Metadata-Version: 1.0
Name: luigi
Version: 1.0.15
Summary: Workflow mgmgt + task scheduling + dependency resolution
Home-page: https://github.com/spotify/luigi
Author: Erik Bernhardsson
Author-email: erikbern@spotify.com
License: Apache License 2.0
Description: Note: For the latest source, discussion, etc, please visit the `Github repository <https://github.com/spotify/luigi>`_
        
        .. figure:: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spotify/luigi/master/doc/luigi.png
           :alt: Luigi Logo
           :align: center
        
        About Luigi
        -----------
        
        Luigi is a Python package that helps you build complex pipelines of
        batch jobs. It handles dependency resolution, workflow management,
        visualization, handling failures, command line integration, and much
        more.
        
        The purpose of Luigi is to address all the plumbing typically associated
        with long-running batch processes. You want to chain many tasks,
        automate them, and failures *will* happen. These tasks can be anything,
        but are typically long running things like
        `Hadoop <http://hadoop.apache.org/>`_ jobs, dumping data to/from
        databases, running machine learning algorithms, or anything else.
        
        There are other software packages that focus on lower level aspects of
        data processing, like `Hive <http://hive.apache.org/>`_,
        `Pig <http://pig.apache.org/>`_, or
        `Cascading <http://www.cascading.org/>`_. Luigi is not a framework to
        replace these. Instead it helps you stitch many tasks together, where
        each task can be a Hive query, a Hadoop job in Java, a Python snippet,
        dumping a table from a database, or anything else. It's easy to build up
        long-running pipelines that comprise thousands of tasks and take days or
        weeks to complete. Luigi takes care of a lot of the workflow management
        so that you can focus on the tasks themselves and their dependencies.
        
        You can build pretty much any task you want, but Luigi also comes with a
        *toolbox* of several common task templates that you use. It includes
        native Python support for running mapreduce jobs in Hadoop, as well as
        Pig and Jar jobs. It also comes with filesystem abstractions for HDFS
        and local files that ensures all file system operations are atomic. This
        is important because it means your data pipeline will not crash in a
        state containing partial data.
        
        Luigi was built at `Spotify <http://www.spotify.com/>`_, mainly by
        `Erik Bernhardsson <https://github.com/erikbern>`_ and `Elias
        Freider <https://github.com/freider>`_, but many other people have
        contributed.
        
        
        Dependency graph example
        ------------------------
        
        Just to give you an idea of what Luigi does, this is a screen shot from
        something we are running in production. Using Luigi's visualizer, we get
        a nice visual overview of the dependency graph of the workflow. Each
        node represents a task which has to be run. Green tasks are already
        completed whereas yellow tasks are yet to be run. Most of these tasks
        are Hadoop jobs, but there are also some things that run locally and
        build up data files.
        
        .. figure:: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spotify/luigi/master/doc/user_recs.png
           :alt: Dependency graph
        
        Background
        ----------
        
        We use Luigi internally at `Spotify <http://www.spotify.com/>`_ to run
        thousands of tasks every day, organized in complex dependency graphs.
        Most of these tasks are Hadoop jobs. Luigi provides an infrastructure
        that powers all kinds of stuff including recommendations, toplists, A/B
        test analysis, external reports, internal dashboards, etc. Luigi grew
        out of the realization that powerful abstractions for batch processing
        can help programmers focus on the most important bits and leave the rest
        (the boilerplate) to the framework.
        
        Conceptually, Luigi is similar to `GNU
        Make <http://www.gnu.org/software/make/>`_ where you have certain tasks
        and these tasks in turn may have dependencies on other tasks. There are
        also some similarities to `Oozie <http://incubator.apache.org/oozie/>`_
        and `Azkaban <http://data.linkedin.com/opensource/azkaban>`_. One major
        difference is that Luigi is not just built specifically for Hadoop, and
        it's easy to extend it with other kinds of tasks.
        
        Everything in Luigi is in Python. Instead of XML configuration or
        similar external data files, the dependency graph is specified *within
        Python*. This makes it easy to build up complex dependency graphs of
        tasks, where the dependencies can involve date algebra or recursive
        references to other versions of the same task. However, the workflow can
        trigger things not in Python, such as running Pig scripts or scp'ing
        files.
        
        Installing
        ----------
        
        Downloading and running ``python setup.py install`` should be enough. Note
        that you probably want `Tornado <http://www.tornadoweb.org/>`_. Also
        `Mechanize <http://wwwsearch.sourceforge.net/mechanize/>`_ is optional
        if you want to run Hadoop jobs since it makes debugging easier. See
        `Configuration <http://luigi.readthedocs.org/en/latest/configuration.html>`_ for how to configure Luigi.
        
        Getting Started
        ---------------
        
        The `Luigi package documentation <http://luigi.readthedocs.org/en/latest/api/luigi.html>`_
        contains an overview of how to work with Luigi, including an `Example workflow
        <http://luigi.readthedocs.org/en/latest/example_top_artists.html>`_ and an `API overview
        <http://luigi.readthedocs.org/en/latest/api_overview.html>`_ which explains some of
        the most important concepts.
        
        Getting Help
        ------------
        
        * Find us on `#luigi` on freenode.
        * Subscribe to the `luigi-user <http://groups.google.com/group/luigi-user/>`_
          group and ask a question.
        
        
        External links
        --------------
        
        * `Documentation <http://luigi.readthedocs.org/>`_ (Read the Docs)
        * `Mailing List <https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/luigi-user>`_ (Google Groups)
        * `Releases <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/luigi>`_ (PyPi)
        * `Source code <https://github.com/spotify/luigi>`_ (Github)
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
