Installation¶
The use of ETL is mainly addressed to OWID staff, but open to the general public. It is supported and regularly run on Linux, MacOS and Windows via WSL. Here's how to get set up.
Warning
Some parts of ETL rely on other internal tools and resources, making it less suitable for external uses. Still, we believe that there is value in having this project open to the public for transparency and reproducibility purposes.
Install dependencies¶
You will need Python 3.10+, basic build tools, and MySQL client libraries.
Tip
We recommend using Homebrew to install dependencies.
Ensure you have XCode command line tools:
Then install Python 3.10+ and MySQL client and UV. UV is our preferred python packaging and dependency management tool.
You then need to inform Python where to find MySQL by adding some lines to your ~/.zshrc file (or ~/.bash_profile, depends on your shell). Run brew info mysql-client to see what's needed. For example, on an M1/M2 Mac where Homebrew installs to /opt/homebrew, you would need to add:
export PATH="/opt/homebrew/opt/mysql-client/bin:$PATH"
export LDFLAGS="-L/opt/homebrew/opt/mysql-client/lib"
export CPPFLAGS="-I/opt/homebrew/opt/mysql-client/include"
On an Intel Mac, the paths will be slightly different.
Finally, check that you have the correct version of Python as your default:
It should say something like /usr/local/bin/python3 or /opt/homebrew/bin/python3. If not, you will have to change the PATH variable in your shell profile (e.g. ~/.bash_profile or ~/.zshrc).
You can install most things you need with apt:
Then install UV package manager with
or
You will need to install WSL2 to get started.
You should use Ubuntu 22.04 as your Linux distribution.
Then, enter your Linux console and follow the instructions for Ubuntu 22.04.
Extra config for staff
OWID staff who want to upsert data from ETL to grapher database will also need access to Cloudflare R2.
First start with installing rclone
Then configure its config with code ~/.config/rclone/rclone.conf. You should get your personal R2 keys
r2_access_key_id and r2_secret_access_key and replace them in the config file.
Install pyenv¶
Tip
pyenv is not crucial now after switching to uv as a package manager. However, it is still recommended to use it to manage your Python versions.
Even though it's not compulsory, it is highly recommended to install pyenv to manage your Python versions. This will allow you to have multiple Python versions installed in your machine and switch between them easily. You will also avoid issues caused by updating system wide Python.
Follow the instructions in the pyenv installation guide or follow the steps below.
For a more complete installation guide, follow this guide.
Use the automatic installer:
For more details visit our other project: https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv-installer
Add these lines to ~/.zshrc, ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc:
export PYENV_ROOT="$HOME/.pyenv"
export PATH="$PYENV_ROOT/bin:$PATH"
if command -v pyenv 1>/dev/null 2>&1; then
eval "$(pyenv init --path)"
eval "$(pyenv init -)"
fi
Restart your shell to apply changes
Verify that pyenv is installed properly:
Now, you can use pyenv to install and manage multiple Python versions on your Mac. For example, to install Python 3.12.0, run:
To set the newly installed Python version as the global default, run:
Now check that which python3 prints path .../.pyenv/shims/python3 and python --version prints Python 3.12.0.
Clone the project¶
First of all, you need to have the ETL project in your working environment. Run:
Along with various directories and files, the project also has sub-packages in the lib/ folder: catalog, repack and datautils. These redistributable in-house libraries simplify access to data.
Check your environment¶
You can get started by using make to see available commands. Note that to run all make commands you should be in the project folder (as it contains the Makefile).
The best way to check if your environment is healthy is to run:
This will install the project, and then run all CI checks.
If make test succeeds, then you should be able to build any dataset you like, including the entire catalog. If it fails, please raise a Github issue (if OWID staff, you can also ask using the #tech-issues Slack channel).
Tip
Speed it up with multiple processes make -j 4 test.
Git hooks¶
The pre-commit hook is activated automatically by make .venv (and any target that depends on it). It runs make check (lint, format, type-check) before every git commit, which prevents accidentally pushing code that fails CI.
If you need to (re)activate it manually:
VSCode setup¶
Recommended extensions¶
We highly recommended installing the following extensions:
Custom ETL extensions¶
We've built custom VS Code extensions to streamline ETL development. To install all extensions:
This includes extensions for navigating ETL steps, debugging interactively, comparing versions, and detecting outdated code patterns.
For detailed information about each extension and how to use them, see the VS Code Extensions Guide.
Additional configuration¶
Add this to your User settings.json (View -> Command Palette -> Preferences: Open User Settings (JSON)):
"files.associations": {
"*.dvc": "yaml"
},
"yaml.schemas": {
"schemas/snapshot-schema.json": "**/*.dvc",
"schemas/dataset-schema.json": ["**/*.meta.yml", "**/*.meta.override.yml"]
},
Improve your terminal experience¶
Using Oh My Zsh.
We recommend using Oh My Zsh. It comes with a lot of plugins and themes that can make your life easier.
Automatic virtualenv activation¶
We use python virtual environments ("venv") everywhere. It's very convenient to have a script that automatically activates the virtualenv when you enter a project folder. Add the following to your ~/.zshrc or ~/.bashrc:
# enters the virtualenv when I enter the folder, provide it's called either .venv or env
autoload -U add-zsh-hook
load-py-venv() {
if [ -f .venv/bin/activate ]; then
# enter a virtual environment that's here
source .venv/bin/activate
elif [ -f env/bin/activate ]; then
source env/bin/activate
elif [ ! -z "$VIRTUAL_ENV" ] && [ -f poetry.toml -o -f requirements.txt ]; then
# exit a virtual environment when you enter a new project folder
deactivate
fi
}
add-zsh-hook chpwd load-py-venv
load-py-venv
Some staff members also use Nushell, which supports similar hooks. Edit your $nu.config-path file, find the hooks section, and add to it an env_change stanza:
hooks:
env_change: {
PWD: [
{
condition: {|before, after| ["pyproject.toml" "requirements.txt" "setup.py"] | any {|f| $f | path exists } }
code: "
if ('.venv/bin/python' | path exists) {
print -e 'Activating virtualenv'
$env.PATH = ($env.PATH | split row (char esep) | filter {|p| $p !~ '.venv' } | prepend $\"($env.PWD)/.venv/bin\")
} else {
$env.PATH = ($env.PATH | split row (char esep) | filter {|p| $p !~ '.venv' })
}
"
}
]
}
Speed up navigation in terminal with autojump¶
Instead of cd ... to a correct folder, you can add the following to your ~/.zshrc or ~/.bashrc:
and then type j etl or j grapher to jump to the right folder.