--- title: Run the ingestion from GCS Composer slug: /deployment/ingestion/external/gcs-composer collate: false --- {% partial file="/v1.7/deployment/external-ingestion.md" /%} # Run the ingestion from GCS Composer ## Requirements This approach has been last tested against: - Composer version 2.5.4 - Airflow version 2.6.3 It also requires the ingestion package to be at least `openmetadata-ingestion==1.3.1.0`. ## Using the Python Operator The most comfortable way to run the metadata workflows from GCS Composer is directly via a `PythonOperator`. Note that it will require you to install the packages and plugins directly on the host. ### Install the Requirements In your environment you will need to install the following packages: - `openmetadata-ingestion[]==x.y.z`. - `sqlalchemy==1.4.27`: This is needed to align OpenMetadata version with the Composer internal requirements. Where `x.y.z` is the version of the OpenMetadata ingestion package. Note that the version needs to match the server version. If we are using the server at 1.1.0, then the ingestion package needs to also be 1.1.0. The plugin parameter is a list of the sources that we want to ingest. An example would look like this `openmetadata-ingestion[mysql,snowflake,s3]==1.1.0`. ### Prepare the DAG! Note that this DAG is a usual connector DAG, just using the Airflow service with the `Backend` connection. As an example of a DAG pushing data to OpenMetadata under Google SSO, we could have: ```python from datetime import timedelta import yaml from airflow import DAG try: from airflow.operators.python import PythonOperator except ModuleNotFoundError: from airflow.operators.python_operator import PythonOperator from airflow.utils.dates import days_ago from metadata.workflow.metadata import MetadataWorkflow default_args = { "owner": "user_name", "email": ["username@org.com"], "email_on_failure": False, "retries": 3, "retry_delay": timedelta(minutes=5), "execution_timeout": timedelta(minutes=60), } CONFIG = """ ... """ def metadata_ingestion_workflow(): workflow_config = yaml.safe_load(CONFIG) workflow = MetadataWorkflow.create(workflow_config) workflow.execute() workflow.raise_from_status() workflow.print_status() workflow.stop() with DAG( "airflow_metadata_extraction", default_args=default_args, description="An example DAG which pushes Airflow data to OM", start_date=days_ago(1), is_paused_upon_creation=True, schedule_interval="*/5 * * * *", catchup=False, ) as dag: ingest_task = PythonOperator( task_id="ingest_using_recipe", python_callable=metadata_ingestion_workflow, ) ``` {% partial file="/v1.7/deployment/run-connectors-class.md" /%} ## Using the Kubernetes Pod Operator In this second approach we won't need to install absolutely anything to the GCS Composer environment. Instead, we will rely on the `KubernetesPodOperator` to use the underlying k8s cluster of Composer. Then, the code won't directly run using the hosts' environment, but rather inside a container that we created with only the `openmetadata-ingestion` package. **Note:** This approach only has the `openmetadata/ingestion-base` ready from version 0.12.1 or higher! ### Prepare the DAG! ```python from datetime import datetime from airflow import models from airflow.providers.cncf.kubernetes.operators.kubernetes_pod import KubernetesPodOperator CONFIG = """ ... """ with models.DAG( "ingestion-k8s-operator", schedule_interval="@once", start_date=datetime(2021, 1, 1), catchup=False, tags=["OpenMetadata"], ) as dag: KubernetesPodOperator( task_id="ingest", name="ingest", cmds=["python", "main.py"], image="openmetadata/ingestion-base:0.13.2", namespace='default', env_vars={"config": CONFIG, "pipelineType": "metadata"}, dag=dag, ) ``` Some remarks on this example code: #### Kubernetes Pod Operator You can name the task as you want (`task_id` and `name`). The important points here are the `cmds`, this should not be changed, and the `env_vars`. The `main.py` script that gets shipped within the image will load the env vars as they are shown, so only modify the content of the config YAML, but not this dictionary. Note that the example uses the image `openmetadata/ingestion-base:0.13.2`. Update that accordingly for higher version once they are released. Also, the image version should be aligned with your OpenMetadata server version to avoid incompatibilities. ```python KubernetesPodOperator( task_id="ingest", name="ingest", cmds=["python", "main.py"], image="openmetadata/ingestion-base:0.13.2", namespace='default', env_vars={"config": config, "pipelineType": "metadata"}, dag=dag, ) ``` You can find more information about the `KubernetesPodOperator` and how to tune its configurations [here](https://cloud.google.com/composer/docs/how-to/using/using-kubernetes-pod-operator). Note that depending on the kind of workflow you will be deploying, the YAML configuration will need to updated following the official OpenMetadata docs, and the value of the `pipelineType` configuration will need to hold one of the following values: - `metadata` - `usage` - `lineage` - `profiler` - `TestSuite` Which are based on the `PipelineType` [JSON Schema definitions](https://github.com/open-metadata/OpenMetadata/blob/main/openmetadata-spec/src/main/resources/json/schema/entity/services/ingestionPipelines/ingestionPipeline.json#L14)