In this section, we provide guides and references to use the MongoDB connector.
Configure and schedule MongoDB metadata workflows from the OpenMetadata UI:
Ingestion Deployment
To run the Ingestion via the UI you'll need to use the OpenMetadata Ingestion Container, which comes shipped with custom Airflow plugins to handle the workflow deployment. If you want to install it manually in an already existing Airflow host, you can follow this guide.
If you don't want to use the OpenMetadata Ingestion container to configure the workflows via the UI, then you can check the following docs to run the Ingestion Framework in any orchestrator externally.
Run Connectors from the OpenMetadata UI
Learn how to manage your deployment to run connectors from the UIRun the Connector Externally
Get the YAML to run the ingestion externallyExternal Schedulers
Get more information about running the Ingestion Framework ExternallyHow to Run the Connector Externally
To run the Ingestion via the UI you'll need to use the OpenMetadata Ingestion Container, which comes shipped with custom Airflow plugins to handle the workflow deployment.
If, instead, you want to manage your workflows externally on your preferred orchestrator, you can check the following docs to run the Ingestion Framework anywhere.
Requirements
To fetch the metadata from MongoDB to OpenMetadata, the MongoDB user must have access to perform find
operation on collection and listCollection
operations on database available in MongoDB.
Python Requirements
We have support for Python versions 3.8-3.11
To run the MongoDB ingestion, you will need to install:
Metadata Ingestion
All connectors are defined as JSON Schemas. Here you can find the structure to create a connection to MongoDB.
In order to create and run a Metadata Ingestion workflow, we will follow the steps to create a YAML configuration able to connect to the source, process the Entities if needed, and reach the OpenMetadata server.
The workflow is modeled around the following JSON Schema
1. Define the YAML Config
This is a sample config for MongoDB:
Source Configuration - Service Connection
username: Username to connect to Mongodb. This user must have access to perform find
operation on collection and listCollection
operations on database available in MongoDB.
password: Password to connect to MongoDB.
hostPort: The hostPort parameter specifies the host and port of the MongoDB. This should be specified as a string in the format hostname:port
. E.g., localhost:27017
.
databaseName: Optional name to give to the database in OpenMetadata. If left blank, we will use default as the database name.
Source Configuration - Source Config
The sourceConfig
is defined here:
markDeletedTables: To flag tables as soft-deleted if they are not present anymore in the source system.
markDeletedStoredProcedures: Optional configuration to soft delete stored procedures in OpenMetadata if the source stored procedures are deleted. Also, if the stored procedures is deleted, all the associated entities like lineage, etc., with that stored procedures will be deleted.
includeTables: true or false, to ingest table data. Default is true.
includeViews: true or false, to ingest views definitions.
includeTags: Optional configuration to toggle the tags ingestion.
includeOwners: Set the 'Include Owners' toggle to control whether to include owners to the ingested entity if the owner email matches with a user stored in the OM server as part of metadata ingestion. If the ingested entity already exists and has an owner, the owner will not be overwritten.
includeStoredProcedures: Optional configuration to toggle the Stored Procedures ingestion.
includeDDL: Optional configuration to toggle the DDL Statements ingestion.
queryLogDuration: Configuration to tune how far we want to look back in query logs to process Stored Procedures results.
queryParsingTimeoutLimit: Configuration to set the timeout for parsing the query in seconds.
useFqnForFiltering: Regex will be applied on fully qualified name (e.g service_name.db_name.schema_name.table_name) instead of raw name (e.g. table_name).
databaseFilterPattern, schemaFilterPattern, tableFilterPattern: Note that the filter supports regex as include or exclude. You can find examples here
threads (beta): The number of threads to use when extracting the metadata using multithreading. Please take a look here before configuring this.
incremental (beta): Incremental Extraction configuration. Currently implemented for:
Sink Configuration
To send the metadata to OpenMetadata, it needs to be specified as type: metadata-rest
.
Workflow Configuration
The main property here is the openMetadataServerConfig
, where you can define the host and security provider of your OpenMetadata installation.
Logger Level
You can specify the loggerLevel
depending on your needs. If you are trying to troubleshoot an ingestion, running with DEBUG
will give you far more traces for identifying issues.
JWT Token
JWT tokens will allow your clients to authenticate against the OpenMetadata server. To enable JWT Tokens, you will get more details here.
You can refer to the JWT Troubleshooting section link for any issues in your JWT configuration.
Store Service Connection
If set to true
(default), we will store the sensitive information either encrypted via the Fernet Key in the database or externally, if you have configured any Secrets Manager.
If set to false
, the service will be created, but the service connection information will only be used by the Ingestion Framework at runtime, and won't be sent to the OpenMetadata server.
Store Service Connection
If set to true
(default), we will store the sensitive information either encrypted via the Fernet Key in the database or externally, if you have configured any Secrets Manager.
If set to false
, the service will be created, but the service connection information will only be used by the Ingestion Framework at runtime, and won't be sent to the OpenMetadata server.
SSL Configuration
If you have added SSL to the OpenMetadata server, then you will need to handle the certificates when running the ingestion too. You can either set verifySSL
to ignore
, or have it as validate
, which will require you to set the sslConfig.caCertificate
with a local path where your ingestion runs that points to the server certificate file.
Find more information on how to troubleshoot SSL issues here.
Advanced Configuration
Connection Options (Optional): Enter the details for any additional connection options that can be sent to database during the connection. These details must be added as Key-Value pairs.
2. Run with the CLI
First, we will need to save the YAML file. Afterward, and with all requirements installed, we can run:
Note that from connector to connector, this recipe will always be the same. By updating the YAML configuration, you will be able to extract metadata from different sources.
Data Profiler
The Data Profiler workflow will be using the orm-profiler
processor.
After running a Metadata Ingestion workflow, we can run Data Profiler workflow. While the serviceName
will be the same to that was used in Metadata Ingestion, so the ingestion bot can get the serviceConnection
details from the server.
Limitations
The MongodDB data profiler current supports only the following features:
- Row count: The number of rows in the collection. Sampling or custom query is not supported.
- Sample data: If a custom query is defined it will be used for sample data.
1. Define the YAML Config
This is a sample config for the profiler:
Source Configuration - Source Config
You can find all the definitions and types for the sourceConfig
here.
generateSampleData: Option to turn on/off generating sample data.
processPiiSensitive: Optional configuration to automatically tag columns that might contain sensitive information.
timeoutSeconds: Profiler Timeout in Seconds
schemaFilterPattern: Regex to only fetch tables or databases that matches the pattern.
tableFilterPattern: Regex to only fetch tables or databases that matches the pattern.
Processor Configuration
Choose the orm-profiler
. Its config can also be updated to define tests from the YAML itself instead of the UI:
tableConfig: tableConfig
allows you to set up some configuration at the table level.
- You can learn more about how to configure and run the Profiler Workflow to extract Profiler data and execute the Data Quality from here
2. Prepare the Profiler DAG
Here, we follow a similar approach as with the metadata and usage pipelines, although we will use a different Workflow class:
Import necessary modules
The ProfilerWorkflow
class that is being imported is a part of a metadata orm_profiler framework, which defines a process of extracting Profiler data.
Here we are also importing all the basic requirements to parse YAMLs, handle dates and build our DAG.
Default arguments for all tasks in the Airflow DAG.
- Default arguments dictionary contains default arguments for tasks in the DAG, including the owner's name, email address, number of retries, retry delay, and execution timeout.
- config: Specifies config for the profiler as we prepare above.
- metadata_ingestion_workflow(): This code defines a function
metadata_ingestion_workflow()
that loads a YAML configuration, creates aProfilerWorkflow
object, executes the workflow, checks its status, prints the status to the console, and stops the workflow.
- DAG: creates a DAG using the Airflow framework, and tune the DAG configurations to whatever fits with your requirements
- For more Airflow DAGs creation details visit here.