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Telemetry-Airflow

Airflow is a platform to programmatically author, schedule and monitor workflows.

When workflows are defined as code, they become more maintainable, versionable, testable, and collaborative.

Use Airflow to author workflows as directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) of tasks. The Airflow scheduler executes your tasks on an array of workers while following the specified dependencies. Rich command line utilities make performing complex surgeries on DAGs a snap. The rich user interface makes it easy to visualize pipelines running in production, monitor progress, and troubleshoot issues when needed.

Prerequisites

This app is built and deployed with docker and docker-compose.

Dependencies

Most Airflow jobs are thin wrappers that spin up an EMR cluster for running the job. Be aware that the configuration of the created EMR clusters depends on finding scripts in an S3 location configured by the SPARK_BUCKET variable. Those scripts are maintained in emr-bootstrap-spark and are deployed independently of this repository. Changes in behavior of Airflow jobs not explained by changes in the source of the Spark jobs or by changes in this repository could be due to changes in the bootstrap scripts.

Build Container

An Airflow container can be built with

make build

Export Credentials

For now, DAGs that use the Databricks operator won't parse until the following environment variables are set (see issue #501):

AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
DB_TOKEN

Migrate Database

Airflow database migration is no longer a separate step for dev but is run by the web container if necessary on first run. That means, however, that you should run the web container (and the database container, of course) and wait for the database migrations to complete before running individual test commands per below. The easiest way to do this is to run make up and let it run until the migrations complete.

Testing

A single task, e.g. spark, of an Airflow dag, e.g. example, can be run with an execution date, e.g. 2018-01-01, in the dev environment with:

export DEV_USERNAME=...
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=...
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=...
make run COMMAND="test example spark 20180101"

The DEV_USERNAME is a short string used to identify your EMR instances. This should be set to something like your IRC or Slack handle.

The container will run the desired task to completion (or failure). Note that if the container is stopped during the execution of a task, the task will be aborted. In the example's case, the Spark job will be terminated.

The logs of the task can be inspected in real-time with:

docker logs -f telemetryairflow_scheduler_1

You can see task logs and see cluster status on the EMR console

By default, the results will end up in the telemetry-test-bucket in S3. If your desired task depends on other views, it will expect to be able to find those results in telemetry-test-bucket too. It's your responsibility to run the tasks in correct order of their dependencies.

CAVEAT: When running the make run multiple times it can spin up multiple versions of the web container. It can also fail if you've never run make up to initialize the database. An alternative form of the above is to launch the containers and shell into the web container to run the airflow test command.

In one terminal launch the docker containers:

make up

Note: initializing the web container will run the airflow initdb/upgradedb

In another terminal shell into the web container, making sure to also supply the environment variables, then run the airflow test command:

export DEV_USERNAME=...
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=...
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=...
docker exec -ti -e DEV_USERNAME -e AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY -e AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID telemetry-airflow_web_1 /bin/bash
airflow test example spark 20180101

Testing main_summary

main_summary can be a good test case for any large changes to telemetry-batch-view, launch in dev as:

export DEV_USERNAME=...
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=...
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=...
make run COMMAND="test main_summary main_summary 20180803"

See the next section for info on how to configure a full DAG run, though this should only be needed to significant changes affecting many view definitions.

Local Deployment

Assuming you're using macOS and Docker for macOS, start the docker service, click the docker icon in the menu bar, click on preferences and change the available memory to 4GB.

To deploy the Airflow container on the docker engine, with its required dependencies, run:

make up

You can now connect to your local Airflow web console at http://localhost:8000/.

All DAGs are paused by default for local instances and our staging instance of Airflow. In order to submit a DAG via the UI, you'll need to toggle the DAG from "Off" to "On". You'll likely want to toggle the DAG back to "Off" as soon as your desired task starts running.

Workaround for permission issues

Users on Linux distributions will encounter permission issues with docker-compose. This is because the local application folder is mounted as a volume into the running container. The Airflow user and group in the container is set to 10001.

To work around this, replace all instances of 10001 in Dockerfile.dev with the host user id.

sed -i "s/10001/$(id -u)/g" Dockerfile.dev

Testing Databricks Jobs

To run a job running on Databricks, run make up in the background. Follow this guide on generating a token and save this to a secure location. Export the token to a an environment variable:

export DB_TOKEN=<TOKEN>

Finally, run the testing command using docker-compose directly:

docker-compose exec web airflow test example spark 20180101

Testing Dev Changes

Note: This only works for telemetry-batch-view and telemetry-streaming jobs

A dev changes can be run by simply changing the DEPLOY_TAG environment variable to whichever upstream branch you've pushed your local changes to.

Afterwards, you're going to need to:make clean and make build and nohup make up &

From there, you can either set the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY in the Dockerfile and run make up to get a local UI and run from there, or you can follow the testing instructions above and use make run.

Testing GKE Jobs (including BigQuery-etl changes)

For now, follow the steps outlined here: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1553559#c1.

In the future we will enhance these testing capabilities.

Production Setup

Note: the canonical reference for production environment variables lives in a private repository.

When deploying to production make sure to set up the following environment variables:

  • AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID -- The AWS access key ID to spin up the Spark clusters
  • AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY -- The AWS secret access key
  • SPARK_BUCKET -- The AWS S3 bucket where Spark related files are stored, e.g. telemetry-spark-emr-2
  • AIRFLOW_BUCKET -- The AWS S3 bucket where airflow specific files are stored, e.g. telemetry-airflow
  • PUBLIC_OUTPUT_BUCKET -- The AWS S3 bucket where public job results are stored in, e.g. telemetry-public-analysis-2
  • PRIVATE_OUTPUT_BUCKET -- The AWS S3 bucket where private job results are stored in, e.g. telemetry-parquet
  • AIRFLOW_DATABASE_URL -- The connection URI for the Airflow database, e.g. mysql://username:password@hostname:port/database
  • AIRFLOW_BROKER_URL -- The connection URI for the Airflow worker queue, e.g. redis://hostname:6379/0
  • AIRFLOW_BROKER_URL -- The connection URI for the Airflow result backend, e.g. redis://hostname:6379/1
  • AIRFLOW_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID -- The Google Auth client id used for authentication.
  • AIRFLOW_GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET -- The Google Auth client secret used for authentication.
  • AIRFLOW_GOOGLE_APPS_DOMAIN -- The domain(s) to restrict Google Auth login to e.g. mozilla.com
  • AIRFLOW_SMTP_HOST -- The SMTP server to use to send emails e.g. email-smtp.us-west-2.amazonaws.com
  • AIRFLOW_SMTP_USER -- The SMTP user name
  • AIRFLOW_SMTP_PASSWORD -- The SMTP password
  • AIRFLOW_SMTP_FROM -- The email address to send emails from e.g. [email protected]
  • URL -- The base URL of the website e.g. https://workflow.telemetry.mozilla.org
  • DEPLOY_ENVIRONMENT -- The environment currently running, e.g. stage or prod
  • DEPLOY_TAG -- The tag or branch to retrieve the JAR from, e.g. master or tags. You can specify the tag or travis build exactly as well, e.g. master/42.1 or tags/v2.2.1. Not specifying the exact tag or build will use the latest from that branch, or the latest tag.
  • ARTIFACTS_BUCKET -- The s3 bucket where the build artifacts can be found, e.g. net-mozaws-data-us-west-2-ops-ci-artifacts

Also, please set

  • AIRFLOW_SECRET_KEY -- A secret key for Airflow's Flask based webserver
  • AIRFLOW__CORE__FERNET_KEY -- A secret key to saving connection passwords in the DB

Both values should be set by using the cryptography module's fernet tool that we've wrapped in a docker-compose call:

make secret

Run this for each key config variable, and don't use the same for both!

Debugging

Some useful docker tricks for development and debugging:

# Stop all docker containers:
docker stop $(docker ps -aq)

# Remove any leftover docker volumes:
docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true)

Triggering a task to re-run within the Airflow UI

  • Check if the task / run you want to re-run is visible in the DAG's Tree View UI
  • If the dag run is not showing in the Dag Tree View UI (maybe deleted)
    • Browse -> Dag Runs
    • Create (you can look at another dag run of the same dag for example values too)
      • Dag Id: the name of the dag, for example, main_summary
      • Execution Date: The date the dag should have run, for example, 2018-05-14 00:00:00
      • Start Date: Some date between the execution date and "now", for example, 2018-05-20 00:00:05
      • End Date: Leave it blank
      • State: success
      • Run Id: scheduled__2018-05-14T00:00:00
      • External Trigger: unchecked
    • Click Save
    • Click on the Graph view for the dag in question. From the main DAGs view, click the name of the DAG
    • Select the "Run Id" you just entered from the drop-down list
    • Click "Go"
    • Click each element of the DAG and "Mark Success"
    • The tasks should now show in the Tree View UI
  • If the dag run is showing in the DAG's Tree View UI
    • Click on the small square for the task you want to re-run
    • Uncheck the "Downstream" toggle
    • Click the "Clear" button
    • Confirm that you want to clear it
    • The task should be scheduled to run again straight away.

Triggering backfill tasks using the CLI

  • SSH into the ECS container instance
  • List docker containers using docker ps
  • Log in to one of the docker containers using docker exec -it <container_id> bash. The web server instance is a good choice.
  • Run the desired backfill command, something like $ airflow backfill main_summary -s 2018-05-20 -e 2018-05-26

CircleCI

  • Commits to forked repo PRs will trigger CircleCI builds that build the docker container and test python dag compilation. This should pass prior to merging.
  • Every commit to master or tag will trigger a CircleCI build that will build and push the container to dockerhub

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Airflow configuration for Telemetry

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