A framework for writing Airbyte Connectors.
Project description
Connector Development Kit (Python)
The Airbyte Python CDK is a framework for rapidly developing production-grade Airbyte connectors. The CDK currently offers helpers specific for creating Airbyte source connectors for:
- HTTP APIs (REST APIs, GraphQL, etc..)
- Singer Taps
- Generic Python sources (anything not covered by the above)
The CDK provides an improved developer experience by providing basic implementation structure and abstracting away low-level glue boilerplate.
This document is a general introduction to the CDK. Readers should have basic familiarity with the Airbyte Specification before proceeding.
Getting Started
Generate an empty connector using the code generator. First clone the Airbyte repository then from the repository root run
cd airbyte-integrations/connector-templates/generator
./generate.sh
then follow the interactive prompt. Next, find all TODO
s in the generated project directory -- they're accompanied by lots of comments explaining what you'll need to do in order to implement your connector. Upon completing all TODOs properly, you should have a functioning connector.
Additionally, you can follow this tutorial for a complete walkthrough of creating an HTTP connector using the Airbyte CDK.
Concepts & Documentation
See the concepts docs for a tour through what the API offers.
Example Connectors
HTTP Connectors:
Singer connectors:
Simple Python connectors using the barebones Source
abstraction:
Contributing
First time setup
We assume python
points to python >=3.8.
Setup a virtual env:
python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -e ".[dev]" # [dev] installs development-only dependencies
Iteration
- Iterate on the code locally
- Run tests via
python -m pytest -s unit_tests
- Perform static type checks using
mypy airbyte_cdk
.MyPy
configuration is in.mypy.ini
. - The
type_check_and_test.sh
script bundles both type checking and testing in one convenient command. Feel free to use it!
Autogenerated files
If the iteration you are working on includes changes to the models, you might want to regenerate them. In order to do that, you can run:
SUB_BUILD=CDK ./gradlew format
This will generate the files based on the schemas, add the license information and format the code. If you want to only do the former and rely on
pre-commit to the others, you can run the appropriate generation command i.e. ./gradlew generateComponentManifestClassFiles
.
Testing
All tests are located in the unit_tests
directory. Run python -m pytest --cov=airbyte_cdk unit_tests/
to run them. This also presents a test coverage report.
Building and testing a connector with your local CDK
When developing a new feature in the CDK, you may find it helpful to run a connector that uses that new feature. You can test this in one of two ways:
- Running a connector locally
- Building and running a source via Docker
Installing your local CDK into a local Python connector
In order to get a local Python connector running your local CDK, do the following.
First, make sure you have your connector's virtual environment active:
# from the `airbyte/airbyte-integrations/connectors/<connector-directory>` directory
source .venv/bin/activate
# if you haven't installed dependencies for your connector already
pip install -e .
Then, navigate to the CDK and install it in editable mode:
cd ../../../airbyte-cdk/python
pip install -e .
You should see that pip
has uninstalled the version of airbyte-cdk
defined by your connector's setup.py
and installed your local CDK. Any changes you make will be immediately reflected in your editor, so long as your editor's interpreter is set to your connector's virtual environment.
Building a Python connector in Docker with your local CDK installed
You can build your connector image with the local CDK using
# from the airbytehq/airbyte base directory
CONNECTOR_TAG=<TAG_NAME> CONNECTOR_NAME=<CONNECTOR_NAME> sh airbyte-integrations/scripts/build-connector-image-with-local-cdk.sh
Note that the local CDK is injected at build time, so if you make changes, you will have to run the build command again to see them reflected.
Running Connector Acceptance Tests for a single connector in Docker with your local CDK installed
To run acceptance tests for a single connectors using the local CDK, from the connector directory, run
LOCAL_CDK=1 sh acceptance-test-docker.sh
To additionally fetch secrets required by CATs, set the FETCH_SECRETS
environment variable. This requires you to have a Google Service Account, and the GCP_GSM_CREDENTIALS environment variable to be set, per the instructions here.
Running Connector Acceptance Tests for multiple connectors in Docker with your local CDK installed
To run acceptance tests for multiple connectors using the local CDK, from the root of the airbyte
repo, run
./airbyte-cdk/python/bin/run-cats-with-local-cdk.sh -c <connector1>,<connector2>,...
Publishing a new version to PyPi
- Open a PR
- Once it is approved and merged, an Airbyte member must run the
Publish CDK Manually
workflow from master usingrelease-type=major|manor|patch
and setting the changelog message.
Coming Soon
- Full OAuth 2.0 support (including refresh token issuing flow via UI or CLI)
- Airbyte Java HTTP CDK
- CDK for Async HTTP endpoints (request-poll-wait style endpoints)
- CDK for other protocols
- Don't see a feature you need? Create an issue and let us know how we can help!
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