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Load Clubhouse Data to Neon Serverless Postgres with dlt in Python

tip

We will be using the dlt PostgreSQL destination to connect to Neon Serverless Postgres. You can get the connection string for your Neon Serverless Postgres database as described in the Neon Serverless Postgres Docs.

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Loading data from Clubhouse to Neon Serverless Postgres can help you manage and analyze audio-based social interactions more effectively. Clubhouse is a social media audio app that provides real-time virtual rooms for users to communicate via audio. With Neon Serverless Postgres, you get a reliable and scalable database platform designed to accelerate your application development. Using the open-source python library dlt, you can streamline the process of transferring data from Clubhouse to Neon Serverless Postgres. This documentation will guide you through the steps to achieve this integration, ensuring data consistency and quality. For more information about Clubhouse, visit their website.

dlt Key Features

  • Pipeline Metadata: dlt pipelines leverage metadata to provide governance capabilities, including load IDs for data lineage and traceability. Read more about lineage.
  • Schema Enforcement and Curation: Ensures data consistency and quality by defining the structure of normalized data and guiding the processing and loading of data. Read more.
  • Schema Evolution: Alerts users to schema changes in source data, allowing necessary actions like reviewing and validating changes. Learn more.
  • Scaling and Finetuning: Offers options to run extraction, normalization, and load in parallel, and to finetune memory buffers and file sizes. Read more about performance.
  • Advanced Topics: dlt is a growing library supporting many features and use cases. Join our Slack to find recent releases or discuss potential builds. Explore more.

Getting started with your pipeline locally

OpenAPI Source Generator dlt-init-openapi

This walkthrough makes use of the dlt-init-openapi generator cli tool. You can read more about it here. The code generated by this tool uses the dlt rest_api verified source, docs for this are here.

0. Prerequisites

dlt and dlt-init-openapi requires Python 3.9 or higher. Additionally, you need to have the pip package manager installed, and we recommend using a virtual environment to manage your dependencies. You can learn more about preparing your computer for dlt in our installation reference.

1. Install dlt and dlt-init-openapi

First you need to install the dlt-init-openapi cli tool.

pip install dlt-init-openapi

The dlt-init-openapi cli is a powerful generator which you can use to turn any OpenAPI spec into a dlt source to ingest data from that api. The quality of the generator source is dependent on how well the API is designed and how accurate the OpenAPI spec you are using is. You may need to make tweaks to the generated code, you can learn more about this here.

# generate pipeline
# NOTE: add_limit adds a global limit, you can remove this later
# NOTE: you will need to select which endpoints to render, you
# can just hit Enter and all will be rendered.
dlt-init-openapi clubhouse --url https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dlt-hub/openapi-specs/main/open_api_specs/Business/clubhouse_api.yaml --global-limit 2
cd clubhouse_pipeline
# install generated requirements
pip install -r requirements.txt

The last command will install the required dependencies for your pipeline. The dependencies are listed in the requirements.txt:

dlt>=0.4.12

You now have the following folder structure in your project:

clubhouse_pipeline/
├── .dlt/
│ ├── config.toml # configs for your pipeline
│ └── secrets.toml # secrets for your pipeline
├── rest_api/ # The rest api verified source
│ └── ...
├── clubhouse/
│ └── __init__.py # TODO: possibly tweak this file
├── clubhouse_pipeline.py # your main pipeline script
├── requirements.txt # dependencies for your pipeline
└── .gitignore # ignore files for git (not required)

1.1. Tweak clubhouse/__init__.py

This file contains the generated configuration of your rest_api. You can continue with the next steps and leave it as is, but you might want to come back here and make adjustments if you need your rest_api source set up in a different way. The generated file for the clubhouse source will look like this:

Click to view full file (133 lines)

from typing import List

import dlt
from dlt.extract.source import DltResource
from rest_api import rest_api_source
from rest_api.typing import RESTAPIConfig


@dlt.source(name="clubhouse_source", max_table_nesting=2)
def clubhouse_source(
base_url: str = dlt.config.value,
) -> List[DltResource]:

# source configuration
source_config: RESTAPIConfig = {
"client": {
"base_url": base_url,
"paginator": {
"type":
"page_number",
"page_param":
"page",
"total_path":
"",
"maximum_page":
20,
},
},
"resources":
[
{
"name": "check_for_update",
"table_name": "check_for_update",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/check_for_update",
"params": {
# the parameters below can optionally be configured
# "is_testflight": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",

},
}
},
{
"name": "get_actionable_notification",
"table_name": "get_actionable_notification",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_actionable_notifications",
}
},
{
"name": "get_all_topic",
"table_name": "get_all_topic",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_all_topics",
}
},
{
"name": "get_channel",
"table_name": "get_channel",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_channels",
}
},
{
"name": "get_event",
"table_name": "get_event",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_events",
"params": {
# the parameters below can optionally be configured
# "is_filtered": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",
# "page_size": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",

},
}
},
{
"name": "get_notification",
"table_name": "get_notification",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_notifications",
"params": {
# the parameters below can optionally be configured
# "page_size": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",

},
}
},
{
"name": "get_setting",
"table_name": "get_setting",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_settings",
}
},
{
"name": "get_suggested_follows_all",
"table_name": "get_suggested_follows_all",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_suggested_follows_all",
"params": {
# the parameters below can optionally be configured
# "in_onboarding": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",
# "page_size": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",

},
}
},
{
"name": "get_users_for_topic",
"table_name": "get_users_for_topic",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_users_for_topic",
"params": {
# the parameters below can optionally be configured
# "topic_id": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",
# "page_size": "OPTIONAL_CONFIG",

},
}
},
{
"name": "get_welcome_channel",
"table_name": "get_welcome_channel",
"endpoint": {
"path": "/get_welcome_channel",
}
},
]
}

return rest_api_source(source_config)

2. Configuring your source and destination credentials

info

dlt-init-openapi will try to detect which authentication mechanism (if any) is used by the API in question and add a placeholder in your secrets.toml.

  • If you know your API needs authentication, but none was detected, you can learn more about adding authentication to the rest_api here.
  • OAuth detection currently is not supported, but you can supply your own authentication mechanism as outlined here.

The dlt cli will have created a .dlt directory in your project folder. This directory contains a config.toml file and a secrets.toml file that you can use to configure your pipeline. The automatically created version of these files look like this:

generated config.toml


[runtime]
log_level="INFO"

[sources.clubhouse]
# Base URL for the API
base_url = "https://www.clubhouseapi.com/api/"

generated secrets.toml


[sources.clubhouse]
# secrets for your clubhouse source
# example_api_key = "example value"

2.1. Adjust the generated code to your usecase

Further help setting up your source and destinations

At this time, the dlt-init-openapi cli tool will always create pipelines that load to a local duckdb instance. Switching to a different destination is trivial, all you need to do is change the destination parameter in clubhouse_pipeline.py to postgres and supply the credentials as outlined in the destination doc linked below.

  • Read more about setting up the rest_api source in our docs.
  • Read more about setting up the Neon Serverless Postgres destination in our docs.

3. Running your pipeline for the first time

The dlt cli has also created a main pipeline script for you at clubhouse_pipeline.py, as well as a folder clubhouse that contains additional python files for your source. These files are your local copies which you can modify to fit your needs. In some cases you may find that you only need to do small changes to your pipelines or add some configurations, in other cases these files can serve as a working starting point for your code, but will need to be adjusted to do what you need them to do.

The main pipeline script will look something like this:


import dlt

from clubhouse import clubhouse_source


if __name__ == "__main__":
pipeline = dlt.pipeline(
pipeline_name="clubhouse_pipeline",
destination='duckdb',
dataset_name="clubhouse_data",
progress="log",
export_schema_path="schemas/export"
)
source = clubhouse_source()
info = pipeline.run(source)
print(info)

Provided you have set up your credentials, you can run your pipeline like a regular python script with the following command:

python clubhouse_pipeline.py

4. Inspecting your load result

You can now inspect the state of your pipeline with the dlt cli:

dlt pipeline clubhouse_pipeline info

You can also use streamlit to inspect the contents of your Neon Serverless Postgres destination for this:

# install streamlit
pip install streamlit
# run the streamlit app for your pipeline with the dlt cli:
dlt pipeline clubhouse_pipeline show

5. Next steps to get your pipeline running in production

One of the beauties of dlt is, that we are just a plain Python library, so you can run your pipeline in any environment that supports Python >= 3.8. We have a couple of helpers and guides in our docs to get you there:

The Deploy section will show you how to deploy your pipeline to

  • Deploy with GitHub Actions: Learn how to deploy your dlt pipeline using GitHub Actions.
  • Deploy with Airflow and Google Composer: Follow this guide to deploy your dlt pipeline with Airflow and Google Composer.
  • Deploy with Google Cloud Functions: Discover how to deploy your dlt pipeline using Google Cloud Functions.
  • Other Deployment Options: Explore various other methods to deploy your dlt pipeline here.

The running in production section will teach you about:

  • How to Monitor your pipeline: Learn how to effectively monitor your dlt pipeline in production to ensure smooth and efficient data processing. How to Monitor your pipeline
  • Set up alerts: Configure alerts to stay informed about the status and health of your dlt pipeline, allowing for proactive management and quick response to issues. Set up alerts
  • Set up tracing: Implement tracing to gain detailed insights into the execution of your dlt pipeline, helping you to identify and resolve performance bottlenecks. And set up tracing

Available Sources and Resources

For this verified source the following sources and resources are available

Source Clubhouse

Clubhouse source provides notifications, user suggestions, events, topics, settings, updates, and channels data.

Resource NameWrite DispositionDescription
get_notificationappendRetrieves notifications for the user.
get_suggested_follows_allappendFetches a list of all suggested users to follow.
get_eventappendRetrieves details about a specific event.
get_users_for_topicappendGets a list of users associated with a specific topic.
get_all_topicappendRetrieves all available topics on the platform.
get_settingappendFetches user settings and preferences.
get_actionable_notificationappendRetrieves actionable notifications that require user interaction.
check_for_updateappendChecks if there are any updates available for the app.
get_channelappendRetrieves information about a specific audio channel.
get_welcome_channelappendFetches details about the welcome channel for new users.

Additional pipeline guides

This demo works on codespaces. Codespaces is a development environment available for free to anyone with a Github account. You'll be asked to fork the demo repository and from there the README guides you with further steps.
The demo uses the Continue VSCode extension.

Off to codespaces!

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