lewismc commented on a change in pull request #20755:
URL: https://github.com/apache/airflow/pull/20755#discussion_r780629491
##########
File path: docs/apache-airflow/concepts/xcoms.rst
##########
@@ -42,13 +42,63 @@ XComs are a relative of :doc:`variables`, with the main
difference being that XC
Note: If the first task run is not succeeded then on every retry task XComs
will be cleared to make the task run idempotent.
-Custom Backends
----------------
+Custom XCom Backends
+--------------------
The XCom system has interchangeable backends, and you can set which backend is
being used via the ``xcom_backend`` configuration option.
If you want to implement your own backend, you should subclass
:class:`~airflow.models.xcom.BaseXCom`, and override the ``serialize_value``
and ``deserialize_value`` methods.
There is also an ``orm_deserialize_value`` method that is called whenever the
XCom objects are rendered for UI or reporting purposes; if you have large or
expensive-to-retrieve values in your XComs, you should override this method to
avoid calling that code (and instead return a lighter, incomplete
representation) so the UI remains responsive.
-You can also override the ``clear`` method and use it when clearing results
for given dags and tasks. This allows the custom XCom backend process the data
lifecycle easier.
+You can also override the ``clear`` method and use it when clearing results
for given dags and tasks. This allows the custom XCom backend to process the
data lifecycle easier.
+
+Working with Custom XCom Backends in Containers
+-----------------------------------------------
+
+Depending on where Airflow is deployed i.e., local, Docker, K8s, etc. it can
be useful to be assured that a custom XCom backend is actually being
initialized. For example, the complexity of the container environment can make
it more difficult to determine if your backend is being loaded correctly during
container deployment. Luckily the following guidance can be used to assist you
in building confidence in your custom XCom implementation.
+
+Firstly, if you can exec into a terminal in the container then you should be
able to do::
+
+ from airflow.models.xcom import XCom
+ print(XCom.__name__)
+
+which will print the actual class that is being used.
+
+Depending on how you've configured the backend, you can also examine airflow
+configuration::
+
+ from airflow.settings import conf
+ conf.get("core", "xcom_backend")
+
+If using env vars check with ``env|grep AIRFLOW__CORE__XCOM``.
Review comment:
Thanks for the peer review TP. It's been a while since I used rst. This
looks much better.
--
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]