This file documents any backwards-incompatible changes in Airflow and assists people when migrating to a new version.
We now rely on more strict ANSI SQL settings for MySQL in order to have sane defaults. Make sure
to have specified explicit_defaults_for_timestamp=1
in your my.cnf under [mysqld]
To make the config of Airflow compatible with Celery, some properties have been renamed:
celeryd_concurrency -> worker_concurrency
celery_result_backend -> result_backend
This will result in the same config parameters as Celery 4 and will make it more transparent.
Dataflow job labeling is now supported in Dataflow{Java,Python}Operator with a default "airflow-version" label, please upgrade your google-cloud-dataflow or apache-beam version to 2.2.0 or greater.
SSH Hook now uses Paramiko library to create ssh client connection, instead of sub-process based ssh command execution previously (<1.9.0), so this is backward incompatible.
- update SSHHook constructor
- use SSHOperator class in place of SSHExecuteOperator which is removed now. Refer test_ssh_operator.py for usage info.
- SFTPOperator is added to perform secure file transfer from serverA to serverB. Refer test_sftp_operator.py.py for usage info.
- No updates are required if you are using ftpHook, it will continue work as is.
The airflow.hooks.S3_hook.S3Hook has been switched to use boto3 instead of the older boto (a.k.a. boto2). This result in a few backwards incompatible changes to the following classes: S3Hook:
- the constructors no longer accepts
s3_conn_id
. It is now calledaws_conn_id
. - the default conneciton is now "aws_default" instead of "s3_default"
- the return type of objects returned by
get_bucket
is now boto3.s3.Bucket - the return type of
get_key
, andget_wildcard_key
is now an boto3.S3.Object.
If you are using any of these in your DAGs and specify a connection ID you will need to update the parameter name for the connection to "aws_conn_id": S3ToHiveTransfer, S3PrefixSensor, S3KeySensor, RedshiftToS3Transfer.
The logging structure of Airflow has been rewritten to make configuration easier and the logging system more transparent.
A logger is the entry point into the logging system. Each logger is a named bucket to which messages can be written for processing. A logger is configured to have a log level. This log level describes the severity of the messages that the logger will handle. Python defines the following log levels: DEBUG, INFO, WARNING, ERROR or CRITICAL.
Each message that is written to the logger is a Log Record. Each log record also has a log level indicating the severity of that specific message. A log record can also contain useful metadata that describes the event that is being logged. This can include details such as a stack trace or an error code.
When a message is given to the logger, the log level of the message is compared to the log level of the logger. If the log level of the message meets or exceeds the log level of the logger itself, the message will undergo further processing. If it doesn’t, the message will be ignored.
Once a logger has determined that a message needs to be processed, it is passed to a Handler. This configuration is now more flexible and can be easily be maintained in a single file.
Airflow's logging mechanism has been refactored to uses Python’s builtin logging
module to perform logging of the application. By extending classes with the existing LoggingMixin
, all the logging will go through a central logger. Also the BaseHook
and BaseOperator
already extends this class, so it is easily available to do logging.
The main benefit is easier configuration of the logging by setting a single centralized python file. Disclaimer; there is still some inline configuration, but this will be removed eventually. The new logging class is defined by setting the dotted classpath in your ~/airflow/airflow.cfg
file:
# Logging class
# Specify the class that will specify the logging configuration
# This class has to be on the python classpath
logging_config_class = my.path.default_local_settings.LOGGING_CONFIG
The logging configuration file needs to be on the PYTHONPATH
, for example $AIRFLOW_HOME/config
. This directory is loaded by default. Of course you are free to add any directory to the PYTHONPATH
, this might be handy when you have the config in another directory or you mount a volume in case of Docker.
You can take the config from airflow/config_templates/airflow_local_settings.py
as a starting point. Copy the contents to ${AIRFLOW_HOME}/config/airflow_local_settings.py
, and alter the config as you like.
If you want to customize the logging (for example, use logging rotate), you can do this by defining one or more of the logging handles that Python has to offer. For more details about the Python logging, please refer to the official logging documentation.
Furthermore, this change also simplifies logging within the DAG itself:
root@ae1bc863e815:/airflow# python
Python 3.6.2 (default, Sep 13 2017, 14:26:54)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from airflow.settings import *
>>>
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> from airflow import DAG
>>> from airflow.operators.dummy_operator import DummyOperator
>>>
>>> dag = DAG('simple_dag', start_date=datetime(2017, 9, 1))
>>>
>>> task = DummyOperator(task_id='task_1', dag=dag)
>>>
>>> task.log.error('I want to say something..')
[2017-09-25 20:17:04,927] {<stdin>:1} ERROR - I want to say something..
The file_task_handler
logger is more flexible. You can change the default format, {dag_id}/{task_id}/{execution_date}/{try_number}.log
by supplying Jinja templating in the FILENAME_TEMPLATE
configuration variable. See the file_task_handler
for more information.
If you are logging to Google cloud storage, please see the Google cloud platform documentation for logging instructions.
If you are using S3, the instructions should be largely the same as the Google cloud platform instructions above. You will need a custom logging config. The REMOTE_BASE_LOG_FOLDER
configuration key in your airflow config has been removed, therefore you will need to take the following steps:
- Copy the logging configuration from
airflow/config_templates/airflow_logging_settings.py
and copy it. - Place it in a directory inside the Python import path
PYTHONPATH
. If you are using Python 2.7, ensuring that any__init__.py
files exist so that it is importable. - Update the config by setting the path of
REMOTE_BASE_LOG_FOLDER
explicitly in the config. TheREMOTE_BASE_LOG_FOLDER
key is not used anymore. - Set the
logging_config_class
to the filename and dict. For example, if you placecustom_logging_config.py
on the base of your pythonpath, you will need to setlogging_config_class = custom_logging_config.LOGGING_CONFIG
in your config as Airflow 1.8.
A new DaskExecutor allows Airflow tasks to be run in Dask Distributed clusters.
These features are marked for deprecation. They may still work (and raise a DeprecationWarning
), but are no longer
supported and will be removed entirely in Airflow 2.0
-
If you're using the
google_cloud_conn_id
ordataproc_cluster
argument names explicitly incontrib.operators.Dataproc{*}Operator
(s), be sure to rename them togcp_conn_id
orcluster_name
, respectively. We've renamed these arguments for consistency. (AIRFLOW-1323) -
post_execute()
hooks now take two arguments,context
andresult
(AIRFLOW-886)Previously, post_execute() only took one argument,
context
. -
contrib.hooks.gcp_dataflow_hook.DataFlowHook
starts to use--runner=DataflowRunner
instead ofDataflowPipelineRunner
, which is removed from the packagegoogle-cloud-dataflow-0.6.0
. -
The pickle type for XCom messages has been replaced by json to prevent RCE attacks. Note that JSON serialization is stricter than pickling, so if you want to e.g. pass raw bytes through XCom you must encode them using an encoding like base64. By default pickling is still enabled until Airflow 2.0. To disable it Set enable_xcom_pickling = False in your Airflow config.
The Airflow package name was changed from airflow
to apache-airflow
during this release. You must uninstall your
previously installed version of Airflow before installing 1.8.1.
The database schema needs to be upgraded. Make sure to shutdown Airflow and make a backup of your database. To
upgrade the schema issue airflow upgradedb
.
Systemd unit files have been updated. If you use systemd please make sure to update these.
Please note that the webserver does not detach properly, this will be fixed in a future version.
Airflow 1.7.1 has issues with being able to over subscribe to a pool, ie. more slots could be used than were available. This is fixed in Airflow 1.8.0, but due to past issue jobs may fail to start although their dependencies are met after an upgrade. To workaround either temporarily increase the amount of slots above the the amount of queued tasks or use a new pool.
Using a dynamic start_date (e.g. start_date = datetime.now()
) is not considered a best practice. The 1.8.0 scheduler
is less forgiving in this area. If you encounter DAGs not being scheduled you can try using a fixed start_date and
renaming your dag. The last step is required to make sure you start with a clean slate, otherwise the old schedule can
interfere.
Please read through these options, defaults have changed since 1.7.1.
In order the increase the robustness of the scheduler, DAGS our now processed in their own process. Therefore each
DAG has its own log file for the scheduler. These are placed in child_process_log_directory
which defaults to
<AIRFLOW_HOME>/scheduler/latest
. You will need to make sure these log files are removed.
DAG logs or processor logs ignore and command line settings for log file locations.
Previously the command line option num_runs
was used to let the scheduler terminate after a certain amount of
loops. This is now time bound and defaults to -1
, which means run continuously. See also num_runs.
Previously num_runs
was used to let the scheduler terminate after a certain amount of loops. Now num_runs specifies
the number of times to try to schedule each DAG file within run_duration
time. Defaults to -1
, which means try
indefinitely. This is only available on the command line.
After how much time should an updated DAG be picked up from the filesystem.
How often the scheduler should relist the contents of the DAG directory. If you experience that while developing your dags are not being picked up, have a look at this number and decrease it when necessary.
By default the scheduler will fill any missing interval DAG Runs between the last execution date and the current date.
This setting changes that behavior to only execute the latest interval. This can also be specified per DAG as
catchup = False / True
. Command line backfills will still work.
Due to changes in the way Airflow processes DAGs the Web UI does not show an error when processing a faulty DAG. To
find processing errors go the child_process_log_directory
which defaults to <AIRFLOW_HOME>/scheduler/latest
.
Previously, new DAGs would be scheduled immediately. To retain the old behavior, add this to airflow.cfg:
[core]
dags_are_paused_at_creation = False
If you specify a hive conf to the run_cli command of the HiveHook, Airflow add some convenience variables to the config. In case your run a sceure Hadoop setup it might be required to whitelist these variables by adding the following to your configuration:
<property>
<name>hive.security.authorization.sqlstd.confwhitelist.append</name>
<value>airflow\.ctx\..*</value>
</property>
All Google Cloud Operators and Hooks are aligned and use the same client library. Now you have a single connection type for all kinds of Google Cloud Operators.
If you experience problems connecting with your operator make sure you set the connection type "Google Cloud Platform".
Also the old P12 key file type is not supported anymore and only the new JSON key files are supported as a service account.
These features are marked for deprecation. They may still work (and raise a DeprecationWarning
), but are no longer
supported and will be removed entirely in Airflow 2.0
-
Hooks and operators must be imported from their respective submodules
airflow.operators.PigOperator
is no longer supported;from airflow.operators.pig_operator import PigOperator
is. (AIRFLOW-31, AIRFLOW-200) -
Operators no longer accept arbitrary arguments
Previously,
Operator.__init__()
accepted any arguments (either positional*args
or keyword**kwargs
) without complaint. Now, invalid arguments will be rejected. (apache#1285) -
The config value secure_mode will default to True which will disable some insecure endpoints/features
There is a report that the default of "-1" for num_runs creates an issue where errors are reported while parsing tasks.
It was not confirmed, but a workaround was found by changing the default back to None
.
To do this edit cli.py
, find the following:
'num_runs': Arg(
("-n", "--num_runs"),
default=-1, type=int,
help="Set the number of runs to execute before exiting"),
and change default=-1
to default=None
. Please report on the mailing list if you have this issue.
To continue using the default smtp email backend, change the email_backend line in your config file from:
[email]
email_backend = airflow.utils.send_email_smtp
to:
[email]
email_backend = airflow.utils.email.send_email_smtp
To continue using S3 logging, update your config file so:
s3_log_folder = s3://my-airflow-log-bucket/logs
becomes:
remote_base_log_folder = s3://my-airflow-log-bucket/logs
remote_log_conn_id = <your desired s3 connection>