--- layout: doc_page --- # Tutorial: Load your own batch data ## Getting started This tutorial shows you how to load your own data files into Druid. For this tutorial, we'll assume you've already downloaded Druid as described in the [single-machine quickstart](quickstart.html) and have it running on your local machine. You don't need to have loaded any data yet. Once that's complete, you can load your own dataset by writing a custom ingestion spec. ## Writing an ingestion spec When loading files into Druid, you will use Druid's [batch loading](../ingestion/batch-ingestion.html) process. There's an example batch ingestion spec in `quickstart/wikiticker-index.json` that you can modify for your own needs. The most important questions are: * What should the dataset be called? This is the "dataSource" field of the "dataSchema". * Where is the dataset located? The file paths belong in the "paths" of the "inputSpec". If you want to load multiple files, you can provide them as a comma-separated string. * Which field should be treated as a timestamp? This belongs in the "column" of the "timestampSpec". * Which fields should be treated as dimensions? This belongs in the "dimensions" of the "dimensionsSpec". * Which fields should be treated as metrics? This belongs in the "metricsSpec". * What time ranges (intervals) are being loaded? This belongs in the "intervals" of the "granularitySpec". If your data does not have a natural sense of time, you can tag each row with the current time. You can also tag all rows with a fixed timestamp, like "2000-01-01T00:00:00.000Z". Let's use this pageviews dataset as an example. Druid supports TSV, CSV, and JSON out of the box. Note that nested JSON objects are not supported, so if you do use JSON, you should provide a file containing flattened objects. ```json {"time": "2015-09-01T00:00:00Z", "url": "/foo/bar", "user": "alice", "latencyMs": 32} {"time": "2015-09-01T01:00:00Z", "url": "/", "user": "bob", "latencyMs": 11} {"time": "2015-09-01T01:30:00Z", "url": "/foo/bar", "user": "bob", "latencyMs": 45} ``` Make sure the file has no newline at the end. If you save this to a file called "pageviews.json", then for this dataset: * Let's call the dataset "pageviews". * The data is located in "pageviews.json". * The timestamp is the "time" field. * Good choices for dimensions are the string fields "url" and "user". * Good choices for metrics are a count of pageviews, and the sum of "latencyMs". Collecting that sum when we load the data will allow us to compute an average at query time as well. * The data covers the time range 2015-09-01 (inclusive) through 2015-09-02 (exclusive). You can copy the existing `quickstart/wikiticker-index.json` indexing task to a new file: ```bash cp quickstart/wikiticker-index.json my-index-task.json ``` And modify it by altering these sections: ```json "dataSource": "pageviews" ``` ```json "inputSpec": { "type": "static", "paths": "pageviews.json" } ``` ```json "timestampSpec": { "format": "auto", "column": "time" } ``` ```json "dimensionsSpec": { "dimensions": ["url", "user"] } ``` ```json "metricsSpec": [ {"name": "views", "type": "count"}, {"name": "latencyMs", "type": "doubleSum", "fieldName": "latencyMs"} ] ``` ```json "granularitySpec": { "type": "uniform", "segmentGranularity": "day", "queryGranularity": "none", "intervals": ["2015-09-01/2015-09-02"] } ``` ## Running the task To actually run this task, first make sure that the indexing task can read *pageviews.json*: - If you're running locally (no configuration for connecting to Hadoop; this is the default) then place it in the root of the Druid distribution. - If you configured Druid to connect to a Hadoop cluster, upload the pageviews.json file to HDFS. You may need to adjust the `paths` in the ingestion spec. To kick off the indexing process, POST your indexing task to the Druid Overlord. In a standard Druid install, the URL is `http://OVERLORD_IP:8090/druid/indexer/v1/task`. ```bash curl -X 'POST' -H 'Content-Type:application/json' -d @my-index-task.json OVERLORD_IP:8090/druid/indexer/v1/task ``` If you're running everything on a single machine, you can use localhost: ```bash curl -X 'POST' -H 'Content-Type:application/json' -d @my-index-task.json localhost:8090/druid/indexer/v1/task ``` If anything goes wrong with this task (e.g. it finishes with status FAILED), you can troubleshoot by visiting the "Task log" on the [overlord console](http://localhost:8090/console.html). ## Querying your data Your data should become fully available within a minute or two. You can monitor this process on your Coordinator console at [http://localhost:8081/#/](http://localhost:8081/#/). Once your data is fully available, you can query it using any of the [supported query methods](../querying/querying.html). ## Further reading For more information on loading batch data, please see [the batch ingestion documentation](../ingestion/batch-ingestion.html).