data streaming on top of popular message queues
Project description
Pipeline provides an unified interface to set up data stream processing systems with Kafka, Pulsar, RabbitMQ, Redis and many more. The idea is to free developer from the dynamic change of technology in deployment, so that a docker image released for a certain task can be used with Kafka or Redis through changes of environment variables.
Features
a unified interface from Kakfa to Pulsar, from Redis to MongoDB
components connection controlled via command line, or environment variables
support file and in-memory for testing
Requirements
Python 3.7, 3.8
Installation
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline
You can install the required backend dependencies with:
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline[redis]
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline[kafka]
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline[pulsar]
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline[rabbitmq]
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline[elastic]
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline[mongodb]
If you want to support all backends, you can:
$ pip install tanbih-pipeline[full]
Producer
Producer is to be used when developing a data source in our pipeline. A source will produce output without input. A crawler can be seen as a producer.
>>> from typing import Generator
>>> from pydantic import BaseModel
>>> from pipeline import Producer as Worker, ProducerSettings as Settings
>>>
>>> class Output(BaseModel):
... key: int
>>>
>>> class MyProducer(Worker):
... def generate(self) -> Generator[Output, None, None]:
... for i in range(10):
... yield Output(key=i)
>>>
>>> settings = Settings(name='producer', version='0.0.0', description='')
>>> producer = MyProducer(settings, output_class=Output)
>>> producer.parse_args("--out-kind MEM --out-topic test".split())
>>> producer.start()
>>> [r.get('key') for r in producer.destination.results]
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Processor
Processor is to be used to process input. Modification will be in-place. A processor can produce one output for each input, or no output.
>>> from pydantic import BaseModel
>>> from pipeline import Processor as Worker, ProcessorSettings as Settings
>>>
>>> class Input(BaseModel):
... temperature: float
>>>
>>> class Output(BaseModel):
... is_hot: bool
>>>
>>> class MyProcessor(Worker):
... def process(self, content, key):
... is_hot = (content.temperature > 25)
... return Output(is_hot=is_hot)
>>>
>>> settings = Settings(name='processor', version='0.1.0', description='')
>>> processor = MyProcessor(settings, input_class=Input, output_class=Output)
>>> args = "--in-kind MEM --in-topic test --out-kind MEM --out-topic test".split()
>>> processor.parse_args(args)
>>> processor.start()
Splitter
Splitter is to be used when writing to multiple outputs. It will take a function to generate output topic based on the processing message, and use it when writing output.
>>> from pipeline import Splitter as Worker, SplitterSettings as Settings
>>>
>>> class MySplitter(Worker):
... def get_topic(self, msg):
... return '{}-{}'.format(self.destination.topic, msg.get('id'))
>>>
>>> settings = Settings(name='splitter', version='0.1.0', description='')
>>> splitter = MySplitter(settings)
>>> args = "--in-kind MEM --in-topic test --out-kind MEM --out-topic test".split()
>>> splitter.parse_args(args)
>>> splitter.start()
Usage
Choosing backend technology:
kind |
description |
multi- reader |
shared reader |
data expire |
---|---|---|---|---|
LREDIS |
Redis List |
X |
X |
read |
XREDIS |
Redis Stream |
X |
X |
limit |
KAFKA |
Kafka |
X |
X |
read |
PULSAR |
Pulsar |
X |
X |
ttl |
RABBITMQ |
RabbitMQ |
X |
read |
|
ELASTIC |
ElasticSearch |
|||
MONGODB |
MongoDB |
|||
FILE* |
json,csv |
|||
MEM* |
memory |
FILE accepts jsonl input on stdin and with filename, it also accepts csv file. Both format can be gzipped.
MEM read and write to memory, designed for unit tests.
# check command line arguments for certain input and output
worker.py --in-kind FILE --help
# or
IN_KIND=FILE worker.py
# or
export IN_KIND=FILE
worker.py --help
# process input from file and output to stdout (--in-content-only is
# needed for this version)
worker.py --in-kind FILE --in-filename data.jsonl --in-content-only \
--out-kind FILE --out-filename -
# read from file and write to KAFKA
worker.py --in-kind FILE --in-filename data.jsonl --in-content-only \
--out-kind KAFKA --out-namespace test --out-topic articles \
--out-kafka kafka_url --out-config kafka_config_json
Arguments
- common
debug monitoring
kind namespace topic
input:
FILE
Scripts
pipeline-copy is a script to copy data from a source to a destination. It can be used to inject data from a file to a database, or from a database to another database. It is implemented as a Pipeline worker.
Since JSON format does not support datetimes, in order for pipeline-copy to treat datetime field as datetime instead of string, you can provide a model definition via argument –model-definition. An example of such model definition is as following (the class name needs to be Model):
from datetime import datetime
from typing import Optional
from pydantic import BaseModel
class Model(BaseModel):
hashtag: str
username: str
text: str
tweet_id: str
location: Optional[str]
created_at: datetime
retweet_count: int
Environment Variables
Application accepts following environment variables (Please note, you will need to add prefix IN_, –in- and OUT_, –out- to these variables to indicate the option for input and output). Please refer to backend documentation for available arguments/environment variables.
Customize Settings
class CustomSettings(Settings):
new_argument: str = Field("", title="a new argument for custom settings")
class CustomProcessor(Processor):
def __init__(self):
settings = CustomSettings("worker", "v0.1.0", "custom processor")
super().__init__(settings, input_class=BaseModel, output_class=BaseModel)
Errors
PipelineError will be raised when error occurs
Contribute
Use pre-commit to run black and flake8
# install pre-commit
pre-commit install
Credits
Yifan Zhang (yzhang at hbku.edu.qa)
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