potiuk commented on code in PR #28300: URL: https://github.com/apache/airflow/pull/28300#discussion_r1051383399
########## docs/apache-airflow/administration-and-deployment/public-airflow-interface.rst: ########## @@ -0,0 +1,118 @@ + .. Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one + or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file + distributed with this work for additional information + regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file + to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the + "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance + with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at + + .. http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 + + .. Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, + software distributed under the License is distributed on an + "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY + KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the + specific language governing permissions and limitations + under the License. + +Public Interface of Airflow +=========================== + +The Public Interface of Apache Airflow is a set of programmatic interfaces that allow developers to interact +with and access certain features of the Apache Airflow system. This can include operations such as +creating and managing DAGs (directed acyclic graphs), managing tasks and their dependencies, +and extending Airflow capabilities by writing new executors, plugins, operators and providers. The +Public Interface can be useful for building custom tools and integrations with other systems, +as well as for automating certain aspects of the Airflow workflow. + +In general, the Public Interface is an important part of the Airflow ecosystem and can be a powerful +tool for users and developers who want to extend the functionality of the system. + +You can extend Airflow in three ways: + +* By writing new custom Python code (via Operators, Plugins, Provider) +* By using the `Stable REST API <stable-rest-api-ref>`_ (based on the OpenAPI specification) +* By using the `Airflow Command Line Interface (CLI) <cli-and-env-variables-ref.rst>`_ + +How can you extend Apache Airflow with custom Python Code? +========================================================== + +Apache Airflow has a number of different Public Interfaces that allow developers to interact with various +aspects of the system. Some examples of the types of Public Interfaces exposed as Python objects +that are available in Apache Airflow include: + +* `DAG <concepts/dags>`_ (Directed Acyclic Graph) APIs, which allow developers to create, manage, + and access DAGs in Airflow. +* `Task <concepts/tasks>`_ APIs, which provide access to information about individual tasks within + a DAG, such as their dependencies and execution status. +* `Operator <concepts/operators>`_ APIs, which allows the developers to write their custom Operators. +* `Decorators <howto/create-custom-decorator>`_ APIs, which allows the developers to write their + custom decorators to make it easier to write `TaskFlow <tutorial/taskflow>`_ DAGs. +* `Secret Managers <security/secrets>`_ APIs, which allows the developers to write their custom + Secret Managers to safely access credentials and other secret configuration of their workflows. +* `Connection management <concepts/connections>`_ APIs, which allow developers to manage + connections to external systems. +* `XCom <concepts/xcoms>`_, which allow developers to manage cross-task communication within Airflow. +* `Variables <concepts/variables>`_, which allow developers to manage variables within Airflow. +* `Executors <executor/index>`_, which allow developers to manage the execution of tasks within Airflow. +* `Listeners <listeners>`_, which allow developers to react to DAG/Task lifecycle events. +* `Plugins <plugins>`_, which allow developers to extend internal Airflow capabilities - add new UI + pages, custom `TimeTables <concepts/timetable>`_, `Extra Links <howto/define_extra_link>`_, + `Triggers <concept/deferring>`_, and `Listeners <listeners>`_. + +What is not part of the Public Interface of Apache Airflow? +=========================================================== + +Everything not mentioned in this document should be considered as non-Public Interface. + +The users however, might have some assumptions about different parts of Airflow, thinking that +they can rely on them, so here we try to clarify and want to be explicit that they are not part of the +Public Interface: Review Comment: I think it could be answered as response to my previous explanation which I gave above. So let me repeat again - that if we list those explicitly without context and telling why we are listing those (because we've learned from the past that our users tend to think they can treat those compoents as "public interface". And listing them here explicitly is the way to avoid any discussions. I rephrased and shortened it to better reflect what I mean. -- This is an automated message from the Apache Git Service. To respond to the message, please log on to GitHub and use the URL above to go to the specific comment. To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For queries about this service, please contact Infrastructure at: [email protected]
