* System plugin tier with mark/unmark fanout (schema v39)
Adds a mandatory plugin tier so admins can pin a small set of curated
plugins into every user's stack from day one. Marking a plugin via the
new toggle on /admin/marketplaces materializes resource_grants for every
group and user_plugin_optouts subscriptions for every user, so the
existing resolver pulls the plugin into every served set without a new
filter layer. Hooks on user-create (Google OAuth, magic-link, admin
POST, scheduler) and group-create propagate the same materialization to
new principals. UI locks: /admin/access disables the checkbox with a
SYSTEM pill; /marketplace cards swap the "In stack" green pill for an
amber "Required" badge with shield icon; the plugin detail install
button reads "Required by your org"; /my-ai-stack toggle is disabled.
Bypass paths return 409 (DELETE /api/admin/grants for system grants,
PUT /api/my-stack/curated/.../{enabled:false}, DELETE
/api/marketplace/curated/.../install). Unmark only flips the flag —
materialized rows persist so admins curate cleanup at their leisure
through the now-unlocked /admin/access checkboxes.
* Marketplace UX polish + drop legacy /store and /my-ai-stack pages
Two-part cleanup post-v39:
(1) Page deletion. /store and /my-ai-stack were already replaced by
/marketplace?tab=flea and /marketplace?tab=my respectively, but the
standalone routes lingered. Hard delete in dev mode — no redirects,
stale bookmarks 404. The /store/new upload wizard, the flea
detail/edit pages, the admin queue, and all /api/store/* +
/api/my-stack endpoints (CLI consumers) stay. Internal hardcoded
hrefs in the upload wizard's Cancel button and the advanced-setup
page repointed to the marketplace tabs.
(2) Detail-page install button rework. The single button that morphed
between "+ Add to my stack" and "✓ In your stack" did not
communicate uninstall affordance. The installed state now renders an
inline white status label *before* a separate red-bordered
"✕ Remove from stack" button on the same row, both at identical
height to avoid layout shift. System plugins keep their locked amber
"✓ Required by your org" pill (no Remove button — API refuses 409).
The post-action hint panel now fires on remove too with the title
flipped to "✓ Removed from your stack" — Claude Code needs the same
/update-agnes-plugins refresh either way.
Also: /admin/marketplaces Details modal "Mark as system" toggle
redesigned. The button was near-invisible (matched neutral row
metadata). It's now a balanced amber-toned chip with shield icon
and a structured confirm modal replacing the native confirm() dialog
that summarizes fanout consequences before commit.
* Move stack-hint inside hero with glass-on-gradient styling
The post-action hint card ("✓ Added to your stack" with the
/update-agnes-plugins recipe) used to live below the hero in
panel-what (gray card on white page body). Clicking add/remove
inserted/removed it between the hero and content, shifting the
panels below — a noticeable scroll jump.
The hint is now anchored inside the hero's top-right corner alongside
the install/remove buttons, both as flex children of an absolutely
positioned .actions container. The card uses a translucent
white-on-glass treatment that adopts the hero's kind color (blue for
plugin, green for skill, purple for agent) without per-kind branching.
Hero is always tall enough (160px photo) to contain the action+hint
stack without overflow, so toggling the hint visibility doesn't grow
the hero or shift body content.
The hero-head grid reserves a third 300px column for the absolute
actions overlay so meta gets the proper 1fr free space instead of
being squeezed by a padding-right hack. Responsive breakpoint at
1100px reflows the actions stack below hero-head when the viewport
isn't wide enough to keep meta + actions side-by-side comfortably.
* Add optional -DataPath bind mount to run-local-dev.ps1
When the operator wants to inspect DuckDB files (system.duckdb, extracts,
marketplaces, store/, …) directly from Windows Explorer, the named volume
inside the Docker Desktop WSL VM isn't reachable. The new -DataPath param
generates a transient compose override that rebinds /data on app, scheduler,
extract (and Caddy's /srv:ro mirror) to a Windows host folder.
Fully additive — when -DataPath is omitted everything behaves exactly as
before: no override file is generated, $composeFiles array is unchanged,
finally cleanup is a no-op. Existing positional invocations
(.\run-local-dev.ps1 up | down | logs) keep binding to $Action because
$DataPath is a named-only parameter with no Position attribute.
The override is written via [System.IO.File]::WriteAllText so the YAML is
BOM-less across PS 5.1 / 7+ — Compose rejects BOM-prefixed YAML on Windows.
The override file is unique per PID and removed in the script's finally
block so concurrent invocations and crashes don't leak files.
* factor mark_system fanout into UserCuratedSubscriptionsRepository
The endpoint imported UserCuratedSubscriptionsRepository, ignored it
(noqa: F841), then duplicated the user-side fanout SQL inline. Adds
fanout_system_for_plugin() symmetric to the existing
fanout_system_for_user() and routes mark_plugin_system through it —
removes the dead import + 14 lines of inline SQL, returns the same
`affected_users` delta count, no behavior change.
* drop customer-specific path from .ps1 example
Per CLAUDE.md vendor-agnostic OSS rule: replaced
C:\\Business\\Groupon\\Agnes\\agnes-data with the generic
C:\\Users\\<you>\\agnes-data placeholder so the docstring
example reads cleanly on any reviewer's box.
* release: 0.48.0 + parallelize Release-workflow pytest
Cuts the release shipped via #228 #230 #231 #232 #233 #234 #236 #237 #238
#239 #240 plus this PR (#241). Major changes:
- System plugin tier (schema v39) — admins mark a plugin mandatory; fans
out RBAC grants + subscriptions to every existing user/group plus
hooks for new principals
- BREAKING: removed standalone /store + /my-ai-stack page routes
(replaced by /marketplace?tab=flea + /marketplace?tab=my)
- Setup-prompt + bootstrap recovery fixes (#240)
- DuckDB CHECKPOINT-on-shutdown + 60s compose grace (#235)
- Marketplace + flea-market UX polish, agnes-metadata.json enrichment
Bonus: switch release.yml test step to `-n auto` (matches ci.yml).
Single-threaded was 15-20 min and frequently the bottleneck on PR
mergeability — now ~6 min.
---------
Co-authored-by: Minas Arustamyan <arustamyan.minas@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ZdenekSrotyr <zdenek.srotyr@keboola.com>
|
||
|---|---|---|
| .github | ||
| app | ||
| cli | ||
| config | ||
| connectors | ||
| dev_docs | ||
| docs | ||
| infra | ||
| scripts | ||
| services | ||
| src | ||
| tests | ||
| .dockerignore | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .pre-commit-config.yaml | ||
| ARCHITECTURE.md | ||
| Caddyfile | ||
| CHANGELOG.md | ||
| CLAUDE.md | ||
| docker-compose.ci.yml | ||
| docker-compose.dev.yml | ||
| docker-compose.flat-mount.yml | ||
| docker-compose.host-mount.yml | ||
| docker-compose.local-dev.yml | ||
| docker-compose.prod.yml | ||
| docker-compose.test.yml | ||
| docker-compose.tls.yml | ||
| docker-compose.yml | ||
| Dockerfile | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| pyproject.toml | ||
| pytest.ini | ||
| README.md | ||
| uv.lock | ||
Agnes — AI Data Analyst
Agnes is an open-source data distribution platform for AI analytical systems. It extracts data from configured sources into DuckDB, serves it via a FastAPI backend, and distributes Parquet files to analysts who query them locally using Claude Code and DuckDB.
Each data source produces a self-describing extract.duckdb file. The SyncOrchestrator attaches all extract databases into a master analytics.duckdb, making every table available through a unified view layer without copying data unnecessarily.
Architecture: extract.duckdb Contract
Every connector produces the same output structure:
/data/extracts/{source_name}/
├── extract.duckdb ← _meta table + views
└── data/ ← parquet files (local sources only)
The orchestrator scans /data/extracts/*/extract.duckdb, attaches each into analytics.duckdb, and creates master views.
┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐
│ Keboola │ │ BigQuery │ │ Jira │
│ extractor │ │ extractor │ │ webhooks │
│ (DuckDB ext) │ │ (remote BQ) │ │ (incremental)│
└──────┬───────┘ └──────┬───────┘ └──────┬───────┘
│ │ │
▼ ▼ ▼
extract.duckdb extract.duckdb extract.duckdb
+ data/*.parquet (views → BQ) + data/*.parquet
│ │ │
└─────────────────┼─────────────────┘
▼
SyncOrchestrator.rebuild()
ATTACH → master views in analytics.duckdb
│
┌──────────┼──────────┐
▼ ▼ ▼
FastAPI CLI
(serve) (agnes pull)
Supported Data Sources
| Mode | Distribution | Sources | Use when |
|---|---|---|---|
Batch pull (local) |
Parquet on disk, scheduled | Keboola | Source has a native bulk-export and the table fits on disk |
Materialized SQL (materialized) |
Parquet on disk, scheduled query | BigQuery, Keboola | Source table is too large to mirror as-is; you want a curated subset / aggregate on disk |
Remote attach (remote) |
View only, no download | BigQuery | Table is too large to materialize; latency cost of remote query is acceptable |
| Real-time push | Incremental parquet | Jira | Source is event-driven and you need sub-minute freshness |
The first three modes are what agnes pull distributes to analysts. The fourth is server-side only — analysts query Jira data through the same agnes pull-distributed parquets.
Admins manage per-source registrations through the /admin/tables UI (per-connector tabs for BigQuery / Keboola / Jira) or the agnes admin register-table CLI; per-row "Manage access" deep-links to /admin/access for granting tables to user groups via resource_grants(group, ResourceType.TABLE, table_id).
Analysts get a closed loop with Claude Code: agnes init writes <workspace>/.claude/settings.json with SessionStart (agnes pull --quiet) and SessionEnd (agnes push --quiet) hooks so every Claude Code session starts with fresh RBAC-filtered parquets and ends with the session log uploaded back.
Adding a new source means creating connectors/<name>/extractor.py that produces extract.duckdb with a _meta table (table_name, description, rows, size_bytes, extracted_at, query_mode). The orchestrator attaches it automatically.
Quick Start with Docker
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/keboola/agnes-the-ai-analyst.git
cd agnes-the-ai-analyst
# Copy and edit configuration
cp config/instance.yaml.example config/instance.yaml
cp config/.env.template .env
# Edit both files for your environment
# Start the app and scheduler
docker compose up
# Start with all optional services (Telegram bot, etc.)
docker compose --profile full up
# Start with TLS (Caddy on :443 with corporate-CA certs from /data/state/certs)
docker compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.prod.yml -f docker-compose.tls.yml \
--profile tls up -d
Once running, the FastAPI app is available at http://localhost:8000 (or https://$DOMAIN in TLS mode). See docs/DEPLOYMENT.md for cert provisioning + auto-rotation via scripts/ops/agnes-tls-rotate.sh. Trigger a manual sync:
curl -X POST http://localhost:8000/api/sync/trigger
Local sync & auto-update
Analysts run Claude Code against a local DuckDB built from RBAC-filtered parquets pulled from the server. agnes pull is the distribution path:
agnes pull # delta-pull: manifest → MD5 compare → download changed → rebuild views
agnes pull --quiet # same, no progress output (for hooks/cron)
agnes push # push session jsonl + CLAUDE.local.md back to the server
agnes init writes Claude Code lifecycle hooks into <workspace>/.claude/settings.json:
SessionStart→agnes pull --quiet— fresh data on every sessionSessionEnd→agnes push --quiet— uploads notes and session log
Hooks live at workspace level so they only fire in this analyst workspace, not in unrelated Claude Code sessions on the same machine.
Admin: which tables auto-sync to whom
The auto-sync set per analyst is the intersection of:
- Tables with
query_mode IN ('local', 'materialized')— these have parquets on disk and end up in the manifest - Tables granted to one of the analyst's groups via
resource_grants(group, ResourceType.TABLE, table_id)(seedocs/RBAC.md)
To enroll a new table for auto-sync, register it (or update its query_mode) and grant it to the relevant groups in /admin/access. New analysts get the same set on their next agnes pull.
For BigQuery, register a query_mode='materialized' table with a SQL body:
agnes admin register-table orders_90d \
--source-type bigquery \
--query-mode materialized \
--query @docs/queries/orders_90d.sql \
--schedule "every 6h"
The scheduler runs the query through the DuckDB BigQuery extension on each tick that's due, writes the result as a parquet, and the analyst picks it up on the next agnes pull. Cost guardrail: data_source.bigquery.max_bytes_per_materialize (default 10 GiB) — operations exceeding the BQ dry-run estimate are skipped.
Development Setup
# Create and activate virtual environment
python3 -m venv .venv && source .venv/bin/activate
# Install dependencies
uv pip install ".[dev]"
# Run FastAPI locally with hot reload
uvicorn app.main:app --reload
# Run the test suite
pytest tests/ -v
Project Structure
├── src/ # Core engine
│ ├── db.py # DuckDB schema (system.duckdb, analytics.duckdb)
│ ├── orchestrator.py # SyncOrchestrator — ATTACHes extract.duckdb files
│ ├── repositories/ # DuckDB-backed CRUD (sync_state, table_registry, users, etc.)
│ ├── profiler.py # Data profiling
│ └── catalog_export.py # OpenMetadata catalog export
├── app/ # FastAPI application
│ ├── main.py # App setup, router registration
│ ├── api/ # REST API (sync, data, catalog, admin, auth)
│ ├── auth/ # Auth providers (Google OAuth, email magic link, desktop JWT)
│ └── web/ # HTML dashboard routes
├── connectors/ # Data source connectors (extract.duckdb contract)
│ ├── keboola/ # Keboola: extractor.py (DuckDB extension) + client.py (fallback)
│ ├── bigquery/ # BigQuery: extractor.py (remote-only via DuckDB BQ extension)
│ └── jira/ # Jira: webhook + incremental parquet → extract.duckdb
├── cli/ # CLI tool (`agnes pull`, `agnes query`, `agnes admin`)
├── services/ # Standalone services (scheduler, telegram_bot, ws_gateway, etc.)
├── scripts/ # Utility + migration scripts
├── config/ # Configuration templates (instance.yaml.example)
├── docs/ # Documentation + metric YAML definitions
└── tests/ # Test suite (633 tests)
Configuration
| File | Purpose |
|---|---|
config/instance.yaml |
Instance-specific settings: branding, data source type, auth provider, Google domain |
.env |
Secrets and environment variables — never committed |
system.duckdb table_registry table |
Table definitions managed via POST /api/admin/register-table (or PUT /api/admin/registry/{id} to update) or the web UI |
Copy the example to get started:
cp config/instance.yaml.example config/instance.yaml
See config/instance.yaml.example for all available options.
Documentation
- Hackathon TL;DR — condensed deploy + dev playbooks (for both humans and AI agents)
- Onboarding Guide — end-to-end Terraform deployment into a GCP project (recommended for production)
- Deployment Guide — chooses between Terraform and Docker Compose; covers OSS self-host
- Configuration Reference —
instance.yaml, env vars, per-instance options - Architecture — orchestrator, extractors, DB layout
- Quickstart — local development
Contributing
- Fork the repository and create a feature branch.
- Run
pytest tests/ -vto verify all tests pass before opening a pull request. - Keep commits focused and messages concise.
- Open a pull request against
mainwith a clear description of the change.
For bugs and feature requests, open a GitHub issue.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License.