| name | databricks-model-serving |
| description | Databricks Model Serving endpoint lifecycle and ops. Use when asked to: CRUD serving endpoints (CLI or MLflow Deployments client); configure traffic routing for A/B / canary deploys and zero-downtime version swaps; retrieve OpenAPI schemas; inspect logs, metrics, or permissions; manage AI Gateway rate limits; discover Foundation Model API endpoints at runtime; integrate endpoints into Databricks Apps; or stream from off-platform clients (Vercel AI SDK v6, standalone Node.js). NOT for: training, MLflow autologging, UC registration, custom PyFunc/ResponsesAgent authoring (databricks-ml-training); Knowledge Assistants/Supervisor Agents (databricks-agent-bricks); MLflow evaluation (databricks-mlflow-evaluation). |
| compatibility | Requires databricks CLI (>= v0.294.0) |
| metadata | {"version":"0.4.0"} |
| parent | databricks-core |
Model Serving Endpoints
FIRST: Use the parent databricks-core skill for CLI basics, authentication, and profile selection.
Model Serving provides managed endpoints for serving LLMs, custom ML models, and external models as scalable REST APIs. Endpoints are identified by name (unique per workspace).
Endpoint Types
| Type | When to Use | Key Detail |
|---|
| Pay-per-token | Foundation Model APIs (Llama, GPT-5, Claude, Gemini, etc.) | Uses system.ai.* catalog models, pre-provisioned in every workspace. Discover at runtime — see Foundation Model API endpoints below. |
| Provisioned throughput | Dedicated GPU capacity | Guaranteed throughput, higher cost |
| Custom model | Your own MLflow models or containers | Deploy any model with an MLflow signature |
Endpoint Structure
Serving Endpoint (top-level, identified by NAME)
├── Config
│ ├── Served Entities (model references + scaling config)
│ └── Traffic Config (routing percentages across entities)
├── AI Gateway (rate limits, usage tracking)
└── State (READY / NOT_READY, config_update status)
- Served Entities: Each entity references a model (from Unity Catalog or MLflow) with scaling parameters. Get the entity name from
served_entities[].name in the get output — needed for build-logs and logs commands.
- Traffic Config: Routes requests across served entities by percentage (for A/B testing, canary deployments).
- State: Endpoints transition
NOT_READY → READY after creation or config update. Poll via get to check state.ready.
CLI Discovery — ALWAYS Do This First
Do NOT guess command syntax. Discover available commands and their usage dynamically:
databricks serving-endpoints -h
databricks serving-endpoints <subcommand> -h
Run databricks serving-endpoints -h before constructing any command. Run databricks serving-endpoints <subcommand> -h to discover exact flags, positional arguments, and JSON spec fields for that subcommand.
Create an Endpoint
Do NOT list endpoints before creating.
databricks serving-endpoints create <ENDPOINT_NAME> \
--json '{
"served_entities": [{
"entity_name": "<MODEL_CATALOG_PATH>",
"entity_version": "<VERSION>",
"min_provisioned_throughput": 0,
"max_provisioned_throughput": 0,
"workload_size": "Small",
"scale_to_zero_enabled": true
}],
"traffic_config": {
"routes": [{
"served_entity_name": "<ENTITY_NAME>",
"traffic_percentage": 100
}]
}
}' --profile <PROFILE>
MLflow Deployments client (Python alternative)
mlflow.deployments.get_deploy_client("databricks").create_endpoint(name=..., config={...}) takes the same JSON shape as the CLI. Two gotchas:
tags= is a top-level kwarg, NOT a field inside config. Same [{key, value}] shape as serving-endpoints patch --add-tags.
traffic_config.routes[].served_model_name = "<model>-<version>" (e.g. "turbine_failure-3"). The API auto-derives this from the entity, but you reference the exact string in traffic_config — get the format wrong and the route silently doesn't match.
Zero-downtime version swap
To roll an endpoint to a new model version: repoint the alias and call update_endpoint with the new served_entities + matching traffic_config. Missing either half is the common bug — alias-only doesn't update the endpoint; update_endpoint-only leaves the alias pointing at the old version.
from mlflow.tracking import MlflowClient
from mlflow.deployments import get_deploy_client
registry = MlflowClient(registry_uri="databricks-uc")
deploy = get_deploy_client("databricks")
registry.set_registered_model_alias(FULL_NAME, "prod", new_version)
deploy.update_endpoint(endpoint=ENDPOINT_NAME, config={
"served_entities": [{"entity_name": FULL_NAME, "entity_version": new_version,
"workload_size": "Small", "scale_to_zero_enabled": True}],
"traffic_config": {"routes": [
{"served_model_name": f"{NAME}-{new_version}", "traffic_percentage": 100}
]},
})
The CLI equivalent is databricks serving-endpoints update-config <NAME> --json '...'. Either way, poll both state.ready and state.config_update afterward — see Endpoint Readiness below.
Endpoint Readiness
After create or update-config, the endpoint provisions compute and loads the model. Do not query the endpoint until it is ready. Two state fields matter and they mean different things:
state.ready — READY once the endpoint has any working config. Stays READY during a version swap.
state.config_update — NOT_UPDATING once the current config update finishes; IN_PROGRESS during a version swap.
A loop watching only state.ready will say "ready" mid version-swap while the old version is still serving. Poll both:
databricks serving-endpoints get <ENDPOINT_NAME> --profile <PROFILE> \
| jq '{ready: .state.ready, config_update: .state.config_update}'
Provisioning may take several minutes. Provisioned throughput endpoints take the longest (GPU allocation). Queries to endpoints that are not yet READY return 404 or 503.
Query an Endpoint
Chat / agent endpoints use the messages array:
databricks serving-endpoints query <ENDPOINT_NAME> \
--json '{"messages": [{"role": "user", "content": "Hello"}]}' --profile <PROFILE>
Classical-ML endpoints use dataframe_records (one record per row):
databricks serving-endpoints query <ENDPOINT_NAME> \
--json '{"dataframe_records": [{"vibration": 0.42, "rpm": 18.3, "temp_c": 71.2}]}'
- Use
--stream for streaming responses on chat endpoints.
- For embeddings or other custom schemas: use
get-open-api <ENDPOINT_NAME> first to discover the request/response shape.
Get Endpoint Schema (OpenAPI)
Returns the OpenAPI 3.1 JSON schema describing what each served model accepts and returns. Use this to understand an endpoint's input/output format before querying it.
databricks serving-endpoints get-open-api <ENDPOINT_NAME> --profile <PROFILE>
The schema shows paths per served model (e.g., /served-models/<model-name>/invocations) with full request/response definitions including parameter types, enums, and nullable fields.
Other Commands
Run databricks serving-endpoints <subcommand> -h for usage details.
| Task | Command | Notes |
|---|
| List all endpoints | list | |
| Get endpoint details | get <NAME> | Shows state, config, served entities |
| Delete endpoint | delete <NAME> | |
| Update served entities or traffic | update-config <NAME> --json '...' | Zero-downtime: old config serves until new is ready |
| Rate limits & usage tracking | put-ai-gateway <NAME> --json '...' | |
| Update tags | patch <NAME> --json '...' | |
| Build logs | build-logs <NAME> <SERVED_MODEL> | Get SERVED_MODEL from get output: served_entities[].name |
| Runtime logs | logs <NAME> <SERVED_MODEL> | |
| Metrics (Prometheus format) | export-metrics <NAME> | |
| Permissions | get-permissions <ENDPOINT_ID> | ⚠️ Uses endpoint ID (hex string), not name. Find ID via get. |
What's Next
Integrate with a Databricks App
After creating a serving endpoint, wire it into a Databricks App.
Step 1 — Check if the serving plugin is available in the AppKit template:
databricks apps manifest --profile <PROFILE>
If the output includes a serving plugin, scaffold with:
databricks apps init --name <APP_NAME> \
--features serving \
--set "serving.serving-endpoint.name=<ENDPOINT_NAME>" \
--run none --profile <PROFILE>
Step 2 — If no serving plugin, add the endpoint resource manually to an existing app's databricks.yml:
resources:
apps:
my_app:
resources:
- name: my-model-endpoint
serving_endpoint:
name: <ENDPOINT_NAME>
permission: CAN_QUERY
And inject the endpoint name as an environment variable in app.yaml:
env:
- name: SERVING_ENDPOINT
valueFrom: serving-endpoint
Then wire the endpoint into your app via the serving() plugin or a custom route in onPluginsReady. For the full app integration pattern, use the databricks-apps skill and read the Model Serving Guide.
Develop & deploy new models
This skill is ops-focused (manage existing endpoints). For the dev-side flow — training, MLflow tracking, UC registration, custom PyFunc authoring, and hand-rolled ResponsesAgent code — see databricks-ml-training (experimental).
Foundation Model API endpoints
Pay-per-token, pre-provisioned in every workspace. New models land regularly and a static skill list goes stale fast — always list at runtime instead of hard-coding names. Filter by the databricks- name prefix AND by the served entity being in system.ai.* (other endpoints like databricks-app-template-serving share the prefix but aren't FM API endpoints).
databricks serving-endpoints list \
| jq -r '.[]
| select(.name | startswith("databricks-"))
| select((.config.served_entities[0].entity_name // "") | startswith("system.ai."))
| "\(.task)\t\(.name)"' \
| sort
Defaults when the user doesn't specify: pick the highest-numbered Claude Sonnet for agents, the highest-numbered -codex-max for code, databricks-gte-large-en for embeddings — resolve actual names from the live list above.
Off-platform streaming
For apps deployed outside Databricks Apps (Vercel, AWS, standalone Node.js) hitting Databricks AI Gateway with Vercel AI SDK v6, see references/off-platform-streaming.md. For AppKit-based apps, use the databricks-apps skill's built-in serving plugin instead.
Troubleshooting
| Error | Solution |
|---|
cannot configure default credentials | Use --profile flag or authenticate first |
PERMISSION_DENIED | Check workspace permissions; for apps, ensure serving_endpoint resource declared with CAN_QUERY |
Endpoint stuck in NOT_READY | Wait up to 30 min for provisioned throughput. Check build logs: build-logs <NAME> <ENTITY_NAME> (get entity name from get output → served_entities[].name) |
RESOURCE_DOES_NOT_EXIST | Verify endpoint name with list |
| Query returns 404 | Endpoint may still be provisioning; check state.ready via get |
RATE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED (429) | AI Gateway rate limit; check put-ai-gateway config or retry after backoff |
| Endpoint missing from the Serving UI after deploy | UI filter defaults to "Owned by me". Deploy jobs run as a service principal, so the endpoint is hidden until you switch to "All". databricks serving-endpoints list always shows it. |