Guide for building reliable, fault-tolerant Python applications with DBOS durable workflows. Use when adding DBOS to existing Python code, creating workflows and steps, or using queues for concurrency control.
Install with the open skills CLI (global, non-interactive — available in every Claude Code session):
npx skills add sickn33/agentic-awesome-skills --skill "dbos-python" -g -a claude-code -yOr manually — clone and copy the skill directory (SKILL.md + companion files):
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/sickn33/agentic-awesome-skills /tmp/agentic-awesome-skills && cp -r /tmp/agentic-awesome-skills/plugins/agentic-awesome-skills-claude/skills/dbos-python ~/.claude/skills/dbos-python-sickn33This skill is a directory: SKILL.md is the entry point; the files below ship with it.
---
name: dbos-python
description: "Guide for building reliable, fault-tolerant Python applications with DBOS durable workflows. Use when adding DBOS to existing Python code, creating workflows and steps, or using queues for concurrency control."
risk: safe
source: "https://docs.dbos.dev/"
date_added: "2026-02-27"
---
# DBOS Python Best Practices
Guide for building reliable, fault-tolerant Python applications with DBOS durable workflows.
## When to Use
Reference these guidelines when:
- Adding DBOS to existing Python code
- Creating workflows and steps
- Using queues for concurrency control
- Implementing workflow communication (events, messages, streams)
- Configuring and launching DBOS applications
- Using DBOSClient from external applications
- Testing DBOS applications
## Rule Categories by Priority
| Priority | Category | Impact | Prefix |
|----------|----------|--------|--------|
| 1 | Lifecycle | CRITICAL | `lifecycle-` |
| 2 | Workflow | CRITICAL | `workflow-` |
| 3 | Step | HIGH | `step-` |
| 4 | Queue | HIGH | `queue-` |
| 5 | Communication | MEDIUM | `comm-` |
| 6 | Pattern | MEDIUM | `pattern-` |
| 7 | Testing | LOW-MEDIUM | `test-` |
| 8 | Client | MEDIUM | `client-` |
| 9 | Advanced | LOW | `advanced-` |
## Critical Rules
### DBOS Configuration and Launch
A DBOS application MUST configure and launch DBOS inside its main function:
```python
import os
from dbos import DBOS, DBOSConfig
@DBOS.workflow()
def my_workflow():
pass
if __name__ == "__main__":
config: DBOSConfig = {
"name": "my-app",
"system_database_url": os.environ.get("DBOS_SYSTEM_DATABASE_URL"),
}
DBOS(config=config)
DBOS.launch()
```
### Workflow and Step Structure
Workflows are comprised of steps. Any function performing complex operations or accessing external services must be a step:
```python
@DBOS.step()
def call_external_api():
return requests.get("https://api.example.com").json()
@DBOS.workflow()
def my_workflow():
result = call_external_api()
return result
```
### Key Constraints
- Do NOT call `DBOS.start_workflow` or `DBOS.recv` from a step
- Do NOT use threads to start workflows - use `DBOS.start_workflow` or queues
- Workflows MUST be deterministic - non-deterministic operations go in steps
- Do NOT create/update global variables from workflows or steps
## How to Use
Read individual rule files for detailed explanations and examples:
```
references/lifecycle-config.md
references/workflow-determinism.md
references/queue-concurrency.md
```
## References
- https://docs.dbos.dev/
- https://github.com/dbos-inc/dbos-transact-py
## Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
Use when facing 2+ independent tasks that can be worked on without shared state or sequential dependencies
Use when encountering any bug, test failure, or unexpected behavior, before proposing fixes
Use when implementing any feature or bugfix, before writing implementation code