Elementary is a dbt-native data observability command-line tool for analytics and data engineering teams.
It works with the Elementary dbt package to read warehouse metadata, dbt artifacts, and test results, then uses that information to help monitor pipeline health, investigate data issues, generate observability reports, and send alerts to collaboration tools.
This is free and open source software.
Key Features
- Generates data observability reports from metadata, artifacts, and test results collected by the Elementary dbt package.
- Surfaces anomalies, failed tests, freshness issues, volume changes, and schema problems.
- Sends alerts to Slack and Microsoft Teams so teams can respond to data issues quickly.
- Tracks model, job, and test performance trends over time.
- Uses configuration as code so monitoring rules live alongside dbt project code.
- Includes support for data lineage, data quality dashboards, data catalog information, and dbt artifact uploads.
Website: github.com/elementary-data/elementary
Support:
Developer: Elementary
License: Apache License 2.0
Elementary is written in Python. Learn Python with our recommended free books and free tutorials.
Related Software
| Python Data Validation | |
|---|---|
| Pydantic | Data validation using Python type hints |
| pandera | Framework for precision data testing |
| jsonschema | Implementation of JSON Schema for Python |
| Cerberus | Lightweight and extensible data validation library |
| schema | Library for validating Python data structures |
| GX | Validating, documenting, and profiling data |
| marshmallow | ORM/ODM/framework-agnostic library |
| Voluptuous | Python data validation library |
| Schematics | Combine types into structures, validate , and transform the shapes of data |
| Colander | Serialization / deserialization / validation library |
| Valideer | Lightweight data validation and adaptation Python library |
Read our verdict in the software roundup.
Explore our comprehensive directory of recommended free and open source software. Our carefully curated collection spans every major software category.This directory is part of our ongoing series of informative articles for Linux enthusiasts. It features hundreds of detailed reviews, along with open source alternatives to proprietary solutions from major corporations such as Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, IBM, Cisco, Oracle, and Autodesk. You’ll also find interesting projects to try, hardware coverage, free programming books and tutorials, and much more. Discovered a useful open source Linux program that we haven’t covered yet? Let us know by completing this form. |

