers are responsible for reviewing and merging PRs as well as steering conversation around new feature requests. If you would like to become a maintainer, please review the Apache Airflow committer requirements.

Can I use the Apache Airflow logo in my presentation?

Yes! Be sure to abide by the Apache Foundation trademark policies and the Apache Airflow Brandbook. The most up to date logos are found in this repo and on the Apache Software Foundation website.

Airflow merchandise

If you would love to have Apache Airflow stickers, t-shirt etc. then check out Redbubble Shop.