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Airflow Breeze - Development and Test Environment for Apache Airflow

Airflow Breeze is an easy-to-use development and test environment using Docker Compose. The environment is available for local use and is also used in Airflow's CI tests.

We call it Airflow Breeze as It's a Breeze to contribute to Airflow.

The advantages and disadvantages of using the Breeze environment vs. other ways of testing Airflow are described in CONTRIBUTING.rst.

  • Version: Install the latest stable Docker Desktop and add make sure it is in your PATH. Breeze detects if you are using version that is too old and warns you to upgrade.
  • Permissions: Configure to run the docker commands directly and not only via root user. Your user should be in the docker group. See Docker installation guide for details.
  • Disk space: On macOS, increase your available disk space before starting to work with the environment. At least 20 GB of free disk space is recommended. You can also get by with a smaller space but make sure to clean up the Docker disk space periodically. See also Docker for Mac - Space for details on increasing disk space available for Docker on Mac.
  • Docker problems: Sometimes it is not obvious that space is an issue when you run into a problem with Docker. If you see a weird behaviour, try breeze cleanup command. Also see pruning instructions from Docker.

Here is an example configuration with more than 200GB disk space for Docker:

Disk space MacOS
  • Version: Install the latest stable Docker Compose and add it to the PATH. Breeze detects if you are using version that is too old and warns you to upgrade.
  • Permissions: Configure permission to be able to run the docker-compose command by your user.
Airflow Breeze - Docker WSL2 integration
  • WSL 2 Filesystem Performance :
    Accessing the host Windows filesystem incurs a performance penalty, it is therefore recommended to do development on the Linux filesystem. E.g. Run cd ~ and create a development folder in your Linux distro home and git pull the Airflow repo there.
  • WSL 2 Docker mount errors:
    Another reason to use Linux filesystem, is that sometimes - depending on the length of your path, you might get strange errors when you try start Breeze, such as caused: mount through procfd: not a directory: unknown:. Therefore checking out Airflow in Windows-mounted Filesystem is strongly discouraged.
  • WSL 2 Docker volume remount errors:
    If you're experiencing errors such as ERROR: for docker-compose_airflow_run Cannot create container for service airflow: not a directory when starting Breeze after the first time or an error like docker: Error response from daemon: not a directory. See 'docker run --help'. when running the pre-commit tests, you may need to consider installing Docker directly in WSL 2 instead of using Docker Desktop for Windows.
  • WSL 2 Memory Usage :
    WSL 2 can consume a lot of memory under the process name "Vmmem". To reclaim the memory after development you can:
    • On the Linux distro clear cached memory: sudo sysctl -w vm.drop_caches=3
    • If no longer using Docker you can quit Docker Desktop (right click system try icon and select "Quit Docker Desktop")
    • If no longer using WSL you can shut it down on the Windows Host with the following command: wsl --shutdown
  • Developing in WSL 2:
    You can use all the standard Linux command line utilities to develop on WSL 2. Further VS Code supports developing in Windows but remotely executing in WSL. If VS Code is installed on the Windows host system then in the WSL Linux Distro you can run code . in the root directory of you Airflow repo to launch VS Code.

We are using pipx tool to install and manage Breeze. The pipx tool is created by the creators of pip from Python Packaging Authority

Install pipx

pip install --user pipx

Breeze, is not globally accessible until your PATH is updated. Add <USER FOLDER>.localbin as a variable environments. This can be done automatically by the following command (follow instructions printed).

pipx ensurepath

In Mac

python -m pipx ensurepath

Minimum 4GB RAM for Docker Engine is required to run the full Breeze environment.

On macOS, 2GB of RAM are available for your Docker containers by default, but more memory is recommended (4GB should be comfortable). For details see Docker for Mac - Advanced tab.

On Windows WSL 2 expect the Linux Distro and Docker containers to use 7 - 8 GB of RAM.

Minimum 40GB free disk space is required for your Docker Containers.

On Mac OS This might deteriorate over time so you might need to increase it or run breeze cleanup periodically. For details see Docker for Mac - Advanced tab.

On WSL2 you might want to increase your Virtual Hard Disk by following: Expanding the size of your WSL 2 Virtual Hard Disk

There is a command breeze ci resource-check that you can run to check available resources. See below for details.

You may need to clean up your Docker environment occasionally. The images are quite big (1.5GB for both images needed for static code analysis and CI tests) and, if you often rebuild/update them, you may end up with some unused image data.

To clean up the Docker environment:

  1. Stop Breeze with breeze stop. (If Breeze is already running)

  2. Run the breeze cleanup command.

  3. Run docker images --all and docker ps --all to verify that your Docker is clean.

    Both commands should return an empty list of images and containers respectively.

If you run into disk space errors, consider pruning your Docker images with the docker system prune --all command. You may need to restart the Docker Engine before running this command.

In case of disk space errors on macOS, increase the disk space available for Docker. See Prerequisites for details.

Run this command to install Breeze (make sure to use -e flag):

pipx install -e ./dev/breeze

Once this is complete, you should have breeze binary on your PATH and available to run by breeze command.

Those are all available commands for Breeze and details about the commands are described below:

Breeze commands

Breeze installed this way is linked to your checked out sources of Airflow so Breeze will automatically use latest version of sources from ./dev/breeze. Sometimes, when dependencies are updated breeze commands with offer you to run self-upgrade (you just need to answer y when asked).

You can always run such self-upgrade at any time:

breeze setup self-upgrade

If you have several checked out Airflow sources, Breeze will warn you if you are using it from a different source tree and will offer you to re-install from those sources - to make sure that you are using the right version.

You can skip Breeze's upgrade check by setting SKIP_BREEZE_UPGRADE_CHECK variable to non empty value.

By default Breeze works on the version of Airflow that you run it in - in case you are outside of the sources of Airflow and you installed Breeze from a directory - Breeze will be run on Airflow sources from where it was installed.

You can run breeze setup version command to see where breeze installed from and what are the current sources that Breeze works on

The First time you run Breeze, it pulls and builds a local version of Docker images. It pulls the latest Airflow CI images from the GitHub Container Registry and uses them to build your local Docker images. Note that the first run (per python) might take up to 10 minutes on a fast connection to start. Subsequent runs should be much faster.

Once you enter the environment, you are dropped into bash shell of the Airflow container and you can run tests immediately.

To use the full potential of breeze you should set up autocomplete. The breeze command comes with a built-in bash/zsh/fish autocomplete setup command. After installing, when you start typing the command, you can use <TAB> to show all the available switches and get auto-completion on typical values of parameters that you can use.

You should set up the autocomplete option automatically by running:

breeze setup autocomplete

Breeze on POSIX-compliant systems (Linux, MacOS) can be automatically installed by running the scripts/tools/setup_breeze bash script. This includes checking and installing pipx, setting up breeze with it and setting up autocomplete.

When you enter the Breeze environment, automatically an environment file is sourced from files/airflow-breeze-config/variables.env.

You can also add files/airflow-breeze-config/init.sh and the script will be sourced always when you enter Breeze. For example you can add pip install commands if you want to install custom dependencies - but there are no limits to add your own customizations.

You can override the name of the init script by setting INIT_SCRIPT_FILE environment variable before running the breeze environment.

You can also customize your environment by setting BREEZE_INIT_COMMAND environment variable. This variable will be evaluated at entering the environment.

The files folder from your local sources is automatically mounted to the container under /files path and you can put there any files you want to make available for the Breeze container.

You can also copy any .whl or .sdist packages to dist and when you pass --use-packages-from-dist flag as wheel or sdist line parameter, breeze will automatically install the packages found there when you enter Breeze.

You can also add your local tmux configuration in files/airflow-breeze-config/.tmux.conf and these configurations will be available for your tmux environment.

There is a symlink between files/airflow-breeze-config/.tmux.conf and ~/.tmux.conf in the container, so you can change it at any place, and run

tmux source ~/.tmux.conf

inside container, to enable modified tmux configurations.

The regular Breeze development tasks are available as top-level commands. Those tasks are most often used during the development, that's why they are available without any sub-command. More advanced commands are separated to sub-commands.

This is the most often used feature of breeze. It simply allows to enter the shell inside the Breeze development environment (inside the Breeze container).

You can use additional breeze flags to choose your environment. You can specify a Python version to use, and backend (the meta-data database). Thanks to that, with Breeze, you can recreate the same environments as we have in matrix builds in the CI.

For example, you can choose to run Python 3.7 tests with MySQL as backend and with mysql version 8 as follows:

breeze --python 3.7 --backend mysql --mysql-version 8

The choices you make are persisted in the ./.build/ cache directory so that next time when you use the breeze script, it could use the values that were used previously. This way you do not have to specify them when you run the script. You can delete the .build/ directory in case you want to restore the default settings.

You can see which value of the parameters that can be stored persistently in cache marked with >VALUE< in the help of the commands.

To build documentation in Breeze, use the build-docs command:

breeze build-docs

Results of the build can be found in the docs/_build folder.

The documentation build consists of three steps:

  • verifying consistency of indexes
  • building documentation
  • spell checking

You can choose only one stage of the two by providing --spellcheck-only or --docs-only after extra -- flag.

breeze build-docs --spellcheck-only

This process can take some time, so in order to make it shorter you can filter by package, using the flag --package-filter <PACKAGE-NAME>. The package name has to be one of the providers or apache-airflow. For instance, for using it with Amazon, the command would be:

breeze build-docs --package-filter apache-airflow-providers-amazon

Often errors during documentation generation come from the docstrings of auto-api generated classes. During the docs building auto-api generated files are stored in the docs/_api folder. This helps you easily identify the location the problems with documentation originated from.

Those are all available flags of build-docs command:

Breeze build documentation

You can run static checks via Breeze. You can also run them via pre-commit command but with auto-completion Breeze makes it easier to run selective static checks. If you press <TAB> after the static-check and if you have auto-complete setup you should see auto-completable list of all checks available.

breeze static-checks -t run-mypy

The above will run mypy check for currently staged files.

You can also pass specific pre-commit flags for example --all-files :

breeze static-checks -t run-mypy --all-files

The above will run mypy check for all files.

There is a convenience --last-commit flag that you can use to run static check on last commit only:

breeze static-checks -t run-mypy --last-commit

The above will run mypy check for all files in the last commit.

There is another convenience --commit-ref flag that you can use to run static check on specific commit:

breeze static-checks -t run-mypy --commit-ref 639483d998ecac64d0fef7c5aa4634414065f690

The above will run mypy check for all files in the 639483d998ecac64d0fef7c5aa4634414065f690 commit. Any commit-ish reference from Git will work here (branch, tag, short/long hash etc.)

If you ever need to get a list of the files that will be checked (for troubleshooting) use these commands:

breeze static-checks -t identity --verbose # currently staged files
breeze static-checks -t identity --verbose --from-ref $(git merge-base main HEAD) --to-ref HEAD #  branch updates

Those are all available flags of static-checks command:

Breeze static checks

Note

When you run static checks, some of the artifacts (mypy_cache) is stored in docker-compose volume so that it can speed up static checks execution significantly. However, sometimes, the cache might get broken, in which case you should run breeze stop to clean up the cache.

For testing Airflow you often want to start multiple components (in multiple terminals). Breeze has built-in start-airflow command that start breeze container, launches multiple terminals using tmux and launches all Airflow necessary components in those terminals.

When you are starting airflow from local sources, www asset compilation is automatically executed before.

breeze --python 3.7 --backend mysql start-airflow

You can also use it to start any released version of Airflow from PyPI with the --use-airflow-version flag.

breeze start-airflow --python 3.7 --backend mysql --use-airflow-version 2.2.5

Those are all available flags of start-airflow command:

Breeze start-airflow

Often if you want to run full airflow in the Breeze environment you need to launch multiple terminals and run airflow webserver, airflow scheduler, airflow worker in separate terminals.

This can be achieved either via tmux or via exec-ing into the running container from the host. Tmux is installed inside the container and you can launch it with tmux command. Tmux provides you with the capability of creating multiple virtual terminals and multiplex between them. More about tmux can be found at tmux GitHub wiki page . Tmux has several useful shortcuts that allow you to split the terminals, open new tabs etc - it's pretty useful to learn it.

Another way is to exec into Breeze terminal from the host's terminal. Often you can have multiple terminals in the host (Linux/MacOS/WSL2 on Windows) and you can simply use those terminals to enter the running container. It's as easy as launching breeze exec while you already started the Breeze environment. You will be dropped into bash and environment variables will be read in the same way as when you enter the environment. You can do it multiple times and open as many terminals as you need.

Those are all available flags of exec command:

Breeze exec

Airflow webserver needs to prepare www assets - compiled with node and yarn. The compile-www-assets command takes care about it. This is needed when you want to run webserver inside of the breeze.

Breeze compile-www-assets

Breeze uses docker images heavily and those images are rebuild periodically. This might cause extra disk usage by the images. If you need to clean-up the images periodically you can run breeze setup cleanup command (by default it will skip removing your images before cleaning up but you can also remove the images to clean-up everything by adding --all).

Those are all available flags of cleanup command:

Breeze setup cleanup

More sophisticated usages of the breeze shell is using the breeze shell command - it has more parameters and you can also use it to execute arbitrary commands inside the container.

breeze shell "ls -la"

Those are all available flags of shell command:

Breeze shell

After starting up, the environment runs in the background and takes quite some memory which you might want to free for other things you are running on your host.

You can always stop it via:

breeze stop

Those are all available flags of stop command:

Breeze stop

If you are having problems with the Breeze environment, try the steps below. After each step you can check whether your problem is fixed.

  1. If you are on macOS, check if you have enough disk space for Docker (Breeze will warn you if not).
  2. Stop Breeze with breeze stop.
  3. Delete the .build directory and run breeze ci-image build.
  4. Clean up Docker images via breeze cleanup command.
  5. Restart your Docker Engine and try again.
  6. Restart your machine and try again.
  7. Re-install Docker Desktop and try again.

In case the problems are not solved, you can set the VERBOSE_COMMANDS variable to "true":

export VERBOSE_COMMANDS="true"

Then run the failed command, copy-and-paste the output from your terminal to the Airflow Slack #airflow-breeze channel and describe your problem.

Airflow Breeze is a bash script serving as a "swiss-army-knife" of Airflow testing. Under the hood it uses other scripts that you can also run manually if you have problem with running the Breeze environment. Breeze script allows performing the following tasks:

You can run tests with breeze. There are various tests type and breeze allows to run different test types easily. You can run unit tests in different ways, either interactively run tests with the default shell command or via the testing commands. The latter allows to run more kinds of tests easily.

Here is the detailed set of options for the breeze testing command.

Breeze testing

You can simply enter the breeze container and run pytest command there. You can enter the container via just breeze command or breeze shell command (the latter has more options useful when you run integration or system tests). This is the best way if you want to interactively run selected tests and iterate with the tests. Once you enter breeze environment it is ready out-of-the-box to run your tests by running the right pytest command (autocomplete should help you with autocompleting test name if you start typing pytest tests<TAB>).

Here are few examples:

Running single test:

pytest tests/core/test_core.py::TestCore::test_check_operators

To run the whole test class:

pytest tests/core/test_core.py::TestCore

You can re-run the tests interactively, add extra parameters to pytest and modify the files before re-running the test to iterate over the tests. You can also add more flags when starting the breeze shell command when you run integration tests or system tests. Read more details about it in the TESTING.rst <TESTING.rst#> where all the test types of our are explained and more information on how to run them.

This applies to all kind of tests - all our tests can be run using pytest.

Another option you have is that you can also run tests via built-in breeze testing command. The iterative pytest command allows to run test individually, or by class or in any other way pytest allows to test them and run them interactively, but breeze testing command allows to run the tests in the same test "types" that are used to run the tests in CI: for example Core, Always API, Providers. This how our CI runs them - running each group in parallel to other groups and you can replicate this behaviour.

Another interesting use of the breeze testing tests command is that you can easily specify sub-set of the tests for Providers. breeze testing tests --test-type "Providers[airbyte,http] for example will only run tests for airbyte and http providers.

Here is the detailed set of options for the breeze testing tests command.

Breeze testing tests

You can use Breeze to run all Helm tests. Those tests are run inside the breeze image as there are all necessary tools installed there.

Breeze testing helm-tests

You can also iterate over those tests with pytest commands, similarly as in case of regular unit tests. The helm tests can be found in tests/chart folder in the main repo.

You can use Breeze to run all docker-compose tests. Those tests are run using Production image and they are running test with the Quick-start docker compose we have.

Breeze testing docker-compose-tests

You can also iterate over those tests with pytest command, but - unlike regular unit tests and Helm tests, they need to be run in local virtual environment. They also require to have DOCKER_IMAGE environment variable set, pointing to the image to test if you do not run them through breeze testing docker-compose-tests command.

The docker-compose tests are in docker-tests/ folder in the main repo.

Breeze helps with running Kubernetes tests in the same environment/way as CI tests are run. Breeze helps to setup KinD cluster for testing, setting up virtualenv and downloads the right tools automatically to run the tests.

You can:

  • Setup environment for k8s tests with breeze k8s setup-env
  • Manage KinD Kubernetes cluster and deploy Airflow to KinD cluster breeze k8s create-cluster, breeze k8s deploy-airflow, breeze k8s status, breeze k8s delete-cluster commands
  • Run Kubernetes tests specified with breeze k8s tests command
  • Enter the interactive kubernetes test environment with breeze k8s shell and breeze k8s k9s command
  • Run multi-cluster-operations breeze k8s list-all-clusters and breeze k8s delete-all-clusters commands as well as running complete tests in parallel via breeze k8s run-complete-tests and export logs from all clusters to a temp directory via breeze k8s dump-logs command

This is described in detail in Testing Kubernetes.

You can read more about KinD that we use in The documentation

Here is the detailed set of options for the breeze k8s command.

Breeze k8s

Kubernetes environment can be set with the breeze k8s setup-env command. It will create appropriate virtualenv to run tests and download the right set of tools to run the tests: kind, kubectl and helm in the right versions. You can re-run the command when you want to make sure the expected versions of the tools are installed properly in the virtualenv. The Virtualenv is available in .build/.k8s-env/bin subdirectory of your Airflow installation.

Breeze k8s setup-env

You can create kubernetes cluster (separate cluster for each python/kubernetes version) via breeze k8s create-cluster command. With --force flag the cluster will be deleted if exists. You can also use it to create multiple clusters in parallel with --run-in-parallel flag - this is what happens in our CI.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s create-cluster

You can delete current kubernetes cluster via breeze k8s delete-cluster command. You can also add --run-in-parallel flag to delete all clusters.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s delete-cluster

Before deploying Airflow Helm Chart, you need to make sure the appropriate Airflow image is build (it has embedded test dags, pod templates and webserver is configured to refresh immediately. This can be done via breeze k8s build-k8s-image command. It can also be done in parallel for all images via --run-in-parallel flag.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s build-k8s-image

The K8S airflow images need to be uploaded to the KinD cluster. This can be done via breeze k8s upload-k8s-image command. It can also be done in parallel for all images via --run-in-parallel flag.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s upload-k8s-image

In order to deploy Airflow, the cluster needs to be configured. Airflow namespace needs to be created and test resources should be deployed. By passing --run-in-parallel the configuration can be run for all clusters in parallel.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s configure-cluster

Airflow can be deployed to the Cluster with breeze k8s deploy-airflow. This step will automatically (unless disabled by switches) will rebuild the image to be deployed. It also uses the latest version of the Airflow Helm Chart to deploy it. You can also choose to upgrade existing airflow deployment and pass extra arguments to helm install or helm upgrade commands that are used to deploy airflow. By passing --run-in-parallel the deployment can be run for all clusters in parallel.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s deploy-airflow

You can delete kubernetes cluster and airflow deployed in the current cluster via breeze k8s status command. It can be also checked fora all clusters created so far by passing --all flag.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s status

You can run breeze k8s tests command to run pytest tests with your cluster. Those testa are placed in kubernetes_tests/ and you can either specify the tests to run as parameter of the tests command or you can leave them empty to run all tests. By passing --run-in-parallel the tests can be run for all clusters in parallel.

Run all tests:

Run selected tests:

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s tests

You can also specify any pytest flags as extra parameters - they will be passed to the shell command directly. In case the shell parameters are the same as the parameters of the command, you can pass them after --. For example this is the way how you can see all available parameters of the shell you have:

The options that are not overlapping with the tests command options can be passed directly and mixed with the specifications of tests you want to run. For example the command below will only run test_kubernetes_executor.py and will suppress capturing output from Pytest so that you can see the output during test execution.

You can have multiple clusters created - with different versions of Kubernetes and Python at the same time. Breeze enables you to interact with the chosen cluster by entering dedicated shell session that has the cluster pre-configured. This is done via breeze k8s shell command.

Once you are in the shell, the prompt will indicate which cluster you are interacting with as well as executor you use, similar to:

The shell automatically activates the virtual environment that has all appropriate dependencies installed and you can interactively run all k8s tests with pytest command (of course the cluster need to be created and airflow deployed to it before running the tests):

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s shell

You can also specify any shell flags and commands as extra parameters - they will be passed to the shell command directly. In case the shell parameters are the same as the parameters of the command, you can pass them after --. For example this is the way how you can see all available parameters of the shell you have:

The k9s is a fantastic tool that allows you to interact with running k8s cluster. Since we can have multiple clusters capability, breeze k8s k9s allows you to start k9s without setting it up or downloading - it uses k9s docker image to run it and connect it to the right cluster.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s k9s

You can also specify any k9s flags and commands as extra parameters - they will be passed to the k9s command directly. In case the k9s parameters are the same as the parameters of the command, you can pass them after --. For example this is the way how you can see all available parameters of the k9s you have:

KinD allows to export logs from the running cluster so that you can troubleshoot your deployment. This can be done with breeze k8s logs command. Logs can be also dumped fora all clusters created so far by passing --all flag.

All parameters of the command are here:

Breeze k8s logs

The image building is usually run for users automatically when needed, but sometimes Breeze users might want to manually build, pull or verify the CI images.

Breeze ci-image

For all development tasks, unit tests, integration tests, and static code checks, we use the CI image maintained in GitHub Container Registry.

The CI image is built automatically as needed, however it can be rebuilt manually with ci image build command.

Building the image first time pulls a pre-built version of images from the Docker Hub, which may take some time. But for subsequent source code changes, no wait time is expected. However, changes to sensitive files like setup.py or Dockerfile.ci will trigger a rebuild that may take more time though it is highly optimized to only rebuild what is needed.

Breeze has built in mechanism to check if your local image has not diverged too much from the latest image build on CI. This might happen when for example latest patches have been released as new Python images or when significant changes are made in the Dockerfile. In such cases, Breeze will download the latest images before rebuilding because this is usually faster than rebuilding the image.

Those are all available flags of ci-image build command:

Breeze ci-image build

You can also pull the CI images locally in parallel with optional verification.

Those are all available flags of pull command:

Breeze ci-image pull

Finally, you can verify CI image by running tests - either with the pulled/built images or with an arbitrary image.

Those are all available flags of verify command:

Breeze ci-image verify

Users can also build Production images when they are developing them. However when you want to use the PROD image, the regular docker build commands are recommended. See building the image

Breeze prod-image

The Production image is also maintained in GitHub Container Registry for Caching and in apache/airflow manually pushed for released versions. This Docker image (built using official Dockerfile) contains size-optimised Airflow installation with selected extras and dependencies.

However in many cases you want to add your own custom version of the image - with added apt dependencies, python dependencies, additional Airflow extras. Breeze's prod-image build command helps to build your own, customized variant of the image that contains everything you need.

You can building the production image manually by using prod-image build command. Note, that the images can also be built using docker build command by passing appropriate build-args as described in IMAGES.rst , but Breeze provides several flags that makes it easier to do it. You can see all the flags by running breeze prod-image build --help, but here typical examples are presented:

breeze prod-image build --additional-extras "jira"

This installs additional jira extra while installing airflow in the image.

breeze prod-image build --additional-python-deps "torchio==0.17.10"

This install additional pypi dependency - torchio in specified version.

breeze prod-image build --additional-dev-apt-deps "libasound2-dev" \
    --additional-runtime-apt-deps "libasound2"

This installs additional apt dependencies - libasound2-dev in the build image and libasound in the final image. Those are development dependencies that might be needed to build and use python packages added via the --additional-python-deps flag. The dev dependencies are not installed in the final production image, they are only installed in the build "segment" of the production image that is used as an intermediate step to build the final image. Usually names of the dev dependencies end with -dev suffix and they need to also be paired with corresponding runtime dependency added for the runtime image (without -dev).

breeze prod-image build --python 3.7 --additional-dev-deps "libasound2-dev" \
   --additional-runtime-apt-deps "libasound2"

Same as above but uses python 3.7.

Those are all available flags of build-prod-image command:

Breeze prod-image build

You can also pull PROD images in parallel with optional verification.

Those are all available flags of pull-prod-image command:

Breeze prod-image pull

Finally, you can verify PROD image by running tests - either with the pulled/built images or with an arbitrary image.

Those are all available flags of verify-prod-image command:

Breeze prod-image verify

Breeze has tools that you can use to configure defaults and breeze behaviours and perform some maintenance operations that might be necessary when you add new commands in Breeze. It also allows to configure your host operating system for Breeze autocompletion.

Those are all available flags of setup command:

Breeze setup

You can configure and inspect settings of Breeze command via this command: Python version, Backend used as well as backend versions.

Another part of configuration is enabling/disabling cheatsheet, asciiart. The cheatsheet and asciiart can be disabled - they are "nice looking" and cheatsheet contains useful information for first time users but eventually you might want to disable both if you find it repetitive and annoying.

With the config setting colour-blind-friendly communication for Breeze messages. By default we communicate with the users about information/errors/warnings/successes via colour-coded messages, but we can switch it off by passing --no-colour to config in which case the messages to the user printed by Breeze will be printed using different schemes (italic/bold/underline) to indicate different kind of messages rather than colours.

Those are all available flags of setup config command:

Breeze setup config

You get the auto-completion working when you re-enter the shell (follow the instructions printed). The command will warn you and not reinstall autocomplete if you already did, but you can also force reinstalling the autocomplete via:

breeze setup autocomplete --force

Those are all available flags of setup-autocomplete command:

Breeze setup autocomplete

You can display Breeze version and with --verbose flag it can provide more information: where Breeze is installed from and details about setup hashes.

Those are all available flags of version command:

Breeze version

You can self-upgrade breeze automatically. Those are all available flags of self-upgrade command:

Breeze setup self-upgrade

This documentation contains exported images with "help" of their commands and parameters. You can regenerate those images that need to be regenerated because their commands changed (usually after the breeze code has been changed) via regenerate-command-images command. Usually this is done automatically via pre-commit, but sometimes (for example when rich or rich-click library changes) you need to regenerate those images.

You can add --force flag (or FORCE="true" environment variable to regenerate all images (not only those that need regeneration). You can also run the command with --check-only flag to simply check if there are any images that need regeneration.

Breeze setup regenerate-command-images

Breeze hase a number of commands that are mostly used in CI environment to perform cleanup.

Breeze ci commands

Breeze requires certain resources to be available - disk, memory, CPU. When you enter Breeze's shell, the resources are checked and information if there is enough resources is displayed. However you can manually run resource check any time by breeze ci resource-check command.

Those are all available flags of resource-check command:

Breeze ci resource-check

When our CI runs a job, it needs all memory and disk it can have. We have a Breeze command that frees the memory and disk space used. You can also use it clear space locally but it performs a few operations that might be a bit invasive - such are removing swap file and complete pruning of docker disk space used.

Those are all available flags of free-space command:

Breeze ci free-space

On Linux, there is a problem with propagating ownership of created files (a known Docker problem). The files and directories created in the container are not owned by the host user (but by the root user in our case). This may prevent you from switching branches, for example, if files owned by the root user are created within your sources. In case you are on a Linux host and have some files in your sources created by the root user, you can fix the ownership of those files by running :

breeze ci fix-ownership

Those are all available flags of fix-ownership command:

Breeze ci fix-ownership

When our CI runs a job, it needs to decide which tests to run, whether to build images and how much the test should be run on multiple combinations of Python, Kubernetes, Backend versions. In order to optimize time needed to run the CI Builds. You can also use the tool to test what tests will be run when you provide a specific commit that Breeze should run the tests on.

More details about the algorithm used to pick the right tests can be found in Selective Checks.

Those are all available flags of selective-check command:

Breeze ci selective-check

When our CI runs a job, it might be within one of several workflows. Information about those workflows is stored in GITHUB_CONTEXT. Rather than using some jq/bash commands, we retrieve the necessary information (like PR labels, event_type, where the job runs on, job description and convert them into GA outputs.

Those are all available flags of get-workflow-info command:

Breeze ci get-workflow-info

When our CI runs a job, we automatically upgrade our dependencies in the main build. However, this might lead to conflicts and pip backtracking for a long time (possibly forever) for dependency resolution. Unfortunately those issues are difficult to diagnose so we had to invent our own tool to help us with diagnosing them. This tool is find-newer-dependencies and it works in the way that it helps to guess which new dependency might have caused the backtracking. The whole process is described in tracking backtracking issues.

Those are all available flags of find-newer-dependencies command:

Breeze ci find-newer-dependencies

Maintainers also can use Breeze for other purposes (those are commands that regular contributors likely do not need or have no access to run). Those are usually connected with releasing Airflow:

Breeze release management

Breeze can be used to prepare airflow packages - both "apache-airflow" main package and provider packages.

You can read more about testing provider packages in TESTING.rst

There are several commands that you can run in Breeze to manage and build packages:

  • preparing Provider documentation files
  • preparing Airflow packages
  • preparing Provider packages

Preparing provider documentation files is part of the release procedure by the release managers and it is described in detail in dev .

The below example perform documentation preparation for provider packages.

breeze release-management prepare-provider-documentation

By default, the documentation preparation runs package verification to check if all packages are importable, but you can add --skip-package-verification to skip it.

breeze release-management prepare-provider-documentation --skip-package-verification

You can also add --answer yes to perform non-interactive build.

Breeze prepare-provider-documentation

You can use Breeze to prepare provider packages.

The packages are prepared in dist folder. Note, that this command cleans up the dist folder before running, so you should run it before generating airflow package below as it will be removed.

The below example builds provider packages in the wheel format.

breeze release-management prepare-provider-packages

If you run this command without packages, you will prepare all packages, you can however specify providers that you would like to build. By default both types of packages are prepared ( wheel and sdist, but you can change it providing optional --package-format flag.

breeze release-management prepare-provider-packages google amazon

You can see all providers available by running this command:

breeze release-management prepare-provider-packages --help

Breeze prepare-provider-packages

Breeze can also be used to verify if provider classes are importable and if they are following the right naming conventions. This happens automatically on CI but you can also run it manually if you just prepared provider packages and they are present in dist folder.

breeze release-management verify-provider-packages

You can also run the verification with an earlier airflow version to check for compatibility.

breeze release-management verify-provider-packages --use-airflow-version 2.1.0

All the command parameters are here:

Breeze verify-provider-packages

You can prepare airflow packages using Breeze:

breeze release-management prepare-airflow-package

This prepares airflow .whl package in the dist folder.

Again, you can specify optional --package-format flag to build selected formats of airflow packages, default is to build both type of packages sdist and wheel.

breeze release-management prepare-airflow-package --package-format=wheel

Breeze release-management prepare-airflow-package

Whenever setup.py gets modified, the CI main job will re-generate constraint files. Those constraint files are stored in separated orphan branches: constraints-main, constraints-2-0.

Those are constraint files as described in detail in the CONTRIBUTING.rst#pinned-constraint-files contributing documentation.

You can use breeze release-management generate-constraints command to manually generate constraints for all or selected python version and single constraint mode like this:

Warning

In order to generate constraints, you need to build all images with --upgrade-to-newer-dependencies flag - for all python versions.

breeze release-management generate-constraints --airflow-constraints-mode constraints

Constraints are generated separately for each python version and there are separate constraints modes:

  • 'constraints' - those are constraints generated by matching the current airflow version from sources
    and providers that are installed from PyPI. Those are constraints used by the users who want to install airflow with pip.
  • "constraints-source-providers" - those are constraints generated by using providers installed from current sources. While adding new providers their dependencies might change, so this set of providers is the current set of the constraints for airflow and providers from the current main sources. Those providers are used by CI system to keep "stable" set of constraints.
  • "constraints-no-providers" - those are constraints generated from only Apache Airflow, without any providers. If you want to manage airflow separately and then add providers individually, you can use those.

Those are all available flags of generate-constraints command:

Breeze generate-constraints

In case someone modifies setup.py, the scheduled CI Tests automatically upgrades and pushes changes to the constraint files, however you can also perform test run of this locally using the procedure described in Refreshing CI Cache which utilises multiple processors on your local machine to generate such constraints faster.

This bumps the constraint files to latest versions and stores hash of setup.py. The generated constraint and setup.py hash files are stored in the files folder and while generating the constraints diff of changes vs the previous constraint files is printed.

The Production image can be released by release managers who have permissions to push the image. This happens only when there is an RC candidate or final version of Airflow released.

You release "regular" and "slim" images as separate steps.

Releasing "regular" images:

breeze release-management release-prod-images --airflow-version 2.4.0

Or "slim" images:

breeze release-management release-prod-images --airflow-version 2.4.0 --slim-images

By default when you are releasing the "final" image, we also tag image with "latest" tags but this step can be skipped if you pass the --skip-latest flag.

These are all of the available flags for the release-prod-images command:

Breeze release management release prod images

Breeze keeps data for all it's integration in named docker volumes. Each backend and integration keeps data in their own volume. Those volumes are persisted until breeze stop command. You can also preserve the volumes by adding flag --preserve-volumes when you run the command. Then, next time when you start Breeze, it will have the data pre-populated.

Those are all available flags of stop command:

Breeze stop

To shrink the Docker image, not all tools are pre-installed in the Docker image. But we have made sure that there is an easy process to install additional tools.

Additional tools are installed in /files/bin. This path is added to $PATH, so your shell will automatically autocomplete files that are in that directory. You can also keep the binaries for your tools in this directory if you need to.

Installation scripts

For the development convenience, we have also provided installation scripts for commonly used tools. They are installed to /files/opt/, so they are preserved after restarting the Breeze environment. Each script is also available in $PATH, so just type install_<TAB> to get a list of tools.

Currently available scripts:

When Breeze starts, it can start additional integrations. Those are additional docker containers that are started in the same docker-compose command. Those are required by some of the tests as described in TESTING.rst#airflow-integration-tests.

By default Breeze starts only airflow container without any integration enabled. If you selected postgres or mysql backend, the container for the selected backend is also started (but only the one that is selected). You can start the additional integrations by passing --integration flag with appropriate integration name when starting Breeze. You can specify several --integration flags to start more than one integration at a time. Finally you can specify --integration all to start all integrations.

Once integration is started, it will continue to run until the environment is stopped with breeze stop command. or restarted via breeze restart command

Note that running integrations uses significant resources - CPU and memory.

You can set up your host IDE (for example, IntelliJ's PyCharm/Idea) to work with Breeze and benefit from all the features provided by your IDE, such as local and remote debugging, language auto-completion, documentation support, etc.

To use your host IDE with Breeze:

  1. Create a local virtual environment:

    You can use any of the following wrappers to create and manage your virtual environments: pyenv, pyenv-virtualenv, or virtualenvwrapper.

  2. Use the right command to activate the virtualenv (workon if you use virtualenvwrapper or pyenv activate if you use pyenv.

  3. Initialize the created local virtualenv:

./scripts/tools/initialize_virtualenv.py

Warning

Make sure that you use the right Python version in this command - matching the Python version you have in your local virtualenv. If you don't, you will get strange conflicts.

  1. Select the virtualenv you created as the project's default virtualenv in your IDE.

Note that you can also use the local virtualenv for Airflow development without Breeze. This is a lightweight solution that has its own limitations.

More details on using the local virtualenv are available in the LOCAL_VIRTUALENV.rst.

When you are in the CI container, the following directories are used:

/opt/airflow - Contains sources of Airflow mounted from the host (AIRFLOW_SOURCES).
/root/airflow - Contains all the "dynamic" Airflow files (AIRFLOW_HOME), such as:
    airflow.db - sqlite database in case sqlite is used;
    dags - folder with non-test dags (test dags are in /opt/airflow/tests/dags);
    logs - logs from Airflow executions;
    unittest.cfg - unit test configuration generated when entering the environment;
    webserver_config.py - webserver configuration generated when running Airflow in the container.

Note that when running in your local environment, the /root/airflow/logs folder is actually mounted from your logs directory in the Airflow sources, so all logs created in the container are automatically visible in the host as well. Every time you enter the container, the logs directory is cleaned so that logs do not accumulate.

When you are in the production container, the following directories are used:

/opt/airflow - Contains sources of Airflow mounted from the host (AIRFLOW_SOURCES).
/root/airflow - Contains all the "dynamic" Airflow files (AIRFLOW_HOME), such as:
    airflow.db - sqlite database in case sqlite is used;
    dags - folder with non-test dags (test dags are in /opt/airflow/tests/dags);
    logs - logs from Airflow executions;
    unittest.cfg - unit test configuration generated when entering the environment;
    webserver_config.py - webserver configuration generated when running Airflow in the container.

Note that when running in your local environment, the /root/airflow/logs folder is actually mounted from your logs directory in the Airflow sources, so all logs created in the container are automatically visible in the host as well. Every time you enter the container, the logs directory is cleaned so that logs do not accumulate.

Sometimes during the build, you are asked whether to perform an action, skip it, or quit. This happens when rebuilding or removing an image and in few other cases - actions that take a lot of time or could be potentially destructive. You can force answer to the questions by providing an --answer flag in the commands that support it.

For automation scripts, you can export the ANSWER variable (and set it to y, n, q, yes, no, quit - in all case combinations).

export ANSWER="yes"

Important sources of Airflow are mounted inside the airflow container that you enter. This means that you can continue editing your changes on the host in your favourite IDE and have them visible in the Docker immediately and ready to test without rebuilding images. You can disable mounting by specifying --skip-mounting-local-sources flag when running Breeze. In this case you will have sources embedded in the container and changes to these sources will not be persistent.

After you run Breeze for the first time, you will have empty directory files in your source code, which will be mapped to /files in your Docker container. You can pass there any files you need to configure and run Docker. They will not be removed between Docker runs.

By default /files/dags folder is mounted from your local <AIRFLOW_SOURCES>/files/dags and this is the directory used by airflow scheduler and webserver to scan dags for. You can use it to test your dags from local sources in Airflow. If you wish to add local DAGs that can be run by Breeze.

When you run Airflow Breeze, the following ports are automatically forwarded:

  • 12322 -> forwarded to Airflow ssh server -> airflow:22
  • 28080 -> forwarded to Airflow webserver -> airflow:8080
  • 25555 -> forwarded to Flower dashboard -> airflow:5555
  • 25433 -> forwarded to Postgres database -> postgres:5432
  • 23306 -> forwarded to MySQL database -> mysql:3306
  • 21433 -> forwarded to MSSQL database -> mssql:1443
  • 26379 -> forwarded to Redis broker -> redis:6379

You can connect to these ports/databases using:

  • ssh connection for remote debugging: ssh -p 12322 [email protected] pw: airflow
  • Webserver: http://127.0.0.1:28080
  • Flower: http://127.0.0.1:25555
  • Postgres: jdbc:postgresql://127.0.0.1:25433/airflow?user=postgres&password=airflow
  • Mysql: jdbc:mysql://127.0.0.1:23306/airflow?user=root
  • MSSQL: jdbc:sqlserver://127.0.0.1:21433;databaseName=airflow;user=sa;password=Airflow123
  • Redis: redis://127.0.0.1:26379/0

If you do not use start-airflow command, you can start the webserver manually with the airflow webserver command if you want to run it. You can use tmux to multiply terminals. You may need to create a user prior to running the webserver in order to log in. This can be done with the following command:

airflow users create --role Admin --username admin --password admin --email [email protected] --firstname foo --lastname bar

For databases, you need to run airflow db reset at least once (or run some tests) after you started Airflow Breeze to get the database/tables created. You can connect to databases with IDE or any other database client:

Airflow Breeze - Database view

You can change the used host port numbers by setting appropriate environment variables:

  • SSH_PORT
  • WEBSERVER_HOST_PORT
  • POSTGRES_HOST_PORT
  • MYSQL_HOST_PORT
  • MSSQL_HOST_PORT
  • FLOWER_HOST_PORT
  • REDIS_HOST_PORT

If you set these variables, next time when you enter the environment the new ports should be in effect.

If you need to change apt dependencies in the Dockerfile.ci, add Python packages in setup.py for airflow and in provider.yaml for packages. If you add any "node" dependencies in airflow/www , you need to compile them in the host with breeze compile-www-assets command.

You can add dependencies to the Dockerfile.ci, setup.py. After you exit the container and re-run breeze, Breeze detects changes in dependencies, asks you to confirm rebuilding the image and proceeds with rebuilding if you confirm (or skip it if you do not confirm). After rebuilding is done, Breeze drops you to shell. You may also use the build command to only rebuild CI image and not to go into shell.

During development, changing dependencies in apt-get closer to the top of the Dockerfile.ci invalidates cache for most of the image. It takes long time for Breeze to rebuild the image. So, it is a recommended practice to add new dependencies initially closer to the end of the Dockerfile.ci. This way dependencies will be added incrementally.

Before merge, these dependencies should be moved to the appropriate apt-get install command, which is already in the Dockerfile.ci.

Breeze uses built-in capability of rich to record and print the command help as an svg file. It's enabled by setting RECORD_BREEZE_OUTPUT_FILE to a file name where it will be recorded. By default it records the screenshots with default characters width and with "Breeze screenshot" title, but you can override it with RECORD_BREEZE_WIDTH and RECORD_BREEZE_TITLE variables respectively.

Breeze was installed with pipx, with pipx list, you can list the installed packages. Once you have the name of breeze package you can proceed to uninstall it.

pipx list

This will also remove breeze from the folder: ${HOME}.local/bin/

pipx uninstall apache-airflow-breeze