openapi-spec-validator | OpenAPI Spec validator | REST library
kandi X-RAY | openapi-spec-validator Summary
kandi X-RAY | openapi-spec-validator Summary
OpenAPI Spec validator
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Validate an instance
- Try to detect the spec validator version
- Prints a validation error
- Return an iterator over OpenAPIValidation errors
- Checks if an instance is valid
openapi-spec-validator Key Features
openapi-spec-validator Examples and Code Snippets
$ which python3
/usr/bin/python3
$ /usr/bin/python3 -V
Python 3.8.2
$ /usr/bin/python3 -m venv airflow-venv
$ source ./airflow-venv/bin/activate
(airflow-venv) $ python -V
Python 3.8.2
(airflow-venv) $ pip -V
pip 19.2.3 from /path/to/air
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on openapi-spec-validator
QUESTION
I have Airflow deployed in virtual env and in case I try to execute PythonVirtualenvOperator with import of the Airflow module (to get Variables for example) it gives me the AttributeError. Guess I do not fully understand how Airflow executes VirtualenvOperator, and therefore what to do to overcome it, so any suggestions and insights will be highly appreciated
My test DAG code
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Apr-19 at 16:29It seems that you are confusing the use-cases for PythonVirtualenvOperator and PythonOperator.
If you simply want to run a Python callable in a task (callable_virtualenv()
in your case) you can use PythonOperator. In this case, it does not matter if you installed Airflow in a virtual environment, system wide, or using Docker.
What happens in your code is the following: PythonVirtualenvOperator
creates another virtual environment (which is completely unrelated to the one in which you run Airflow), installs Airflow into it, and tries to import Variable
. But this another Airflow installation is not configured and that is why you get those exceptions. You could set the AIRFLOW_HOME
environment variable for this second Airflow installation to the same directory as used by the first Airflow installation, and this should actually work, but it looks like an overkill to me.
So, what you can do is install colorama
into the same environment in which you installed Airflow and replace PythonVirtualenvOperator
by PythonOperator
.
BTW, those print()
inside the callable would be redirected into a log file and not printed to terminal, so it probably does not make much sense to use colorama
with them.
QUESTION
I'm trying to find some help installing apache-airflow.
I am on MacOS 10.15.7, Python version 3.8.2, and I keep getting an error:
ERROR: Could not build wheels for setproctitle which use PEP 517 and cannot be installed directly
I have tried using earlier versions of pip and python to no avail.
Does anyone know what I can do in this situation? I have looked at all the stack overflow questions that popped up with these search terms but none have presented a solution that worked for me so far.
Any help would be much appreciated.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Mar-04 at 00:26I am on MacOS 10.15.7 Python version 3.8.2
I'm guessing you used the Python 3 bundled/pre-installed with macOS Catalina.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
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Install openapi-spec-validator
You can use openapi-spec-validator like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.
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