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INSTALL
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INSTALL
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# INSTALL / BUILD instructions for Apache Airflow
This ia a generic installation method that requires a number of dependencies to be installed.
Depending on your system you might need different prerequisites, but the following
systems/prerequisites are known to work:
Linux (Debian Buster and Linux Mint Tricia):
sudo apt install build-essentials python3.6-dev python3.7-dev python-dev openssl \
sqlite sqlite-dev default-libmysqlclient-dev libmysqld-dev postgresq
MacOS (Mojave/Catalina):
brew install sqlite mysql postgresql
# [required] fetch the tarball and untar the source move into the directory that was untarred.
# [optional] run Apache RAT (release audit tool) to validate license headers
# RAT docs here: https://creadur.apache.org/rat/. Requires Java and Apache Rat
java -jar apache-rat.jar -E ./.rat-excludes -d .
# [optional] Airflow pulls in quite a lot of dependencies in order
# to connect to other services. You might want to test or run Airflow
# from a virtual env to make sure those dependencies are separated
# from your system wide versions
python3 -m venv PATH_TO_YOUR_VENV
source PATH_TO_YOUR_VENV/bin/activate
# [required] building and installing by pip (preferred)
pip install .
# or directly
python setup.py install
# You can also install recommended version of the dependencies by using
# constraint-python<PYTHON_MAJOR_MINOR_VERSION>.txt files as constraint file. This is needed in case
# you have problems with installing the current requirements from PyPI.
# There are different constraint files for different python versions. For example"
pip install . \
--constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-master/constraints-3.6.txt"
By default `pip install` in Airflow 2.0 installs only the provider packages that are needed by the extras and
install them as packages from PyPI rather than from local sources:
pip install .[google,amazon] \
--constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-master/constraints-3.6.txt"
You can upgrade just airflow, without paying attention to provider's dependencies by using 'no-providers'
constraint files. This allows you to keep installed provider packages.
pip install . --upgrade \
--constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-master/constraints-no-providers-3.6.txt"
You can also install airflow in "editable mode" (with -e) flag and then provider packages are
available directly from the sources (and the provider packages installed from PyPI are UNINSTALLED in
order to avoid having providers in two places. And `provider.yaml` files are used to discover capabilities
of the providers which are part of the airflow source code.
You can read more about `provider.yaml` and community-managed providers in
https://airflow.apache.org/docs/apache-airflow-providers/index.html for developing custom providers
and in ``CONTRIBUTING.rst`` for developing community maintained providers.
This is useful if you want to develop providers:
pip install -e . \
--constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-master/constraints-3.6.txt"
You can also skip installing provider packages from PyPI by setting INSTALL_PROVIDERS_FROM_SOURCE to "true".
In this case Airflow will be installed in non-editable mode with all providers installed from the sources.
Additionally `provider.yaml` files will also be copied to providers folders which will make the providers
discoverable by Airflow even if they are not installed from packages in this case.
INSTALL_PROVIDERS_FROM_SOURCES="true" pip install . \
--constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-master/constraints-3.6.txt"
Airflow can be installed with extras to install some additional features (for example 'async' or 'doc' or
to install automatically providers and all dependencies needed by that provider:
pip install .[async,google,amazon] \
--constraint "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/airflow/constraints-master/constraints-3.6.txt"
The list of available extras:
# START EXTRAS HERE
airbyte, all, all_dbs, amazon, apache.atlas, apache.beam, apache.cassandra, apache.druid,
apache.hdfs, apache.hive, apache.kylin, apache.livy, apache.pig, apache.pinot, apache.spark,
apache.sqoop, apache.webhdfs, asana, async, atlas, aws, azure, cassandra, celery, cgroups, cloudant,
cncf.kubernetes, crypto, dask, databricks, datadog, deprecated_api, devel, devel_all, devel_ci,
devel_hadoop, dingding, discord, doc, docker, druid, elasticsearch, exasol, facebook, ftp, gcp,
gcp_api, github_enterprise, google, google_auth, grpc, hashicorp, hdfs, hive, http, imap, jdbc,
jenkins, jira, kerberos, kubernetes, ldap, leveldb, microsoft.azure, microsoft.mssql,
microsoft.winrm, mongo, mssql, mysql, neo4j, odbc, openfaas, opsgenie, oracle, pagerduty, papermill,
password, pinot, plexus, postgres, presto, qds, qubole, rabbitmq, redis, s3, salesforce, samba,
segment, sendgrid, sentry, sftp, singularity, slack, snowflake, spark, sqlite, ssh, statsd, tableau,
telegram, trino, vertica, virtualenv, webhdfs, winrm, yandex, zendesk
# END EXTRAS HERE
# For installing Airflow in development environments - see CONTRIBUTING.rst