[core] # The home folder for airflow, default is ~/airflow # The folder where your airflow pipelines live, most likely a # subfolder in a code repository # This path must be absolute dags_folder = /usr/local/airflow/dags # The folder where airflow should store its log files # This path must be absolute base_log_folder = /usr/local/airflow/logs # Airflow can store logs remotely in AWS S3, Google Cloud Storage or Elastic Search. # Users must supply an Airflow connection id that provides access to the storage # location. If remote_logging is set to true, see UPDATING.md for additional # configuration requirements. remote_logging = False remote_log_conn_id = remote_base_log_folder = encrypt_s3_logs = False # Logging level logging_level = INFO fab_logging_level = WARN # Logging class # Specify the class that will specify the logging configuration # This class has to be on the python classpath # logging_config_class = my.path.default_local_settings.LOGGING_CONFIG logging_config_class = # Log format # we need to escape the curly braces by adding an additional curly brace log_format = [%%(asctime)s] {%%(filename)s:%%(lineno)d} %%(levelname)s - %%(message)s simple_log_format = %%(asctime)s %%(levelname)s - %%(message)s # Log filename format # we need to escape the curly braces by adding an additional curly brace log_filename_template = {{ ti.dag_id }}/{{ ti.task_id }}/{{ ts }}/{{ try_number }}.log log_processor_filename_template = {{ filename }}.log # Hostname by providing a path to a callable, which will resolve the hostname hostname_callable = socket:getfqdn # Default timezone in case supplied date times are naive # can be utc (default), system, or any IANA timezone string (e.g. Europe/Amsterdam) default_timezone = utc # The executor class that airflow should use. Choices include # SequentialExecutor, LocalExecutor, CeleryExecutor, DaskExecutor executor = CeleryExecutor # The SqlAlchemy connection string to the metadata database. # SqlAlchemy supports many different database engine, more information # their website sql_alchemy_conn = postgresql+psycopg2://airflow:airflow@postgres:5432/airflow # If SqlAlchemy should pool database connections. sql_alchemy_pool_enabled = True # The SqlAlchemy pool size is the maximum number of database connections # in the pool. 0 indicates no limit. sql_alchemy_pool_size = 5 # The SqlAlchemy pool recycle is the number of seconds a connection # can be idle in the pool before it is invalidated. This config does # not apply to sqlite. If the number of DB connections is ever exceeded, # a lower config value will allow the system to recover faster. sql_alchemy_pool_recycle = 1800 # How many seconds to retry re-establishing a DB connection after # disconnects. Setting this to 0 disables retries. sql_alchemy_reconnect_timeout = 300 # The amount of parallelism as a setting to the executor. This defines # the max number of task instances that should run simultaneously # on this airflow installation parallelism = 32 # The number of task instances allowed to run concurrently by the scheduler dag_concurrency = 16 # Are DAGs paused by default at creation dags_are_paused_at_creation = True # When not using pools, tasks are run in the "default pool", # whose size is guided by this config element non_pooled_task_slot_count = 128 # The maximum number of active DAG runs per DAG max_active_runs_per_dag = 16 # Whether to load the examples that ship with Airflow. It's good to # get started, but you probably want to set this to False in a production # environment load_examples = False # Where your Airflow plugins are stored plugins_folder = /usr/local/airflow/plugins # Secret key to save connection passwords in the db fernet_key = # Whether to disable pickling dags donot_pickle = False # How long before timing out a python file import while filling the DagBag dagbag_import_timeout = 30 # The class to use for running task instances in a subprocess task_runner = StandardTaskRunner # If set, tasks without a `run_as_user` argument will be run with this user # Can be used to de-elevate a sudo user running Airflow when executing tasks default_impersonation = # What security module to use (for example kerberos): security = # If set to False enables some unsecure features like Charts and Ad Hoc Queries. # In 2.0 will default to True. secure_mode = True # Turn unit test mode on (overwrites many configuration options with test # values at runtime) unit_test_mode = False # Name of handler to read task instance logs. # Default to use task handler. task_log_reader = task # Whether to enable pickling for xcom (note that this is insecure and allows for # RCE exploits). This will be deprecated in Airflow 2.0 (be forced to False). enable_xcom_pickling = True # When a task is killed forcefully, this is the amount of time in seconds that # it has to cleanup after it is sent a SIGTERM, before it is SIGKILLED killed_task_cleanup_time = 60 # Whether to override params with dag_run.conf. If you pass some key-value pairs through `airflow backfill -c` or # `airflow trigger_dag -c`, the key-value pairs will override the existing ones in params. dag_run_conf_overrides_params = False [cli] # In what way should the cli access the API. The LocalClient will use the # database directly, while the json_client will use the api running on the # webserver api_client = airflow.api.client.local_client # If you set web_server_url_prefix, do NOT forget to append it here, ex: # endpoint_url = http://localhost:8080/myroot # So api will look like: http://localhost:8080/myroot/api/experimental/... endpoint_url = http://localhost:8080 [api] # How to authenticate users of the API auth_backend = airflow.api.auth.backend.default [lineage] # what lineage backend to use backend = [atlas] sasl_enabled = False host = port = 21000 username = password = [operators] # The default owner assigned to each new operator, unless # provided explicitly or passed via `default_args` default_owner = Airflow default_cpus = 1 default_ram = 512 default_disk = 512 default_gpus = 0 [hive] # Default mapreduce queue for HiveOperator tasks default_hive_mapred_queue = [webserver] # The base url of your website as airflow cannot guess what domain or # cname you are using. This is used in automated emails that # airflow sends to point links to the right web server base_url = http://localhost:8080 # The ip specified when starting the web server web_server_host = 0.0.0.0 # The port on which to run the web server web_server_port = 8080 # Paths to the SSL certificate and key for the web server. When both are # provided SSL will be enabled. This does not change the web server port. web_server_ssl_cert = web_server_ssl_key = # Number of seconds the webserver waits before killing gunicorn master that doesn't respond web_server_master_timeout = 120 # Number of seconds the gunicorn webserver waits before timing out on a worker web_server_worker_timeout = 120 # Number of workers to refresh at a time. When set to 0, worker refresh is # disabled. When nonzero, airflow periodically refreshes webserver workers by # bringing up new ones and killing old ones. worker_refresh_batch_size = 1 # Number of seconds to wait before refreshing a batch of workers. worker_refresh_interval = 30 # Secret key used to run your flask app secret_key = temporary_key # Number of workers to run the Gunicorn web server workers = 4 # The worker class gunicorn should use. Choices include # sync (default), eventlet, gevent worker_class = sync # Log files for the gunicorn webserver. '-' means log to stderr. access_logfile = - error_logfile = - # Expose the configuration file in the web server expose_config = True # Set to true to turn on authentication: # https://airflow.incubator.apache.org/security.html#web-authentication authenticate = False # Filter the list of dags by owner name (requires authentication to be enabled) filter_by_owner = False # Filtering mode. Choices include user (default) and ldapgroup. # Ldap group filtering requires using the ldap backend # # Note that the ldap server needs the "memberOf" overlay to be set up # in order to user the ldapgroup mode. owner_mode = user # Default DAG view. Valid values are: # tree, graph, duration, gantt, landing_times dag_default_view = tree # Default DAG orientation. Valid values are: # LR (Left->Right), TB (Top->Bottom), RL (Right->Left), BT (Bottom->Top) dag_orientation = LR # Puts the webserver in demonstration mode; blurs the names of Operators for # privacy. demo_mode = False # The amount of time (in secs) webserver will wait for initial handshake # while fetching logs from other worker machine log_fetch_timeout_sec = 5 # By default, the webserver shows paused DAGs. Flip this to hide paused # DAGs by default hide_paused_dags_by_default = False # Consistent page size across all listing views in the UI page_size = 100 # Use FAB-based webserver with RBAC feature rbac = False # Define the color of navigation bar navbar_color = #007A87 # Default dagrun to show in UI default_dag_run_display_number = 25 [email] email_backend = airflow.utils.email.send_email_smtp [smtp] # If you want airflow to send emails on retries, failure, and you want to use # the airflow.utils.email.send_email_smtp function, you have to configure an # smtp server here smtp_host = localhost smtp_starttls = True smtp_ssl = False # Uncomment and set the user/pass settings if you want to use SMTP AUTH # smtp_user = airflow # smtp_password = airflow smtp_port = 25 smtp_mail_from = airflow@example.com [celery] # This section only applies if you are using the CeleryExecutor in # [core] section above # The app name that will be used by celery celery_app_name = airflow.executors.celery_executor # The concurrency that will be used when starting workers with the # "airflow worker" command. This defines the number of task instances that # a worker will take, so size up your workers based on the resources on # your worker box and the nature of your tasks worker_concurrency = 16 # When you start an airflow worker, airflow starts a tiny web server # subprocess to serve the workers local log files to the airflow main # web server, who then builds pages and sends them to users. This defines # the port on which the logs are served. It needs to be unused, and open # visible from the main web server to connect into the workers. worker_log_server_port = 8793 # The Celery broker URL. Celery supports RabbitMQ, Redis and experimentally # a sqlalchemy database. Refer to the Celery documentation for more # information. # http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/userguide/configuration.html#broker-settings broker_url = redis://redis:6379/0 # The Celery result_backend. When a job finishes, it needs to update the # metadata of the job. Therefore it will post a message on a message bus, # or insert it into a database (depending of the backend) # This status is used by the scheduler to update the state of the task # The use of a database is highly recommended # http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/userguide/configuration.html#task-result-backend-settings result_backend = db+postgresql://airflow:airflow@postgres:5432/airflow # Celery Flower is a sweet UI for Celery. Airflow has a shortcut to start # it `airflow flower`. This defines the IP that Celery Flower runs on flower_host = flower # The root URL for Flower # Ex: flower_url_prefix = /flower flower_url_prefix = # This defines the port that Celery Flower runs on flower_port = 5555 # Default queue that tasks get assigned to and that worker listen on. default_queue = default # Import path for celery configuration options celery_config_options = airflow.config_templates.default_celery.DEFAULT_CELERY_CONFIG # In case of using SSL ssl_active = False ssl_key = ssl_cert = ssl_cacert = [celery_broker_transport_options] # This section is for specifying options which can be passed to the # underlying celery broker transport. See: # http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/userguide/configuration.html#std:setting-broker_transport_options # The visibility timeout defines the number of seconds to wait for the worker # to acknowledge the task before the message is redelivered to another worker. # Make sure to increase the visibility timeout to match the time of the longest # ETA you're planning to use. # # visibility_timeout is only supported for Redis and SQS celery brokers. # See: # http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/master/userguide/configuration.html#std:setting-broker_transport_options visibility_timeout = 21600 [dask] # This section only applies if you are using the DaskExecutor in # [core] section above # The IP address and port of the Dask cluster's scheduler. cluster_address = 127.0.0.1:8786 # TLS/ SSL settings to access a secured Dask scheduler. tls_ca = tls_cert = tls_key = [scheduler] # Task instances listen for external kill signal (when you clear tasks # from the CLI or the UI), this defines the frequency at which they should # listen (in seconds). job_heartbeat_sec = 5 # The scheduler constantly tries to trigger new tasks (look at the # scheduler section in the docs for more information). This defines # how often the scheduler should run (in seconds). scheduler_heartbeat_sec = 5 # after how much time should the scheduler terminate in seconds # -1 indicates to run continuously (see also num_runs) run_duration = -1 # after how much time a new DAGs should be picked up from the filesystem min_file_process_interval = 0 # How many seconds to wait between file-parsing loops to prevent the logs from being spammed. min_file_parsing_loop_time = 1 dag_dir_list_interval = 300 # How often should stats be printed to the logs print_stats_interval = 30 child_process_log_directory = ~/airflow_tutorial/logs/scheduler # Local task jobs periodically heartbeat to the DB. If the job has # not heartbeat in this many seconds, the scheduler will mark the # associated task instance as failed and will re-schedule the task. scheduler_zombie_task_threshold = 300 # Turn off scheduler catchup by setting this to False. # Default behavior is unchanged and # Command Line Backfills still work, but the scheduler # will not do scheduler catchup if this is False, # however it can be set on a per DAG basis in the # DAG definition (catchup) catchup_by_default = True # This changes the batch size of queries in the scheduling main loop. # If this is too high, SQL query performance may be impacted by one # or more of the following: # - reversion to full table scan # - complexity of query predicate # - excessive locking # # Additionally, you may hit the maximum allowable query length for your db. # # Set this to 0 for no limit (not advised) max_tis_per_query = 512 # Statsd (https://github.com/etsy/statsd) integration settings statsd_on = False statsd_host = localhost statsd_port = 8125 statsd_prefix = airflow # The scheduler can run multiple threads in parallel to schedule dags. # This defines how many threads will run. max_threads = 2 authenticate = False [ldap] # set this to ldaps://: uri = user_filter = objectClass=* user_name_attr = uid group_member_attr = memberOf superuser_filter = data_profiler_filter = bind_user = cn=Manager,dc=example,dc=com bind_password = insecure basedn = dc=example,dc=com cacert = /etc/ca/ldap_ca.crt search_scope = LEVEL [mesos] # Mesos master address which MesosExecutor will connect to. master = localhost:5050 # The framework name which Airflow scheduler will register itself as on mesos framework_name = Airflow # Number of cpu cores required for running one task instance using # 'airflow run --local -p ' # command on a mesos slave task_cpu = 1 # Memory in MB required for running one task instance using # 'airflow run --local -p ' # command on a mesos slave task_memory = 256 # Enable framework checkpointing for mesos # See http://mesos.apache.org/documentation/latest/slave-recovery/ checkpoint = False # Failover timeout in milliseconds. # When checkpointing is enabled and this option is set, Mesos waits # until the configured timeout for # the MesosExecutor framework to re-register after a failover. Mesos # shuts down running tasks if the # MesosExecutor framework fails to re-register within this timeframe. # failover_timeout = 604800 # Enable framework authentication for mesos # See http://mesos.apache.org/documentation/latest/configuration/ authenticate = False # Mesos credentials, if authentication is enabled # default_principal = admin # default_secret = admin # Optional Docker Image to run on slave before running the command # This image should be accessible from mesos slave i.e mesos slave # should be able to pull this docker image before executing the command. # docker_image_slave = puckel/docker-airflow [kerberos] ccache = /tmp/airflow_krb5_ccache # gets augmented with fqdn principal = airflow reinit_frequency = 3600 kinit_path = kinit keytab = airflow.keytab [github_enterprise] api_rev = v3 [admin] # UI to hide sensitive variable fields when set to True hide_sensitive_variable_fields = True [elasticsearch] elasticsearch_host = # we need to escape the curly braces by adding an additional curly brace elasticsearch_log_id_template = {dag_id}-{task_id}-{execution_date}-{try_number} elasticsearch_end_of_log_mark = end_of_log [kubernetes] # The repository and tag of the Kubernetes Image for the Worker to Run worker_container_repository = worker_container_tag = # If True (default), worker pods will be deleted upon termination delete_worker_pods = True # The Kubernetes namespace where airflow workers should be created. Defaults to `default` namespace = default # The name of the Kubernetes ConfigMap Containing the Airflow Configuration (this file) airflow_configmap = # For either git sync or volume mounted DAGs, the worker will look in this subpath for DAGs dags_volume_subpath = # For DAGs mounted via a volume claim (mutually exclusive with volume claim) dags_volume_claim = # For volume mounted logs, the worker will look in this subpath for logs logs_volume_subpath = # A shared volume claim for the logs logs_volume_claim = # Git credentials and repository for DAGs mounted via Git (mutually exclusive with volume claim) git_repo = git_branch = git_user = git_password = git_subpath = # For cloning DAGs from git repositories into volumes: https://github.com/kubernetes/git-sync git_sync_container_repository = gcr.io/google-containers/git-sync-amd64 git_sync_container_tag = v2.0.5 git_sync_init_container_name = git-sync-clone # The name of the Kubernetes service account to be associated with airflow workers, if any. # Service accounts are required for workers that require access to secrets or cluster resources. # See the Kubernetes RBAC documentation for more: # https://kubernetes.io/docs/admin/authorization/rbac/ worker_service_account_name = # Any image pull secrets to be given to worker pods, If more than one secret is # required, provide a comma separated list: secret_a,secret_b image_pull_secrets = # GCP Service Account Keys to be provided to tasks run on Kubernetes Executors # Should be supplied in the format: key-name-1:key-path-1,key-name-2:key-path-2 gcp_service_account_keys = # Use the service account kubernetes gives to pods to connect to kubernetes cluster. # It's intended for clients that expect to be running inside a pod running on kubernetes. # It will raise an exception if called from a process not running in a kubernetes environment. in_cluster = True [kubernetes_secrets] # The scheduler mounts the following secrets into your workers as they are launched by the # scheduler. You may define as many secrets as needed and the kubernetes launcher will parse the # defined secrets and mount them as secret environment variables in the launched workers. # Secrets in this section are defined as follows # = : # # For example if you wanted to mount a kubernetes secret key named `postgres_password` from the # kubernetes secret object `airflow-secret` as the environment variable `POSTGRES_PASSWORD` into # your workers you would follow the following format: # POSTGRES_PASSWORD = airflow-secret:postgres_credentials # # Additionally you may override worker airflow settings with the AIRFLOW__
__ # formatting as supported by airflow normally.