Best Practices for Designing Components
This page describes some recommended practices for designing components. For an application of these best practices, see the component development guide. If you’re new to pipelines, see the conceptual guides to pipelines and components.
General component design rules
- Design your components with composability in mind. Think about upstream and downstream components. What formats to consume as inputs from the upstream components. What formats to use for output data so that downstream components can consume it.
- Component code must use local files for input/output data (unless impossible
- for example, Cloud ML Engine and BigQuery require Cloud Storage staging paths).
- Components must be pure - they must not use any outside data except data that comes through inputs (unless impossible). Everything should either be inside the container or come from inputs. Network access is strongly discouraged unless that’s the explicit purpose of a component (for example, upload/download).
Writing component code
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The program must be runnable both locally and inside the Docker container.
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Programming languages:
- Generally, use the language that makes the most sense. If the component wraps a Java library, then it may make sense to use Java to expose that library.
- For most new components when the performance is not a concern the Python language is preferred (use version 3 wherever possible).
- If a component wraps an existing program, it’s preferred to directly expose the program in the component command line.
- If there needs to be some wrapper around the program (small pre-processing or post-processing like file renaming), it can be done with a shell script.
- Follow the best practices for the chosen language.
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Each output data piece should be written to a separate file (see next line).
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The input and output file paths must be passed in the command line and not hard coded:
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Typical command line:
program.py --input-data <input path> --output-data <output path> --param 42
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Do NOT hardcode paths in the program:
open("/output.txt", "w")
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For temporary data you should use library functions that create temporary files. For example, for Python use https://docs.python.org/3/library/tempfile.html. Do not just write to the root, or testing will be hard.
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Design the code to be testable.
Writing tests
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Follow the general rules section so that writing the tests is easier.
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Use the unit testing libraries that are standard for the language you’re using.
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Try to design the component code so that it can be tested using unit tests. Do not use network unless necessary
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Prepare small input data files so that the component code can be tested in isolation. For example, for an ML prediction component prepare a small model and evaluation dataset.
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Use testing best practices.
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Test the expected behavior of the code. Don’t just verify that “nothing has changed”:
- For training you can look at loss at final iteration.
- For prediction you can look at the result metrics.
- For data augmenting you can check for some desired post-invariants.
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If the component cannot be tested locally or in isolation, then create a small proof-of-concept pipeline that tests the component. You can use conditionals to verify the output values of a particular task and only enable the “success” task if the results are expected.
Writing a Dockerfile
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Follow the Docker best practices
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Structure the Dockerfile so that the required packages are installed first and the main component scripts/binaries are added last. Ideally, split the Dockerfile in two parts (base image and component code) so that the main component image build is fast and more reliable (not require network access).
Writing a component specification YAML file
For the complete definition of a Kubeflow Pipelines component, see the
component specification.
When creating your component.yaml
file, you can look at the definitions for
some
existing components.
- Use the
{inputValue: Input name}
command-line placeholder for small values that should be directly inserted into the command-line. - Use the
{inputPath: Input name}
command-line placeholder for input file locations. - Use the
{outputPath: Output name}
command-line placeholder for output file locations. - Specify the full command line in ‘command:' instead of just arguments to the entry point.
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