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An Elixir runtime manager for executing OpenFn jobs.

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OpenFn/engine

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Engine CircleCI

A processing framework for executing jobs using the OpenFn ecosystem of language packs.

Installation

If available in Hex, the package can be installed by adding openfn_engine to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:engine, github: "OpenFn/engine", tag: "v0.7.2"}
  ]
end

Using

As part of your application

With this approach the available jobs and their triggers are stored in memory and loaded in via a YAML file.

  1. Add a module
defmodule MyApp.Engine do
  use Engine.Application, otp_app: :my_app
end
  1. Add it to your supervision tree
# application.ex
  def start(_type, _args) do

    children = [
      ...
      MyApp.Engine, [
        project_config: "file://" <> project_yaml_path,
        adaptors_path: Path.join(project_dir, "priv/openfn")
      ]
    ]

  end
  1. Add calls to process messages

Wherever you need to process a message, for example in a Phoenix controller. For example:

  ...
  alias Engine.Message

  def receive(conn, _other) do
    body =
      conn
      |> Map.fetch!(:body_params)
      |> Jason.encode!()
      |> Jason.decode!()

    runs = Microservice.Engine.handle_message(%Message{body: body})

    {status, data} =
          {:accepted,
           %{
             "meta" => %{"message" => "Data accepted and processing has begun."},
             "data" => Enum.map(runs, fn run -> run.job.name end),
             "errors" => []
           }}

    conn
    |> put_status(status)
    |> json(data)
  end

  ...
  1. Add some callbacks (optional)
defmodule MyApp.GenericHandler do
  use Engine.Run.Handler
  require Logger

  def on_log_emit(str, _context) do
    Logger.debug("#{inspect(str)}")
  end
end

Running without a supervisor

It's possible to use Engine without it being in your supervision tree. A common reason would be using some other queueing mechanism.

This can be achieved by calling start/2 directly on a handler:

defmodule MyApp.Handler do
  use Engine.Run.Handler
end

MyApp.Handler.start(run_spec)
# => %Result{...}

Configuration

A note on adaptors_path:

By default everything is installed into $PWD/priv/openfn.

Currently with the ShellRuntime module, we require NPM modules to be installed in a global style. Just like with npm install -g, except we control where those packages will be installed using the --prefix argument. Without using global installs you run the risk of new packages installed by Adaptor.Service overwriting all currently installed packages.

Callbacks

When using the Handler module, there are several callbacks that you can provide to hook into various steps in the processing pipeline:

  • on_log_emit/2
    Log chunks as they come out of the Log Agent, strings are emitted for each complete grapheme (i.e. a complete and decodeable chunk of utf-8 data). Depending on the job being executed it is possible for this callback to be called quite a lot. It's up to you to buffer this up before forwarding.

  • on_start/1
    When a job is about to be processed, this is called with the context that was provided to it with start/2.

  • on_finish/2
    When a job is has ended, contains the %Result{} struct and context as arguments.

Mix Tasks

  • openfn.install.runtime
    Assuming NodeJS is installed, it will install the latest versions of the most basic language packs.

Documentation can be generated with ExDoc and published on HexDocs. Once published, the docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/openfn_engine.

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An Elixir runtime manager for executing OpenFn jobs.

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GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0 licenses found

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GPL-3.0
LICENSE
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LICENSE.LESSER

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