Skip to main content

Camunda External Task Client for Python 3

Project description

camunda-external-task-client-python3

camunda-external-task-client-python3

This repository contains Camunda External Task Client written in Python3.

Implement your BPMN Service Task in Python3.

Python >= 3.7 is required

Installing

Add following line to requirements.txt of your Python project.

git+https://github.com/trustfactors/camunda-external-task-client-python3.git/#egg=camunda-external-task-client-python3

Or use pip to install as shown below:

pip install camunda-external-task-client-python3

Running Camunda with Docker

To run the examples provided in examples folder, you need to have Camunda running locally or somewhere.

To run Camunda locally with Postgres DB as backend, you can use docker-compose.yml file.

$> docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up

Usage

  1. Make sure to have Camunda running.
  2. Create a simple process model with an External Service Task and define the topic as 'topicName'.
  3. Deploy the process to the Camunda BPM engine.
  4. In your Python code:
import time
from camunda.external_task.external_task import ExternalTask, TaskResult
from camunda.external_task.external_task_worker import ExternalTaskWorker

# configuration for the Client
default_config = {
    "maxTasks": 1,
    "lockDuration": 10000,
    "asyncResponseTimeout": 5000,
    "retries": 3,
    "retryTimeout": 5000,
    "sleepSeconds": 30
}

def handle_task(task: ExternalTask) -> TaskResult:
    """
    This task handler you need to implement with your business logic.
    After completion of business logic call either task.complete() or task.failure() or task.bpmn_error() 
    to report status of task to Camunda
    """
    # add your business logic here
    # ...

    # mark task either complete/failure/bpmnError based on outcome of your business logic
    failure, bpmn_error = random_true(), random_true() # this code simulate random failure
    if failure:
        # this marks task as failed in Camunda
        return task.failure(error_message="task failed",  error_details="failed task details", 
                            max_retries=3, retry_timeout=5000)
    elif bpmn_error:
        return task.bpmn_error(error_code="BPMN_ERROR_CODE", error_message="BPMN Error occurred", 
                                variables={"var1": "value1", "success": False})

    # pass any output variables you may want to send to Camunda as dictionary to complete()
    return task.complete({"var1": 1, "var2": "value"}) 

def random_true():
    current_milli_time = int(round(time.time() * 1000))
    return current_milli_time % 2 == 0

if __name__ == '__main__':
   ExternalTaskWorker(worker_id="1", config=default_config).subscribe("topicName", handle_task)

About External Tasks

External Tasks are service tasks whose execution differs particularly from the execution of other service tasks (e.g. Human Tasks). The execution works in a way that units of work are polled from the engine before being completed.

camunda-external-task-client-python allows you to create easily such client in Python3.

Features

Start process

Camunda provides functionality to start a process instance for a given process definition.

To start a process instance, we can use start_process() from engine_client.py

You can find an usage example here.

client = EngineClient()
resp_json = client.start_process(process_key="PARALLEL_STEPS_EXAMPLE", variables={"intVar": "1", "strVar": "hello"},
                                 tenant_id="6172cdf0-7b32-4460-9da0-ded5107aa977", business_key=str(uuid.uuid1()))

Fetch and Lock

ExternalTaskWorker(worker_id="1").subscribe("topicName", handle_task) starts long polling of the Camunda engine for external tasks.

  • Polling tasks from the engine works by performing a fetch & lock operation of tasks that have subscriptions. It then calls the handler function passed to subscribe() function. i.e. handle_task in above example.
  • Long Polling is done periodically based on the asyncResponseTimeout configuration. Read more about Long Polling.

Complete

from camunda.external_task.external_task import ExternalTask, TaskResult
from camunda.external_task.external_task_worker import ExternalTaskWorker
def handle_task(task: ExternalTask) -> TaskResult:
    # add your business logic here

    # Complete the task
    # pass any output variables you may want to send to Camunda as dictionary to complete()
    return task.complete({"var1": 1, "var2": "value"})

ExternalTaskWorker(worker_id="1").subscribe("topicName", handle_task)

Handle Failure

from camunda.external_task.external_task import ExternalTask, TaskResult
from camunda.external_task.external_task_worker import ExternalTaskWorker
def handle_task(task: ExternalTask) -> TaskResult:
    # add your business logic here

    # Handle task Failure
    return task.failure(error_message="task failed",  error_details="failed task details", 
                        max_retries=3, retry_timeout=5000)
    # This client/worker uses max_retries if no retries are previously set in the task
    # if retries are previously set then it just decrements that count by one before reporting failure to Camunda
    # when retries are zero, Camunda creates an incident which then manually needs to be looked into on Camunda Cockpit            

ExternalTaskWorker(worker_id="1").subscribe("topicName", handle_task)

Handle BPMN Error

from camunda.external_task.external_task import ExternalTask, TaskResult
from camunda.external_task.external_task_worker import ExternalTaskWorker
def handle_task(task: ExternalTask) -> TaskResult:
    # add your business logic here

    # Handle a BPMN Failure
    return task.bpmn_error(error_code="BPMN_ERROR", error_message="BPMN error occurred")

ExternalTaskWorker(worker_id="1" ).subscribe("topicName", handle_task)

Access Process Variables

from camunda.external_task.external_task import ExternalTask, TaskResult
from camunda.external_task.external_task_worker import ExternalTaskWorker
def handle_task(task: ExternalTask) -> TaskResult:
    # add your business logic here
    # get the process variable 'score'
    score = task.get_variable("score")
    if int(score) >= 100:
        return task.complete(...)
    else:
        return task.failure(...)        

ExternalTaskWorker().subscribe("topicName", handle_task)

Correlate message

Camunda provides functionality to send a message event to a running process instance.

You can read more about the message events here: https://docs.camunda.org/manual/7.13/reference/bpmn20/events/message-events/

In our to send a message event to a process instance, a new function called correlate_message() is added to engine_client.py

We can correlate the message by:

  • process_instance_id
  • tenant_id
  • business_key
  • process_variables

You can find an usage example here.

client = EngineClient()
resp_json = client.correlate_message("CANCEL_MESSAGE", business_key="b4a6f392-12ab-11eb-80ef-acde48001122")

License

The source files in this repository are made available under the Apache License Version 2.0.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

camunda-external-task-client-python3-4.0.0.tar.gz (18.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

File details

Details for the file camunda-external-task-client-python3-4.0.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: camunda-external-task-client-python3-4.0.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 18.5 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.1.1 importlib_metadata/3.10.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.25.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.46.0 CPython/3.7.5

File hashes

Hashes for camunda-external-task-client-python3-4.0.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 dbc288d9650ed68e458bc1601fcf6c255025a29c247be3f109c7764741631e19
MD5 081b062e7a3398c2a38fc7027ff3602e
BLAKE2b-256 30dcc551c21c7012ee474bf1370738c05ac46f3a8f3289cfec266b44658dcba0

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file camunda_external_task_client_python3-4.0.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: camunda_external_task_client_python3-4.0.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 27.3 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.1.1 importlib_metadata/3.10.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.25.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.46.0 CPython/3.7.5

File hashes

Hashes for camunda_external_task_client_python3-4.0.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5f6f8ff4df922ce305b87068e27b378e4fdbec07960587dae6c3237af819bba6
MD5 9ff335e705d4b09a4e57b7004c06e979
BLAKE2b-256 7a66f28d9b8276f8b6fbf71201cfaf111d90b09ff6d6ef05caa863a12f33c651

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page