kedro-geospatial
Project Documentation
This is the standard generated Kedro Readme. For the project documentation, see docs/index.html.
Overview
This is your new Kedro project, which was generated using kedro 0.18.14
.
Take a look at the Kedro documentation to get started.
Rules and guidelines
In order to get the best out of the template:
Don’t remove any lines from the
.gitignore
file we provideMake sure your results can be reproduced by following a data engineering convention
Don’t commit data to your repository
Don’t commit any credentials or your local configuration to your repository. Keep all your credentials and local configuration in
conf/local/
How to install dependencies
Declare any dependencies in src/requirements.txt
for pip
installation and src/environment.yml
for conda
installation.
To install them, run:
pip install -r src/requirements.txt
How to run your Kedro pipeline
You can run your Kedro project with:
kedro run
How to test your Kedro project
Have a look at the file src/tests/test_run.py
for instructions on how to write your tests. You can run your tests as follows:
kedro test
To configure the coverage threshold, go to the .coveragerc
file.
Project dependencies
To generate or update the dependency requirements for your project:
kedro build-reqs
This will pip-compile
the contents of src/requirements.txt
into a new file src/requirements.lock
. You can see the output of the resolution by opening src/requirements.lock
.
After this, if you’d like to update your project requirements, please update src/requirements.txt
and re-run kedro build-reqs
.
How to work with Kedro and notebooks
Note: Using
kedro jupyter
orkedro ipython
to run your notebook provides these variables in scope:context
,catalog
, andstartup_error
.Jupyter, JupyterLab, and IPython are already included in the project requirements by default, so once you have run
pip install -r src/requirements.txt
you will not need to take any extra steps before you use them.
Jupyter
To use Jupyter notebooks in your Kedro project, you need to install Jupyter:
pip install jupyter
After installing Jupyter, you can start a local notebook server:
kedro jupyter notebook
JupyterLab
To use JupyterLab, you need to install it:
pip install jupyterlab
You can also start JupyterLab:
kedro jupyter lab
IPython
And if you want to run an IPython session:
kedro ipython
How to convert notebook cells to nodes in a Kedro project
You can move notebook code over into a Kedro project structure using a mixture of cell tagging and Kedro CLI commands.
By adding the node
tag to a cell and running the command below, the cell’s source code will be copied over to a Python file within src/<package_name>/nodes/
:
kedro jupyter convert <filepath_to_my_notebook>
Note: The name of the Python file matches the name of the original notebook.
Alternatively, you may want to transform all your notebooks in one go. Run the following command to convert all notebook files found in the project root directory and under any of its sub-folders:
kedro jupyter convert --all
How to ignore notebook output cells in git
To automatically strip out all output cell contents before committing to git
, you can run kedro activate-nbstripout
. This will add a hook in .git/config
which will run nbstripout
before anything is committed to git
.
Note: Your output cells will be retained locally.
Package your Kedro project
Further information about building project documentation and packaging your project