Well. Not sure what else you'd expect, I wonder ?
This is for sure unexpected and not reasonable use of it. There are best
practices to follow and things to avoid when you run top-level python code
https://airflow.apache.org/docs/apache-airflow/stable/best-practices.html#top-level-python-code
but if you want you can do anything.
This is Python, we can't prevent you from doing pretty much anything with
it if you want. There are no "truly" private methods in Python. Also you
can do that:
```
while True:
pass
```
and you will get your CPU at 100% too,
J,.
On Sun, Oct 3, 2021 at 11:22 PM Khalid Mammadov <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Hi Devs,
>
>
> I was reviewing DAG class and noticed that almost all it's methods are
> public.
>
> So, one can do something like below:
>
> with DAG(...) as dag: t1 = BashOperator(...)
>
> run_id = DagRun.generate_run_id(DagRunType.MANUAL, datetime.utcnow())
>
>
> # This one works OK and create a DagRun for the Scheduler to pick up
> dag.create_dagrun(state=DagRunState.QUEUED, run_id=run_id)
>
> # OR EVEN DO BELOW - which caused my laptop to run on 100% CPU
> # dag.run()
>
> And I was wondering if this is intentional and/or expected behavior?
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Khalid
>