airflow.operators.bash¶
Module Contents¶
Classes¶
| Execute a Bash script, command or set of commands. | 
- class airflow.operators.bash.BashOperator(*, bash_command, env=None, append_env=False, output_encoding='utf-8', skip_exit_code=99, cwd=None, **kwargs)[source]¶
- Bases: - airflow.models.baseoperator.BaseOperator- Execute a Bash script, command or set of commands. - See also - For more information on how to use this operator, take a look at the guide: BashOperator - If BaseOperator.do_xcom_push is True, the last line written to stdout will also be pushed to an XCom when the bash command completes - Parameters
- bash_command (str) – The command, set of commands or reference to a bash script (must be ‘.sh’) to be executed. (templated) 
- env (dict[str, str] | None) – If env is not None, it must be a dict that defines the environment variables for the new process; these are used instead of inheriting the current process environment, which is the default behavior. (templated) 
- append_env (bool) – If False(default) uses the environment variables passed in env params and does not inherit the current process environment. If True, inherits the environment variables from current passes and then environment variable passed by the user will either update the existing inherited environment variables or the new variables gets appended to it 
- output_encoding (str) – Output encoding of bash command 
- skip_exit_code (int) – If task exits with this exit code, leave the task in - skippedstate (default: 99). If set to- None, any non-zero exit code will be treated as a failure.
- cwd (str | None) – Working directory to execute the command in. If None (default), the command is run in a temporary directory. 
 
 - Airflow will evaluate the exit code of the bash command. In general, a non-zero exit code will result in task failure and zero will result in task success. Exit code - 99(or another set in- skip_exit_code) will throw an- airflow.exceptions.AirflowSkipException, which will leave the task in- skippedstate. You can have all non-zero exit codes be treated as a failure by setting- skip_exit_code=None.- Exit code - Behavior - 0 - success - skip_exit_code (default: 99) - otherwise - Note - Airflow will not recognize a non-zero exit code unless the whole shell exit with a non-zero exit code. This can be an issue if the non-zero exit arises from a sub-command. The easiest way of addressing this is to prefix the command with - set -e;- Example: .. code-block:: python - bash_command = “set -e; python3 script.py ‘{{ next_execution_date }}’” - Note - Add a space after the script name when directly calling a - .shscript with the- bash_commandargument – for example- bash_command="my_script.sh ". This is because Airflow tries to apply load this file and process it as a Jinja template to it ends with- .sh, which will likely not be what most users want.- Warning - Care should be taken with “user” input or when using Jinja templates in the - bash_command, as this bash operator does not perform any escaping or sanitization of the command.- This applies mostly to using “dag_run” conf, as that can be submitted via users in the Web UI. Most of the default template variables are not at risk. - For example, do not do this: - bash_task = BashOperator( task_id="bash_task", bash_command='echo "Here is the message: \'{{ dag_run.conf["message"] if dag_run else "" }}\'"', ) - Instead, you should pass this via the - envkwarg and use double-quotes inside the bash_command, as below:- bash_task = BashOperator( task_id="bash_task", bash_command="echo \"here is the message: '$message'\"", env={"message": '{{ dag_run.conf["message"] if dag_run else "" }}'}, ) - get_env(context)[source]¶
- Builds the set of environment variables to be exposed for the bash command 
 
