testing-dags
$
npx mdskill add astronomer/agents/testing-dagsIteratively test, debug, and fix Airflow DAGs in complex workflows.
- Handles multi-step requests requiring iterative test-debug-fix cycles.
- Integrates with Astro CLI and Airflow trigger-wait commands.
- Executes af runs trigger-wait immediately without prior listing.
- Delivers actionable fixes through command execution and error resolution.
SKILL.md
.github/skills/testing-dagsView on GitHub ↗
---
name: testing-dags
description: Complex DAG testing workflows with debugging and fixing cycles. Use for multi-step testing requests like "test this dag and fix it if it fails", "test and debug", "run the pipeline and troubleshoot issues". For simple test requests ("test dag", "run dag"), the airflow entrypoint skill handles it directly. This skill is for iterative test-debug-fix cycles.
---
# DAG Testing Skill
Use `af` commands to test, debug, and fix DAGs in iterative cycles.
## Running the CLI
Run all `af` commands using uvx (no installation required):
```bash
uvx --from astro-airflow-mcp af <command>
```
Throughout this document, `af` is shorthand for `uvx --from astro-airflow-mcp af`.
---
## Quick Validation with Astro CLI
If the user has the Astro CLI available, these commands provide fast feedback without needing a running Airflow instance:
```bash
# Parse DAGs to catch import errors, syntax issues, and DAG-level problems
astro dev parse
# Run pytest against DAGs (runs tests in tests/ directory)
astro dev pytest
```
Use these for quick validation during development. For full end-to-end testing against a live Airflow instance, continue to the trigger-and-wait workflow below.
---
## FIRST ACTION: Just Trigger the DAG
When the user asks to test a DAG, your **FIRST AND ONLY action** should be:
```bash
af runs trigger-wait <dag_id>
```
**DO NOT:**
- Call `af dags list` first
- Call `af dags get` first
- Call `af dags errors` first
- Use `grep` or `ls` or any other bash command
- Do any "pre-flight checks"
**Just trigger the DAG.** If it fails, THEN debug.
---
## Testing Workflow Overview
```
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 1. TRIGGER AND WAIT │
│ Run DAG, wait for completion │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌───────┴───────┐
↓ ↓
┌─────────┐ ┌──────────┐
│ SUCCESS │ │ FAILED │
│ Done! │ │ Debug... │
└─────────┘ └──────────┘
↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 2. DEBUG (only if failed) │
│ Get logs, identify root cause │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 3. FIX AND RETEST │
│ Apply fix, restart from step 1 │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
```
**Philosophy: Try first, debug on failure.** Don't waste time on pre-flight checks — just run the DAG and diagnose if something goes wrong.
---
## Phase 1: Trigger and Wait
Use `af runs trigger-wait` to test the DAG:
### Primary Method: Trigger and Wait
```bash
af runs trigger-wait <dag_id> --timeout 300
```
**Example:**
```bash
af runs trigger-wait my_dag --timeout 300
```
**Why this is the preferred method:**
- Single command handles trigger + monitoring
- Returns immediately when DAG completes (success or failure)
- Includes failed task details if run fails
- No manual polling required
### Response Interpretation
**Success:**
```json
{
"dag_run": {
"dag_id": "my_dag",
"dag_run_id": "manual__2025-01-14T...",
"state": "success",
"start_date": "...",
"end_date": "..."
},
"timed_out": false,
"elapsed_seconds": 45.2
}
```
**Failure:**
```json
{
"dag_run": {
"state": "failed"
},
"timed_out": false,
"elapsed_seconds": 30.1,
"failed_tasks": [
{
"task_id": "extract_data",
"state": "failed",
"try_number": 2
}
]
}
```
**Timeout:**
```json
{
"dag_id": "my_dag",
"dag_run_id": "manual__...",
"state": "running",
"timed_out": true,
"elapsed_seconds": 300.0,
"message": "Timed out after 300 seconds. DAG run is still running."
}
```
### Alternative: Trigger and Monitor Separately
Use this only when you need more control:
```bash
# Step 1: Trigger
af runs trigger my_dag
# Returns: {"dag_run_id": "manual__...", "state": "queued"}
# Step 2: Check status
af runs get my_dag manual__2025-01-14T...
# Returns current state
```
---
## Handling Results
### If Success
The DAG ran successfully. Summarize for the user:
- Total elapsed time
- Number of tasks completed
- Any notable outputs (if visible in logs)
**You're done!**
### If Timed Out
The DAG is still running. Options:
1. Check current status: `af runs get <dag_id> <dag_run_id>`
2. Ask user if they want to continue waiting
3. Increase timeout and try again
### If Failed
Move to Phase 2 (Debug) to identify the root cause.
---
## Phase 2: Debug Failures (Only If Needed)
When a DAG run fails, use these commands to diagnose:
### Get Comprehensive Diagnosis
```bash
af runs diagnose <dag_id> <dag_run_id>
```
Returns in one call:
- Run metadata (state, timing)
- All task instances with states
- Summary of failed tasks
- State counts (success, failed, skipped, etc.)
### Get Task Logs
```bash
af tasks logs <dag_id> <dag_run_id> <task_id>
```
**Example:**
```bash
af tasks logs my_dag manual__2025-01-14T... extract_data
```
**For specific retry attempt:**
```bash
af tasks logs my_dag manual__2025-01-14T... extract_data --try 2
```
**Look for:**
- Exception messages and stack traces
- Connection errors (database, API, S3)
- Permission errors
- Timeout errors
- Missing dependencies
### Check Upstream Tasks
If a task shows `upstream_failed`, the root cause is in an upstream task. Use `af runs diagnose` to find which task actually failed.
### Check Import Errors (If DAG Didn't Run)
If the trigger failed because the DAG doesn't exist:
```bash
af dags errors
```
This reveals syntax errors or missing dependencies that prevented the DAG from loading.
---
## Phase 3: Fix and Retest
Once you identify the issue:
### Common Fixes
| Issue | Fix |
|-------|-----|
| Missing import | Add to DAG file |
| Missing package | Add to `requirements.txt` |
| Connection error | Check `af config connections`, verify credentials |
| Variable missing | Check `af config variables`, create if needed |
| Timeout | Increase task timeout or optimize query |
| Permission error | Check credentials in connection |
### After Fixing
1. Save the file
2. **Retest:** `af runs trigger-wait <dag_id>`
**Repeat the test → debug → fix loop until the DAG succeeds.**
---
## CLI Quick Reference
| Phase | Command | Purpose |
|-------|---------|---------|
| Test | `af runs trigger-wait <dag_id>` | **Primary test method — start here** |
| Test | `af runs trigger <dag_id>` | Start run (alternative) |
| Test | `af runs get <dag_id> <run_id>` | Check run status |
| Debug | `af runs diagnose <dag_id> <run_id>` | Comprehensive failure diagnosis |
| Debug | `af tasks logs <dag_id> <run_id> <task_id>` | Get task output/errors |
| Debug | `af dags errors` | Check for parse errors (if DAG won't load) |
| Debug | `af dags get <dag_id>` | Verify DAG config |
| Debug | `af dags explore <dag_id>` | Full DAG inspection |
| Config | `af config connections` | List connections |
| Config | `af config variables` | List variables |
---
## Testing Scenarios
### Scenario 1: Test a DAG (Happy Path)
```bash
af runs trigger-wait my_dag
# Success! Done.
```
### Scenario 2: Test a DAG (With Failure)
```bash
# 1. Run and wait
af runs trigger-wait my_dag
# Failed...
# 2. Find failed tasks
af runs diagnose my_dag manual__2025-01-14T...
# 3. Get error details
af tasks logs my_dag manual__2025-01-14T... extract_data
# 4. [Fix the issue in DAG code]
# 5. Retest
af runs trigger-wait my_dag
```
### Scenario 3: DAG Doesn't Exist / Won't Load
```bash
# 1. Trigger fails - DAG not found
af runs trigger-wait my_dag
# Error: DAG not found
# 2. Find parse error
af dags errors
# 3. [Fix the issue in DAG code]
# 4. Retest
af runs trigger-wait my_dag
```
### Scenario 4: Debug a Failed Scheduled Run
```bash
# 1. Get failure summary
af runs diagnose my_dag scheduled__2025-01-14T...
# 2. Get error from failed task
af tasks logs my_dag scheduled__2025-01-14T... failed_task_id
# 3. [Fix the issue]
# 4. Retest
af runs trigger-wait my_dag
```
### Scenario 5: Test with Custom Configuration
```bash
af runs trigger-wait my_dag --conf '{"env": "staging", "batch_size": 100}' --timeout 600
```
### Scenario 6: Long-Running DAG
```bash
# Wait up to 1 hour
af runs trigger-wait my_dag --timeout 3600
# If timed out, check current state
af runs get my_dag manual__2025-01-14T...
```
---
## Debugging Tips
### Common Error Patterns
**Connection Refused / Timeout:**
- Check `af config connections` for correct host/port
- Verify network connectivity to external system
- Check if connection credentials are correct
**ModuleNotFoundError:**
- Package missing from `requirements.txt`
- After adding, may need environment restart
**PermissionError:**
- Check IAM roles, database grants, API keys
- Verify connection has correct credentials
**Task Timeout:**
- Query or operation taking too long
- Consider adding timeout parameter to task
- Optimize underlying query/operation
### Reading Task Logs
Task logs typically show:
1. Task start timestamp
2. Any print/log statements from task code
3. Return value (for @task decorated functions)
4. Exception + full stack trace (if failed)
5. Task end timestamp and duration
**Focus on the exception at the bottom of failed task logs.**
### On Astro
Astro deployments support environment promotion, which helps structure your testing workflow:
- **Dev deployment**: Test DAGs freely with `astro deploy --dags` for fast iteration
- **Staging deployment**: Run integration tests against production-like data
- **Production deployment**: Deploy only after validation in lower environments
- Use separate Astro deployments for each environment and promote code through them
---
## Related Skills
- **authoring-dags**: For creating new DAGs (includes validation before testing)
- **debugging-dags**: For general Airflow troubleshooting
- **deploying-airflow**: For deploying DAGs to production after testing
More from astronomer/agents
- airflowQueries, manages, and troubleshoots Apache Airflow using the af CLI. Covers listing DAGs, triggering runs, reading task logs, diagnosing failures, debugging DAG import errors, checking connections, variables, pools, and monitoring health. Also routes to sub-skills for writing DAGs, debugging, deploying, and migrating Airflow 2 to 3. Use when user mentions "Airflow", "DAG", "DAG run", "task log", "import error", "parse error", "broken DAG", or asks to "trigger a pipeline", "debug import errors", "check Airflow health", "list connections", "retry a run", or any Airflow operation. Do NOT use for warehouse/SQL analytics on Airflow metadata tables — use analyzing-data instead.
- airflow-adapterAirflow adapter pattern for v2/v3 API compatibility. Use when working with adapters, version detection, or adding new API methods that need to work across Airflow 2.x and 3.x.
- airflow-hitlUse when the user needs human-in-the-loop workflows in Airflow (approval/reject, form input, or human-driven branching). Covers ApprovalOperator, HITLOperator, HITLBranchOperator, HITLEntryOperator. Requires Airflow 3.1+. Does not cover AI/LLM calls (see airflow-ai).
- airflow-pluginsBuild Airflow 3.1+ plugins that embed FastAPI apps, custom UI pages, React components, middleware, macros, and operator links directly into the Airflow UI. Use this skill whenever the user wants to create an Airflow plugin, add a custom UI page or nav entry to Airflow, build FastAPI-backed endpoints inside Airflow, serve static assets from a plugin, embed a React app in the Airflow UI, add middleware to the Airflow API server, create custom operator extra links, or call the Airflow REST API from inside a plugin. Also trigger when the user mentions AirflowPlugin, fastapi_apps, external_views, react_apps, plugin registration, or embedding a web app in Airflow 3.1+. If someone is building anything custom inside Airflow 3.1+ that involves Python and a browser-facing interface, this skill almost certainly applies.
- analyzing-dataQueries data warehouse and answers business questions about data. Handles questions requiring database/warehouse queries including "who uses X", "how many Y", "show me Z", "find customers", "what is the count", data lookups, metrics, trends, or SQL analysis.
- annotating-task-lineageAnnotate Airflow tasks with data lineage using inlets and outlets. Use when the user wants to add lineage metadata to tasks, specify input/output datasets, or enable lineage tracking for operators without built-in OpenLineage extraction.
- authoring-dagsWorkflow and best practices for writing Apache Airflow DAGs. Use when the user wants to create a new DAG, write pipeline code, or asks about DAG patterns and conventions. For testing and debugging DAGs, see the testing-dags skill.
- checking-freshnessQuick data freshness check. Use when the user asks if data is up to date, when a table was last updated, if data is stale, or needs to verify data currency before using it.
- cosmos-dbt-coreUse when turning a dbt Core project into an Airflow DAG/TaskGroup using Astronomer Cosmos. Does not cover dbt Fusion. Before implementing, verify dbt engine, warehouse, Airflow version, execution environment, DAG vs TaskGroup, and manifest availability.
- cosmos-dbt-fusionUse when running a dbt Fusion project with Astronomer Cosmos. Covers Cosmos 1.11+ configuration for Fusion on Snowflake/Databricks with ExecutionMode.LOCAL. Before implementing, verify dbt engine is Fusion (not Core), warehouse is supported, and local execution is acceptable. Does not cover dbt Core.