@rudderstack/workflow-engine
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rudder-workflow-engine

Overview

In transformer service, we are doing data transformation from customer events to destination events, and we want organize the transformation process into logically separated steps for better understanding and maintainability so we have created a workflow engine to address the following requirements.

  • Validation
    • Event validation
    • Destination config validation
  • Source to destination data mapping
  • Enriching data with destination API calls
  • Handling different types of events
    • Track, Identify, Page, etc.
    • Custom categories:
      • Product Viewed
      • Product Purchased
  • Multiplexing
  • Batching
  • Response building.

Currently, most steps are implemented using Javascript code, which provides the most flexibility. Still, it is getting difficult to maintain, understand, debug, test, and develop in a standardized way. To bring standardization, we are building a workflow engine that is config driven to provide improved readability, testability, reusability, and speed of development.

Since we want to express the transformation of the logic using easy to read and write template based language. We support following template languages:

templateType: Jsonata
steps:
  - name: unsupported
    condition: $not(op in ["+", "-", "*", "/"])
    template: |
      $doThrow("unsupported operation")
  - name: add
    description: Do addition
    condition: op = "+"
    template: |
      ( a + b )
  - name: subtract
    description: Do subtraction
    condition: op = "-"
    template: |
      ( a - b )
  - name: multiply
    description: Do multiplication
    condition: op = "*"
    template: |
      ( a * b )
  - name: divide
    description: Do division
    condition: op = "/"
    template: |
      ( 
        $assert( b != 0, "division by zero is not allowed");
        a / b 
      )

Getting started

  • npm install @rudderstack/workflow-engine
import { WorkflowEngineFactory } from '@rudderstack/workflow-engine';
const workflowEngine = WorkflowEngineFactory.createFromFilePath('workflow.yaml', options);
workflowEngine.execute(input);

Features

Config Driven

Users should be able to express the destination transformation logic as a series of steps in a YAML file as a workflow. Steps can be written as template base languages.

Bindings

Supports importing of external functions and data using bindings.

Workflow Bindings

  • Bindings are similar to imports, which allow importing of externally defined functions and data to the workflow.
  • Types
    • Type 1: Import a specific field from a file.
      name: EventType
      path: ./config
      • EvenType is defined in ./config file then it will be imported as $EventType
    • Type 2: Import everything from a file as something.
      name: MappingData
      path: ./mapping
      exportAll: true
      • Everything from ./mapping file will be imported to the variable MappingData
      • If something1 and something2 are defined in ./mapping then we need to access them using $MappingData.something1 and $MappingData.something2
    • Type 3: Import everything as it is defined in the file
      path: ./utils
      • Everything from ./utils file will be imported with the same names.
      • If something1 and something2 are defined in ./utils then we need to access them using $something1 and $something2
  • Full example:
    bindings:
      - name: EventType
        path: ./config
      - name: MappingData
        path: ./mapping
        exportAll: true
      - path: ./utils
  • These are user-specified bindings while defining the workflow.

Platform bindings

  • The platform provides these bindings, which can be used directly without defining them in the bindings block.
  • We will soon release detailed documentation on these bindings.

Execution bindings

  • $outputs: Provides access to the outputs of the previous steps executed before the current step.
    steps:
      - name: step1
        template: |
          {
            "a": something
          }
      - name: step2
        template: |
        {
          "b": $doSomething($outputs.step1.a)
        }
    • Step2 uses the output of step1.
    • Workflow Engine automatically bindings step outputs to the $outputs variable.
  • $setContext: It is a function to store any data in $context and use it later. $outputs are read-only variables for users to refer to the previous step outputs, so we can’t use them to pass a modifiable result. So if we want to update the same variable in multiple steps, then **$setContext** should be used.
    • Example:
      steps:
        - name: setAForCase1
          condition: $isCase1(message)
          template: |
            $setContext("a", something1)
        - name: setAForCase2
          condition: $isCase2(message)
          template: |
            $setContext("a", something2)
        - name: updateA
          template: |
            $setContext("a", $updateA($context.a))
        - name: useA
          template: |
            $doSomething($context.a)
      • In this example, we update the variable repeatedly in several steps, so it is impossible to use $outputs.
      • A practical scenario for this feature is: that we want to populate an object differently based on some conditions and later use it.
    • $context: To access variables set using $setContext function. Please refer to the above example for clarity.

Steps

  • Steps are the main execution blocks of the workflow.
  • Steps must contain a name to track outputs.
  • Steps can contain an optional description field to describe the details.
  • The step can contain an optional condition field to execute only if the condition is satisfied.
  • The step can contain an optional inputTemplate field to customize the input, which will be passed while executing the step.
  • There are two different types of steps supported:
    • SimpleStep
    • WorkflowStep

Conditions

  • A step in a workflow can mention an optional condition so that it gets executed only when the condition is satisfied.
  • Condition is also a Jsonata code.
    steps:
      - name: commonValidation
        template: |
          ( common validations for events )
      - name: ValidateInputOfTrackEvent
        condition: message.type = EventType.Track
        template: |
          ( some validations specific to track events)

InputTemplate**

  • By default, all steps receive the same input as the workflow input, but when we want to modify the input before executing the step, we can use this feature.
    steps:
      - name: step1
        (some logic ...)
      - name: step2
        inputTemplate: |
          (customize the input)
      - name: step3
        (some logic ...)
    • In the above example: step1 and step3 will be executed with the workflow’s input, but the step2 receives custom input as defined in the inputTemplate

ContextTemplate

  • By default, all steps receive the current context, but we can use this feature when we want to modify the context before executing the step. This is useful when using external workflows, workflow steps, or template paths.
    steps:
      - name: step1
        (some logic to prepareContext)
      - name: step2
        contextTemplate: |
          (customize the context for step2)
        (some logic ...)
      - name: step3
        (some logic ...)
    • In the above example: step 3 will execute with the context prepared in step 1, but step 2 receives custom context as defined in the contextTemplate.

LoopOverInput

  • We can use this feature when the input is an array, and we want to execute the step logic for each element independently.
  • This is mainly used for batch processing, and we report failed and successful executions without failing the step if an error occurs while processing a particular step.
    name: executeForEach
    loopOverInput: true
    template: |
      ( do something )
    • If the input for the step is [e1, e2, e3], then the step will be executed for all elements independently, and imagine that it failed for e1 and succeeded for e2 and e3 then, the overall step output will be the following:
      [
        {
          "error": someErrorForE1
        },
        {
          "output": someOutputForE2
        },
        {
          "output": someOutputForE3
        }
      ]

OnComplete

  • When the step is completed, the next step will be executed, but if we want to exit the workflow with the output of a particular step, then we can use this.

  • This feature should be used only in a conditional step.

  • Example 1: Avoid reprocessing, so return without modifying the input message.

      steps:
        - name: checkIfProcessed
          condition: message.processed = true
          template: |
            message
          **onComplete: return**
        - name: processMessage
          template: |
            (...)
    • In the above example, we don’t want to reprocess messages, so we need to return them immediately if they are already processed.
  • Example 2: Return early after processing the input message.

    steps:
      - name: step1
        template: |
          (doSomeProcessing)
      - name: **step2**
        condition: someCondition
        template: |
          (doSomeProcessing)
        onComplete: return
      - name: step3
        template: |
          (doSomeProcessing)
    • In this example, we want to return early after successfully processing the message in step2 since this step is conditional, and if the condition is not satisfied, then step3 will be executed.

OnError

  • By default, if any step fails, then the entire workflow fails but if the step uses OnError: continue setting, then the workflow will ignore the error and continue with execution.
    steps:
      - name: step1
        template: |
          (doSomeProcessing)
      - name: **step2**
        template: |
          (doSomeProcessing)
        onError: continue
      - name: step3
        template: |
          (doSomeProcessing)
    • In the above example, if any error occurs in either step1 or step3, the workflow will exit immediately, but when step2 fails, the workflow ignores the error and continues to execute step3.

Custom Workflow Executor

When you may want finer control on how workflow steps needs to executed by workflow engine then you can use this feature. You need to implement WorkflowExecutor and use it in following ways to override the default workflow executor.

Specify directly in YAML

executor: myCustomWorkflowExecutor
bindings:
  - name: myCustomWorkflowExecutor
    path: ./custom_executor
steps:
  - name: step1
    template: |
      doSomething

Refer this example for more details.

Specify using workflow options

WorkflowEngineFactory.createFromFilePath('workflow.yaml', {
  executor: myCustomWorkflowExecutor,
});

Custom Bindings Provider

When you want to implement custom logic to resolve the bindings then you can use this feature. You need to implement WorkflowBindingProvider.

WorkflowEngineFactory.createFromFilePath('workflow.yaml', {
  bindingProvider: myCustomBindingsProvider,
});

Steps

Simple Step

  • Simple step is the basic unit of execution in the workflow.

  • A simple step can be a function that is defined in the Bindings.

    bindings:
      - name: **processTrackEvent
        path: ./transform # actual file name is transform.js**
    steps:
      - name: processTrackEvent
        functionName: processTrackEvent
    • We can omit .js extension while defining the bindings.
    • processTrackEvent must have the following definition.
    (input: any, bindings: Record<string, any>) => {
      error?: any,
      output?: any
    }
  • A simple step can be a JSONata template.

    name: processTrackEvent
    template: |
      (JSONata template to process track events)**
    • The template also can be imported from the file path.
      name: processTrackEvent
      templatePath: ./trackTemplate.yaml
  • We can use an external workflow in a simple step.

    steps:
      - name: prepareContext
        template: $setContext("batchMode", true)
      - name: transform
        **externalWorkflow:
          path: ./pinterest_tag_single_workflow.yaml**
        loopOverInput: true
    • We are reusing the single event workflow in the batch events transformation workflow.
    • The external workflow will be executed as a black box, so we can only access the final output of the workflow but not the individual outputs of steps.
    • The external workflow is executed with step input and context of the original workflow.
    • The context of the parent workflow is passed to the child workflow (externalWorkflow) but not vice-versa. This is helpful to customize the child workflow execution based on where it is used.
    • The external workflow doesn’t have access to the parent workflow outputs.

Workflow Step

  • Series of simple steps.
    steps:
      - name: category
        template: |
          (compute category)
      - name: ecom
        condition: $outputs.category = "ecom"
        steps:
          - name: validateInput
            description: Common validation for all ECom pages
            template: |
              (assert everything is fine)
          - name: page
            template: |
              (compute page using $outputs.category)
          - name: processSearchPage
            condition: $outputs.ecom.page = "search"
            template: |
              (search page template)
          - name: processDetailPage
            condition: $outputs.ecom.page = "detail"
            template: |
              (detail page template)
          - name: processCartPage
            condition: $outputs.ecom.page = "cart"
            template: |
              (cart page template)
    • We can access outputs of previous steps normally like $outputs.category.
    • To access outputs of the child steps of the workflowStep, we need to use $outputs.workflowStepName.childStepName, for example: $outputs.ecom.page.
      • The outputs of the child steps are not available outside the workflow step.
      • The last successfully executed child step’s output will become the output of the workflow step, and we can only access that outside the workflow step as $output.workflowStepName, for example, $output.ecom.
    • Currently, we don’t support nested workflow steps.
  • Workflow Step can be imported from a file.
    steps:
      - name: processECommerace
        workflowStepPath: ./ecomWorkflow.yaml
  • Supports additional Bindings
    bindings:
      - name: commonBinding
        path: ./bindings
    steps:
      - name: processECommerace
        bindings:
          - name: stepBinding
            path: ./workflow_step_bindings
        steps:
          - name: validateInput
            description: Common validation for all ECom pages
            template: |
              (assert with $commonBinding)
          - name: page
            template: |
              (compute page using $workflowBinding)
          - name: processSearchPage
            condition: $outputs.ecom.page = "search"
            template: |
              (search page template)
    • In the above example: processECommerace step is the workflow step and importing additional bindings. Both workflow’s (commonBinding) and step’s (stepBinding) bindings are available to the workflow step.

Batch Step

This helps to batch the inputs using filter and by length or size. We can also define our own batching by implementing BatchExecutor interface.

Syntax

steps:
  - name: batchStep
    type: batch
    batches:
      - key: heroes
        filter: .type === "hero"
        length: 5
      - key: villains
        filter: .type === "villain"
        size: 100

Here we are using keys (heroes or villains) to indicate batches and these will be reflected in the output for further processing.

Custom Batch Executor

Refer this example.

Custom Step

When you want to bring your own steps to workflows then you use this feature.

Using Executor

When your custom step doesn't require initialization specific to workflow then you can directly a provide executor instance in bindings by implementing CustomStepExecutor.

Refer this example.

Using Provider

When your custom step requires initialization with custom params then you can pass a provider in bindings by implementing CustomStepExecutorProvider.

Refer this example.

Testing

Test Scenarios using Jest

  • npm run jest:scenarios -- --scenarios=<comma separate scenarios>
  • Example: npm run jest:scenarios -- --scenarios=basic_workflow,to_array

Manually Test Scenario

  • npm run test:scenario -- -s <scenario_folder> -i <test_case_index_from_data.json>
  • Example: npm run test:scenario -- -s outputs -i 1
  • Note: It just run the test case and produces results but won't run any validations of the results.

Contribute

We would love to see you contribute to RudderStack. Get more information on how to contribute here.

License

The RudderStack rudder-workflow-engine is released under the MIT License.

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