Public Interface of Airflow¶
The Public Interface of Apache Airflow is the collection of interfaces and behaviors in Apache Airflow whose changes are governed by semantic versioning. A user interacts with Airflow’s public interface by creating and managing DAGs, managing tasks and dependencies, and extending Airflow capabilities by writing new executors, plugins, operators and providers. The Public Interface can be useful for building custom tools and integrations with other systems, and for automating certain aspects of the Airflow workflow.
Using Airflow Public Interfaces¶
The following are some examples of the public interface of Airflow:
When you are writing your own operators or hooks. This commonly done when no hook or operator exists for your use case, or when perhaps when one exists but you need to customize the behavior.
When writing new Plugins that extend Airflow’s functionality beyond DAG building blocks. Secrets, Timetables, Triggers, Listeners are all examples of such functionality. This is usually done by users who manage Airflow instances.
Bundling custom Operators, Hooks, Plugins and releasing them together via provider packages - this is usually done by those who intend to provide a reusable set of functionality for external services or applications Airflow integrates with.
Using the taskflow API to write tasks
Relying on the consistent behavior of Airflow objects
One aspect of “public interface” is extending or using Airflow Python classes and functions. The classes
and functions mentioned below can be relied on to keep backwards-compatible signatures and behaviours within
MAJOR version of Airflow. On the other hand, classes and methods starting with _
(also known
as protected Python methods) and __
(also known as private Python methods) are not part of the Public
Airflow Interface and might change at any time.
You can also use Airflow’s Public Interface via the Stable REST API (based on the OpenAPI specification). For specific needs you can also use the Airflow Command Line Interface (CLI) though its behaviour might change in details (such as output format and available flags) so if you want to rely on those in programmatic way, the Stable REST API is recommended.
Using the Public Interface for DAG Authors¶
DAGs¶
The DAG is Airflow’s core entity that represents a recurring workflow. You can create a DAG by
instantiating the DAG
class in your DAG file. You can also instantiate
them via DagBag
class that reads DAGs from a file or a folder. DAGs
can also have parameters specified via Param
class.
Airflow has a set of example DAGs that you can use to learn how to write DAGs
You can read more about DAGs in DAGs.
References for the modules used in DAGs are here:
Properties of a DagRun
can also be referenced in things like Templates.
Operators¶
The base classes BaseOperator
and BaseSensorOperator
are public and may be extended to make new operators.
Subclasses of BaseOperator which are published in Apache Airflow are public in behavior but not in structure. That is to say, the Operator’s parameters and behavior is governed by semver but the methods are subject to change at any time.
Task Instances¶
Task instances are the individual runs of a single task in a DAG (in a DAG Run). They are available in the context
passed to the execute method of the operators via the TaskInstance
class.
Task Instance Keys¶
Task instance keys are unique identifiers of task instances in a DAG (in a DAG Run). A key is a tuple that consists of
dag_id
, task_id
, run_id
, try_number
, and map_index
. The key of a task instance can be retrieved via
key()
.
Hooks¶
Hooks are interfaces to external platforms and databases, implementing a common
interface when possible and acting as building blocks for operators. All hooks
are derived from BaseHook
.
Airflow has a set of Hooks that are considered public. You are free to extend their functionality by extending them:
Public Airflow utilities¶
When writing or extending Hooks and Operators, DAG authors and developers can use the following classes:
The
Connection
, which provides access to external service credentials and configuration.The
Variable
, which provides access to Airflow configuration variables.The
XCom
which are used to access to inter-task communication data.
You can read more about the public Airflow utilities in Managing Connections, Variables, XComs
Reference for classes used for the utilities are here:
Public Exceptions¶
When writing the custom Operators and Hooks, you can handle and raise public Exceptions that Airflow exposes:
Public Utility classes¶
Using Public Interface to extend Airflow capabilities¶
Airflow uses Plugin mechanism to extend Airflow platform capabilities. They allow to extend Airflow UI but also they are the way to expose the below customizations (Triggers, Timetables, Listeners, etc.). Providers can also implement plugin endpoints and customize Airflow UI and the customizations.
You can read more about plugins in Plugins. You can read how to extend Airflow UI in Customize view of Apache from Airflow web UI. Note that there are some simple customizations of the UI that do not require plugins - you can read more about them in Customizing the UI.
Here are the ways how Plugins can be used to extend Airflow:
Triggers¶
Airflow uses Triggers to implement asyncio
compatible Deferrable Operators.
All Triggers derive from BaseTrigger
.
Airflow has a set of Triggers that are considered public. You are free to extend their functionality by extending them:
You can read more about Triggers in Deferrable Operators & Triggers.
Timetables¶
Custom timetable implementations provide Airflow’s scheduler additional logic to
schedule DAG runs in ways not possible with built-in schedule expressions.
All Timetables derive from Timetable
.
Airflow has a set of Timetables that are considered public. You are free to extend their functionality by extending them:
You can read more about Timetables in Customizing DAG Scheduling with Timetables.
Listeners¶
Listeners enable you to respond to DAG/Task lifecycle events.
This is implemented via ListenerManager
class that provides hooks that
can be implemented to respond to DAG/Task lifecycle events.
New in version 2.5: Listener public interface has been added in version 2.5.
You can read more about Listeners in Listeners.
Extra Links¶
Extra links are dynamic links that could be added to Airflow independently from custom Operators. Normally they can be defined by the Operators, but plugins allow you to override the links on a global level.
You can read more about the Extra Links in Define an operator extra link.
Using Public Interface to integrate with external services and applications¶
Tasks in Airflow can orchestrate external services via Hooks and Operators. The core functionality of Airflow (such as authentication) can also be extended to leverage external services. You can read more about providers provider packages and core extensions they can provide in provider packages.
Executors¶
Executors are the mechanism by which task instances get run. All executors are
derived from BaseExecutor
. There are several
executor implementations built-in Airflow, each with their own unique characteristics and capabilities.
The executor interface itself (the BaseExecutor class) is public, but the built-in executors are not (i.e. KubernetesExecutor, LocalExecutor, etc). This means that, to use KubernetesExecutor as an example, we may make changes to KubernetesExecutor in minor or patch Airflow releases which could break an executor that subclasses KubernetesExecutor. This is necessary to allow Airflow developers sufficient freedom to continue to improve the executors we offer. Accordingly, if you want to modify or extend a built-in executor, you should incorporate the full executor code into your project so that such changes will not break your derivative executor.
You can read more about executors and how to write your own in Executor.
New in version 2.6: The executor interface has been present in Airflow for quite some time but prior to 2.6, there was executor-specific code elsewhere in the codebase. As of version 2.6 executors are fully decoupled, in the sense that Airflow core no longer needs to know about the behavior of specific executors. You could have succeeded with implementing a custom executor before Airflow 2.6, and a number of people did, but there were some hard-coded behaviours that preferred in-built executors, and custom executors could not provide full functionality that built-in executors had.
Secrets Backends¶
Airflow can be configured to rely on secrets backends to retrieve
Connection
and Variable
.
All secrets backends derive from BaseSecretsBackend
.
All Secrets Backend implementations are public. You can extend their functionality:
You can read more about Secret Backends in Secrets Backend. You can also find all the available Secrets Backends implemented in community providers in Secret backends.
Auth managers¶
Auth managers are responsible of user authentication and user authorization in Airflow. All auth managers are
derived from BaseAuthManager
.
The auth manager interface itself (the BaseAuthManager
class) is
public, but the different implementations of auth managers are not (i.e. FabAuthManager).
You can read more about auth managers and how to write your own in Auth manager.
Authentication Backends¶
Authentication backends can extend the way how Airflow authentication mechanism works. You can find out more about authentication in Auth backends that also shows available Authentication backends implemented in the community providers. In case of authentication backend implemented in a provider, it is then part of the provider’s public interface and not Airflow’s.
Connections¶
When creating Hooks, you can add custom Connections. You can read more about connections in Connections for available Connections implemented in the community providers.
Extra Links¶
When creating Hooks, you can add custom Extra Links that are displayed when the tasks are run. You can find out more about extra links in Extra Links that also shows available extra links implemented in the community providers.
Logging and Monitoring¶
You can extend the way how logs are written by Airflow. You can find out more about log writing in Logging & Monitoring.
The Writing logs that also shows available log writers implemented in the community providers.
Decorators¶
DAG authors can use decorators to author DAGs using the TaskFlow concept.
All Decorators derive from TaskDecorator
.
Airflow has a set of Decorators that are considered public. You are free to extend their functionality by extending them:
You can read more about creating custom Decorators in Creating Custom @task Decorators.
Email notifications¶
Airflow has a built-in way of sending email notifications and it allows to extend it by adding custom email notification classes. You can read more about email notifications in Email Configuration.
Notifications¶
Airflow has a built-in extensible way of sending notifications using the various on_*_callback
. You can read more
about notifications in Creating a notifier.
Cluster Policies¶
Cluster Policies are the way to dynamically apply cluster-wide policies to the DAGs being parsed or tasks being executed. You can read more about Cluster Policies in Cluster Policies.
What is not part of the Public Interface of Apache Airflow?¶
Everything not mentioned in this document should be considered as non-Public Interface.
Sometimes in other applications those components could be relied on to keep backwards compatibility, but in Airflow they are not parts of the Public Interface and might change any time:
Database structure is considered to be an internal implementation detail and you should not assume the structure is going to be maintained in a backwards-compatible way.
Web UI is continuously evolving and there are no backwards compatibility guarantees on HTML elements.
Python classes except those explicitly mentioned in this document, are considered an internal implementation detail and you should not assume they will be maintained in a backwards-compatible way.