Migration guide 0.58.2 → 0.60.0

How to migrate from ZenML 0.58.2 to 0.60.0 (Pydantic 2 edition).

ZenML now uses Pydantic v2. 🥳

This upgrade comes with a set of critical updates. While your user experience mostly remains unaffected, you might see unexpected behavior due to the changes in our dependencies. Moreover, since Pydantic v2 provides a slightly stricter validation process, you might end up bumping into some validation errors which was not caught before, but it is all for the better 🙂 If you run into any other errors, please let us know either on GitHub or on our Slack.

Changes in some of the critical dependencies

  • SQLModel is one of the core dependencies of ZenML and prior to this upgrade, we were utilizing version 0.0.8. However, this version is relatively outdated and incompatible with Pydantic v2. Within the scope of this upgrade, we upgraded it to 0.0.18.

  • Due to the change in the SQLModel version, we also had to upgrade our SQLAlchemy dependency from V1 to v2. While this does not affect the way that you are using ZenML, if you are using SQLAlchemy in your environment, you might have to migrate your code as well. For a detailed list of changes, feel free to check their migration guide.

Changes in pydantic

Pydantic v2 brings a lot of new and exciting changes to the table. The core logic now uses Rust and it is much faster and more efficient in terms of performance. On top of it, the main concepts like model design, configuration, validation, or serialization now include a lot of new cool features. If you are using pydantic in your workflow and are interested in the new changes, you can check the brilliant migration guide provided by the pydantic team to see the full list of changes.

Changes in our integrations changes

Much like ZenML, pydantic is an important dependency in many other Python packages. That’s why conducting this upgrade helped us unlock a new version for several ZenML integration dependencies. Additionally, in some instances, we had to adapt the functionality of the integration to keep it compatible with pydantic. So, if you are using any of these integrations, please go through the changes.

Airflow

As mentioned above upgrading our pydantic dependency meant we had to upgrade our sqlmodel dependency. Upgrading our sqlmodel dependency meant we had to upgrade our sqlalchemy dependency as well. Unfortunately, apache-airflow is still using sqlalchemy v1 and is incompatible with pydantic v2. As a solution, we have removed the dependencies of the airflow integration. Now, you can use ZenML to create your Airflow pipelines and use a separate environment to run them with Airflow. You can check the updated docs right here.

AWS

Some of our integrations now require protobuf 4. Since our previous sagemaker version (2.117.0) did not support protobof 4, we could not pair it with these new integrations. Thankfully sagemaker started supporting protobuf 4 with version 2.172.0 and relaxing its dependency solved the compatibility issue.

Evidently

The old version of our evidently integration was not compatible with Pydantic v2. They started supporting it starting from version 0.4.16. As their latest version is 0.4.22, the new dependency of the integration is limited between these two versions.

Feast

Our previous implementation of the feast integration was not compatible with Pydantic v2 due to the extra redis dependency we were using. This extra dependency is now removed and the feast integration is working as intended.

GCP

The previous version of the Kubeflow dependency (kfp==1.8.22) in our GCP integration required Pydantic V1 to be installed. While we were upgrading our Pydantic dependency, we saw this as an opportunity and wanted to use this chance to upgrade the kfp dependency to v2 (which has no dependencies on the Pydantic library). This is why you may see some functional changes in the vertex step operator and orchestrator. If you would like to go through the changes in the kfp library, you can find the migration guide here.

Great Expectations

Great Expectations started supporting Pydantic v2 starting from version 0.17.15 and they are closing in on their 1.0 release. Since this release might include a lot of big changes, we adjusted the dependency in our integration to great-expectations>=0.17.15,<1.0. We will try to keep it updated in the future once they release the 1.0 version

Kubeflow

Similar to the GCP integration, the previous version of the kubeflow dependency (kfp==1.8.22) in our kubeflow integration required Pydantic V1 to be installed. While we were upgrading our Pydantic dependency, we saw this as an opportunity and wanted to use this chance to upgrade the kfp dependency to v2 (which has no dependencies on the Pydantic library). If you would like to go through the changes in the kfp library, you can find the migration guide here. ( We also are considering adding an alternative version of this integration so our users can keep using kfp V1 in their environment. Stay tuned for any updates.)

MLflow

mlflow is compatible with both Pydantic V1 and v2. However, due to a known issue, if you install zenml first and then do zenml integration install mlflow -y, it downgrades pydantic to V1. This is why we manually added the same duplicated pydantic requirement in the integration definition as well. Keep in mind that the mlflow library is still using some features of pydantic V1 which are deprecated. So, if the integration is installed in your environment, you might run into some deprecation warnings.

Label Studio

While we were working on updating our pydantic dependency, the label-studio-sdk has released its 1.0 version. In this new version, pydantic v2 is also supported. The implementation and documentation of our Label Studio integration have been updated accordingly.

Skypilot

With the switch to pydantic v2, the implementation of our skypilot integration mostly remained untouched. However, due to an incompatibility between the new version pydantic and the azurecli, the skypilot[azure] flavor can not be installed at the same time, thus our skypilot_azure integration is currently deactivated. We are working on fixing this issue and if you are using this integration in your workflows, we recommend staying on the previous version of ZenML until we can solve this issue.

Tensorflow

The new version of pydantic creates a drift between tensorflow and typing_extensions packages and relaxing the dependencies here resolves the issue. At the same time, the upgrade to kfp v2 (in integrations like kubeflow, tekton, or gcp) bumps our protobuf dependency from 3.X to 4.X. To stay compatible with this requirement, the installed version of tensorflow needs to be >=2.12.0. While this change solves the dependency issues in most settings, we have bumped into some errors while using tensorflow 2.12.0 on Python 3.8 on Ubuntu. If you would like to use this integration, please consider using a higher Python version.

Tekton

Similar to the gcp and kubeflow integrations, the old version of our tekton integration was not compatible with pydantic V1 due to its kfp dependency. With the switch from kfp V1 to v2, we have adapted our implementation to use the new version of kfp library and updated our documentation accordingly.

Due to all aforementioned changes, when you upgrade ZenML to 0.60.0, you might run into some dependency issues, especially if you were previously using an integration which was not supporting Pydantic v2 before. In such cases, we highly recommend setting up a fresh Python environment.

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