Skip to main content

Nexus SDK library for Python.

Project description

Introduction

Nexus SDK Py is a Python development kit for Nexus client applications. It builds upon Golang Client via cgo. Python SDK does not use any Python-level HTTP middleware for Nexus interactions, but authentication might require it.

SDK is tested against a Nexus stack in a docker-compose deployment, backed by kind Kubernetes clusters.

Quickstart

Install CGO library from Go SDK by running:

chmod +x ./sdk-installer.sh
./sdk-installer.sh

In case you are testing changes for Go SDK, clone branch you are testing and compile the .so file from source:

go build -v -buildmode=c-shared -o nexus_sdk.so main.go

Afterwards, copy the nexus_sdk.so under nexus_client_sdk/.extensions/nexus_sdk.so.

Initialize a client and retrieve results for a tagged submission:

from nexus_client_sdk.models.access_token import AccessToken
from nexus_client_sdk.models.scheduler import SdkCustomRunConfiguration
from nexus_client_sdk.clients.nexus_scheduler_client import NexusSchedulerClient

token = "..."
client = NexusSchedulerClient.create("https://localhost:8080", lambda: AccessToken.empty())

alg_params = {"field1": {"field2": 1, "field3": "abc"}, "field4": "cde"}

# create a run
new_run = client.create_run(
    algorithm_parameters=alg_params,
    algorithm_name="test-algorithm",
    custom_configuration=SdkCustomRunConfiguration.create(version="v1.2.3"),
    tag="test-py-sdk",
    payload_valid_for="6h",
)

print(f"Run id: {new_run}")

for result in client.get_run_results("abc"):
    print(result)

Nexus Development Framework

Apart from API clients for Nexus, SDK ships a development framework under nexus subpackage. It allows to create production-grade, asyncio-native ML/AI solutions that use a unified structure and are compose of objects and object relations, rather than methods. Nexus turns ML/AI apps into standard Python applications and removes the common noise found in notebook- type code, such as variable reassignment, frequent data copying due to lack of reusable code, copy-paste of code etc.

Nexus's design makes life even easier when using AI code generation, as it is essentially a framework an AI agent can follow to generate a working data science pipeline. Nexus takes care of result accounting, error handling, logging, metric reporting and, most importantly, execution flow. A key feature in Nexus is automatic resolution of execution graph via dependency injection. In essence, a developer just needs to specify which inputs are required for an algorithm to run, and provide class implementations for this, and Nexus will take care of the rest. This also implies that whether an IO operation happens, such as a database read or a file load, Nexus will utilize asyncio coroutines to run multiple IO ops in parallel, significantly increasing the execution speed, without any need for a developer to understand async programming.

For a example of how to use Nexus, take a look at a Sample Algorithm and a corresponding test configuration and a test itself.

Execution tree

Nexus provides a set of utilities that allow viewing and inspecting the execution tree:

from nexus_client_sdk.nexus.execution.trees import get_tree
from tests.sample_algorithm.sample_main import TestAlgorithm

print(get_tree(TestAlgorithm).serialize())

# graph TB
# TESTALGORITHM["TestAlgorithm"] --> XYPROCESSOR["XYProcessor"] --> XYREADER["XYReader"]
# TESTALGORITHM["TestAlgorithm"] --> ZPROCESSOR["ZProcessor"] --> ZREADER["ZReader"]

Handling Compressed Payloads

Nexus supports reading compressed payloads for efficient data transfer. When a payload is compressed, it must include both the compressed content and a reference to the decompression function.

Payload Structure

A compressed payload should be a json with the following keys:

  • content: The compressed data (as a base64-encoded string).
  • decompressor_import_path: The Python import path to the decompression function.

Example:

{
    "content": "SGVsbG8gd29ybGQ=",  # base64-encoded string of compressed bytes
    "decompressor_import_path": "my_module.my_decompress"
}

When Nexus receives such a payload, it will:

  1. Base64-decode the content field to obtain the compressed bytes.
  2. Dynamically import and call the function specified by decompressor_import_path to decompress the payload.
  3. Use the decompressed data as the actual payload for the algorithm.

This mechanism allows for flexible, pluggable decompression logic, as long as the function path is importable and callable in the runtime environment.

Automatic Payload Compression

Nexus can automatically compress and decompress payloads when using RemoteAlgorithm. To use this feature, you must first configure it with environment variables and then explicitly enable it in your RemoteAlgorithm implementation.

Step 1: Configuration (Environment Variables)

First, you need to provide the Python import paths for your compression and decompression logic. Setting these environment variables allows Nexus to create an injectable Compressor service.

  • NEXUS__REMOTE_ALGORITHM__COMPRESSION_IMPORT_PATH: The import path to your compression function (e.g., my_module.my_compress).
  • NEXUS__REMOTE_ALGORITHM__DECOMPRESSION_IMPORT_PATH: The import path to your decompression function (e.g., my_module.my_decompress).

Step 2: Enabling Compression in Your Algorithm

Once the environment variables are set, you can activate compression on a RemoteAlgorithm instance by providing two arguments during its initialization:

  1. compress_payload=True: This boolean flag signals your intent to use compression for this remote algorithm.
  2. compressor=<injected_compressor_instance>: You must inject the Compressor service that Nexus creates from your environment variables.

Important Requirement

For compression to work, both conditions must be met. The application will raise an error if compress_payload is set to True but a valid Compressor instance is not injected. Ensure that the required environment variables are set so the Compressor service can be created and injected successfully.

Project details


Download files

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

Source Distributions

No source distribution files available for this release.See tutorial on generating distribution archives.

Built Distributions

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

nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_x86_64.whl (25.1 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11manylinux: glibc 2.28+ x86-64

nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_aarch64.whl (23.0 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11manylinux: glibc 2.28+ ARM64

nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-macosx_13_0_arm64.whl (11.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 13.0+ ARM64

File details

Details for the file nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3e1c8c9120c1e0b51e8efe34f5678dd12c8e2ba971ead6d4c71e655cf543fee0
MD5 ec5c2a6896370a6bb246549b78ea12f2
BLAKE2b-256 3ace640033357d576d6f3ef3a8b0d198fb3fa866c1f4eadbc250e7f531144725

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_aarch64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_aarch64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ef799a92454974fedb0f640cdf5b9cd998743effc72896d1101d285648f7538c
MD5 338c8a5402a68872e1249bc8d8619603
BLAKE2b-256 8b3f694e802ddd1c5b65405e771ebabb3109ab16510c19842e8554db56870b93

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-macosx_13_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for nexus_client_sdk-1.5.6-cp311-cp311-macosx_13_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a13e1411f18db6bc26bfd8b4ad7a76ee824640be410dd3fec6421db5d7cb1ab5
MD5 4648872f07151887f1966533090f9137
BLAKE2b-256 85dfb87df52c3803d1c3352b2a6d4eab8a6f4a7cac0ee11512eb9cd58134e893

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