How to create a new Checkpoint
This guide will help you create a new CheckpointThe primary means for validating data in a production deployment of Great Expectations., which allows you to couple an Expectation SuiteA collection of verifiable assertions about data. with a data set to ValidateThe act of applying an Expectation Suite to a Batch..
As of Great Expectations version 0.13.7, we have updated and improved the Checkpoints feature. You can continue to use your existing legacy Checkpoint workflows if you’re working with concepts from the Batch Kwargs (v2) API. If you’re using concepts from the BatchRequest (v3) API, please refer to the new Checkpoints guides.
This how-to guide assumes you have already:
Steps (for Checkpoints in Great Expectations version >=0.13.12)
1. Use the CLI to open a Jupyter Notebook for creating a new Checkpoint
To assist you with creating Checkpoints, the Great Expectations CLICommand Line Interface has a convenience method that will open a Jupyter Notebook with all the scaffolding you need to easily configure and save your Checkpoint. Simply run the following CLI command from your Data ContextThe primary entry point for a Great Expectations deployment, with configurations and methods for all supporting components.:
> great_expectations checkpoint new my_checkpoint
You can replace my_checkpoint
in the above example with whatever name you would like to associate with the Checkpoint you will be creating.
Executing this command will open a Jupyter Notebook which will guide you through the steps of creating a Checkpoint. This Jupyter Notebook will include a default configuration that you can edit to suite your use case.
2. Configure your SimpleCheckpoint (Example)
2.1. Edit the configuration
The sample Checkpoint configuration in your Jupyter Notebook will utilize the SimpleCheckpoint
class, which takes care of some defaults.
To update this configuration to suit your environment, you will need to replace the names my_datasource
, my_data_connector
, MyDataAsset
and my_suite
with the respective DatasourceProvides a standard API for accessing and interacting with data from a wide variety of source systems., Data ConnectorProvides the configuration details based on the source data system which are needed by a Datasource to define Data Assets., Data AssetA collection of records within a Datasource which is usually named based on the underlying data system and sliced to correspond to a desired specification., and Expectation SuiteA collection of verifiable assertions about data. names you have configured in your great_expectations.yml
.
config = """
name: my_checkpoint # This is populated by the CLI.
config_version: 1
class_name: SimpleCheckpoint
validations:
- batch_request:
datasource_name: my_datasource # Update this value.
data_connector_name: my_data_connector # Update this value.
data_asset_name: MyDataAsset # Update this value.
data_connector_query:
index: -1
expectation_suite_name: my_suite # Update this value.
"""
This is the minimum required to configure a Checkpoint that will run the Expectation Suite my_suite
against the Data Asset MyDataAsset
.
See How to configure a new Checkpoint using test_yaml_config for advanced configuration options.
2.2. Validate and test your configuration
You can use the following command to validate the contents of your config
yaml string:
context.test_yaml_config(yaml_config=config)
When executed, test_yaml_config(...)
will instantiate the component and run through a self-check procedure to verify that the component works as expected.
In the case of a Checkpoint, this means:
- Validating the yaml configuration
- Verifying that the Checkpoint class with the given configuration, if valid, can be instantiated
- Printing warnings in case certain parts of the configuration, while valid, may be incomplete and need to be better specified for a successful Checkpoint operation
The output will look something like this:
Attempting to instantiate class from config...
Instantiating as a SimpleCheckpoint, since class_name is SimpleCheckpoint
Successfully instantiated SimpleCheckpoint
Checkpoint class name: SimpleCheckpoint
If something about your configuration was not set up correctly, test_yaml_config(...)
will raise an error.
3. Store your Checkpoint configuration
After you are satisfied with your configuration, save it by running the appropriate cells in the Jupyter Notebook.
4. (Optional) Check your stored Checkpoint config
If the StoreA connector to store and retrieve information about metadata in Great Expectations. backend of your Checkpoint StoreA connector to store and retrieve information about means for validating data in a production deployment of Great Expectations. is on the local filesystem, you can navigate to the checkpoints
store directory that is configured in great_expectations.yml
and find the configuration files corresponding to the Checkpoints you created.
5. (Optional) Test run the new Checkpoint and open Data Docs
Now that you have stored your Checkpoint configuration to the Store backend configured for the Checkpoint Configuration store of your Data Context, you can also test context.run_checkpoint(...)
, right within your Jupyter Notebook by running the appropriate cells.
Before running a Checkpoint, make sure that all classes and Expectation Suites referred to in the configuration exist.
When run_checkpoint(...)
returns, the checkpoint_run_result
can then be checked for the value of the success
field (all validations passed) and other information associated with running the specified ActionsA Python class with a run method that takes a Validation Result and does something with it.
For more advanced configurations of Checkpoints, please see How to configure a new Checkpoint using test_yaml_config.