DJ_service

To further enhance the user experience of Data-Juicer, we have introduced a new service features based on API (Service API) and a MCP server, This enables users to integrate and utilize Data-Juicer’s powerful operator pool in a more convenient way. With these service features, users can quickly build data processing pipelines without needing to delve into the underlying implementation details of the framework, and seamlessly integrate with existing systems. Additionally, users can achieve environment isolation between different projects through this service. This document will provide a detailed explanation of how to launch and use this service feature, helping you get started quickly and fully leverage the potential of Data-Juicer.

API Service

Start the Service

Run the following code:

uvicorn service:app

API Calls

The API supports calling all functions and classes in Data-Juicer’s __init__.py (including calling specific functions of a class). Functions are called via GET, while classes are called via POST.

Protocol

URL Path

For GET requests to call functions, the URL path corresponds to the function reference path in the Data-Juicer library. For example, from data_juicer.config import init_configs maps to the path data_juicer/config/init_configs. For POST requests to call a specific function of a class, the URL path is constructed by appending the function name to the class path in the Data-Juicer library. For instance, calling the compute_stats_batched function of the TextLengthFilter operator corresponds to the path data_juicer/ops/filter/TextLengthFilter/compute_stats_batched.

Parameters

When making GET and POST calls, parameters are automatically converted into lists. Additionally, query parameters do not support dictionary transmission. Therefore, if the value of a parameter is a list or dictionary, we uniformly transmit it using json.dumps and prepend a special symbol <json_dumps> to distinguish it from regular strings.

Special Cases
  1. For the cfg parameter, we default to transmitting it using json.dumps, without needing to prepend the special symbol <json_dumps>.

  2. For the dataset parameter, users can pass the path of the dataset on the server, and the server will load the dataset.

  3. Users can set the skip_return parameter. When set to True, the result of the function call will not be returned, avoiding errors caused by network transmission issues.

Function Calls

GET requests are used for function calls, with the URL path corresponding to the function reference path in the Data-Juicer library. Query parameters are used to pass the function arguments.

For example, the following Python code can be used to call Data-Juicer’s init_configs function to retrieve all parameters of Data-Juicer:

import requests
import json

json_prefix = '<json_dumps>'
url = 'http://localhost:8000/data_juicer/config/init_configs'
params = {"args": json_prefix + json.dumps(['--config', './configs/demo/process.yaml'])}
response = requests.get(url, params=params)
print(json.loads(response.text))

The corresponding curl command is as follows:

curl -G "http://localhost:8000/data_juicer/config/init_configs" \
     --data-urlencode "args=--config" \
     --data-urlencode "args=./configs/demo/process.yaml"

Class Function Calls

POST requests are used for class function calls, with the URL path constructed by appending the function name to the class path in the Data-Juicer library. Query parameters are used to pass the function arguments, while JSON fields are used to pass the arguments required for the class constructor.

For example, the following Python code can be used to call Data-Juicer’s TextLengthFilter operator:

import requests
import json

json_prefix = '<json_dumps>'
url = 'http://localhost:8000/data_juicer/ops/filter/TextLengthFilter/compute_stats_batched'
params = {'samples': json_prefix + json.dumps({'text': ['12345', '123'], '__dj__stats__': [{}, {}]})}
init_json = {'min_len': 4, 'max_len': 10}
response = requests.post(url, params=params, json=init_json)
print(json.loads(response.text))

The corresponding curl command is as follows:

curl -X POST \
  "http://localhost:8000/data_juicer/ops/filter/TextLengthFilter/compute_stats_batched?samples=%3Cjson_dumps%3E%7B%22text%22%3A%20%5B%2212345%22%2C%20%22123%22%5D%2C%20%22__dj__stats__%22%3A%20%5B%7B%7D%2C%20%7B%7D%5D%7D" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"min_len": 4, "max_len": 10}'

Note: If you need to call the run function of the Executor or Analyzer classes for data processing and data analysis, you must first call the init_configs or get_init_configs function to obtain the complete Data-Juicer parameters to construct these two classes. For more details, refer to the demonstration below.

Demonstration

We have integrated AgentScope to enable users to invoke Data-Juicer operators for data cleaning through natural language. The operators are invoked via an API service. For the specific code, please refer to here.

MCP Server

Overview

The Data-Juicer MCP server provides data processing operators to assist in tasks such as data cleaning, filtering, deduplication, and more. To accommodate different use cases, we offer two server options:

  • Recipe-Flow: Allows filtering operators by type and tags, and supports combining multiple operators into a data recipe for execution.

  • Granular-Operators: Provides each operator as an independent tool, allowing you to flexibly specify a list of operators to use via environment variables, thus building a customized data processing pipeline.

Please note that the Data-Juicer MCP server is currently in early development. Its features and available tools may change and expand as we continue to develop and improve the server.

The server supports two deployment methods: stdio and SSE. The stdio method does not support multiprocessing. If you require multiprocessing or multithreading capabilities, you must use the SSE deployment method. Configuration details for each method are provided below.

Recipe-Flow

  1. get_data_processing_ops

    • Retrieves a list of available data processing operators based on the specified type and tags (if unspecified, returns all operators)

    • Input:

      • op_type (str, optional): The type of data processing operator to retrieve

      • tags (List[str], optional): A list of tags to filter operators

      • match_all (bool): Whether all specified tags must match. Default is True

    • Returns: A dictionary containing details about the available operators

  2. run_data_recipe

    • Executes a data recipe

    • Input:

      • dataset_path (str): The path to the dataset to be processed

      • process (List[Dict]): A list of processing steps to execute, where each dictionary contains an operator name and a parameter dictionary

      • export_path (str, optional): The path to export the dataset to. Default is None, meaning the dataset will be exported to ‘./outputs’

    • Returns: A string representing the execution result

For specific data processing requests, the MCP client should first call get_data_processing_ops to obtain relevant operator information, select operators that match the requirements from it, and then call run_data_recipe to run the selected combination of operators.

Configuration

The following configuration examples demonstrate how to set up the Recipe-Flow server using both stdio and SSE transport methods. These examples are for illustrative purposes and should be adapted to your specific MCP client’s configuration format.

stdio Transport

Add the following to your MCP client’s configuration file (e.g., claude_desktop_config.json or a similar configuration file):

"mcpServers": {
  "DJ_recipe_flow": {
    "transport": "stdio",
    "command": "/path/to/python",
    "args": [
      "/path/to/data_juicer/tools/DJ_mcp_recipe_flow.py"
    ],
    "env": {
      "SERVER_TRANSPORT": "stdio"
    }
  }
}
SSE Transport

To use the SSE transport, you first need to start the MCP server separately.

  1. Run the Server: Execute the server script, specifying the port number:

    python /path/to/data_juicer/tools/DJ_mcp_recipe_flow.py --port=8080
    
  2. Configure your MCP Client: Add the following to your MCP client’s configuration file:

    "mcpServers": {
      "DJ_recipe_flow": {
        "url": "http://127.0.0.1:8080/sse"
      }
    }
    

Note:

  • URL: The url should point to the SSE endpoint of your running server (typically http://127.0.0.1:<port>/sse). Adjust the port number if you used a different value when starting the server.

  • Separate Server Process: The SSE server must be running before your MCP client attempts to connect.

  • Firewall: Ensure that your firewall allows connections to the specified port.

Granular-Operators

By default, this MCP server will return all Data-Juicer operator tools, each running independently.

You can control the operator tools returned by the MCP server by specifying the environment variable DJ_OPS_LIST_PATH:

  1. Create a .txt file.

  2. Add operator names to the file, such as: ops_list_example.txt.

  3. Set the path to the operators list as the environment variable DJ_OPS_LIST_PATH.

Configuration

The following configuration examples demonstrate how to set up the Granular-Operators server using both stdio and SSE transport methods. These examples are for illustrative purposes and should be adapted to your specific MCP client’s configuration format.

stdio Transport

Add the following to your MCP client’s configuration file:

"mcpServers": {
  "DJ_granular_ops_stdio": {
    "transport": "stdio",
    "command": "/path/to/python",
    "args": [
      "/path/to/data_juicer/tools/DJ_mcp_granular_ops.py"
    ],
    "env": {
      "DJ_OPS_LIST_PATH": "/path/to/ops_list.txt",
      "SERVER_TRANSPORT": "stdio"
    }
  }
}
SSE Transport

To use the SSE transport, you first need to start the MCP server separately.

  1. Set Environment Variables: Ensure any required environment variables for the server are set, including DJ_OPS_LIST_PATH if you’re using it.

  2. Run the Server: Execute the server script, specifying the port number:

    python /path/to/data_juicer/tools/DJ_mcp_granular_ops.py --port=8081
    
  3. Configure your MCP Client: Add the following to your MCP client’s configuration file:

    "mcpServers": {
      "DJ_granular_ops_sse": {
        "url": "http://127.0.0.1:8081/sse"
      }
    }
    

Note:

  • URL: The url should point to the SSE endpoint of your running server (typically http://127.0.0.1:<port>/sse). Adjust the port number if you used a different value when starting the server.

  • Separate Server Process: The SSE server must be running before your MCP client attempts to connect.

  • Firewall: Ensure that your firewall allows connections to the specified port.

Finding Your Python Path

To find the path to the Python executable, use the following commands:

Windows (Command Prompt/Terminal):

where python

Linux/macOS (Terminal):

which python