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doc_page | Export Metadata Tool |
Export Metadata Tool
Druid includes an export-metadata
tool for assisting with migration of cluster metadata and deep storage.
This tool exports the contents of the following Druid metadata tables:
- segments
- rules
- config
- datasource
- supervisors
Additionally, the tool can rewrite the local deep storage location descriptors in the rows of the segments table to point to new deep storage locations (S3, HDFS, and local rewrite paths are supported).
The tool has the following limitations:
- Only exporting from Derby metadata is currently supported
- If rewriting load specs for deep storage migration, only migrating from local deep storage is currently supported.
export-metadata
Options
The export-metadata
tool provides the following options:
Connection Properties
--connectURI
: The URI of the Derby database, e.g. jdbc:derby://localhost:1527/var/druid/metadata.db;create=true
--user
: Username
--password
: Password
--base
: corresponds to the value of druid.metadata.storage.tables.base
in the configuration, druid
by default.
Output Path
--output-path
, -o
: The output directory of the tool. CSV files for the Druid segments, rules, config, datasource, and supervisors tables will be written to this directory.
Export Format Options
--use-hex-blobs
, -x
: If set, export BLOB payload columns as hexadecimal strings. This needs to be set if importing back into Derby. Default is false.
--booleans-as-strings
, -t
: If set, write boolean values as "true" or "false" instead of "1" and "0". This needs to be set if importing back into Derby. Default is false.
Deep Storage Migration
Migration to S3 Deep Storage
By setting the options below, the tool will rewrite the segment load specs to point to a new S3 deep storage location.
This helps users migrate segments stored in local deep storage to S3.
--s3bucket
, -b
: The S3 bucket that will hold the migrated segments
--s3baseKey
, -k
: The base S3 key where the migrated segments will be stored
When copying the local deep storage segments to S3, the rewrite performed by this tool requires that the directory structure of the segments be unchanged.
For example, if the cluster had the following local deep storage configuration:
druid.storage.type=local
druid.storage.storageDirectory=/druid/segments
If the target S3 bucket was migration
, with a base key of example
, the contents of s3://migration/example/
must be identical to that of /druid/segments
on the old local filesystem.
Migration to HDFS Deep Storage
By setting the options below, the tool will rewrite the segment load specs to point to a new HDFS deep storage location.
This helps users migrate segments stored in local deep storage to HDFS.
--hadoopStorageDirectory
, -h
: The HDFS path that will hold the migrated segments
When copying the local deep storage segments to HDFS, the rewrite performed by this tool requires that the directory structure of the segments be unchanged, with the exception of directory names containing colons (:
).
For example, if the cluster had the following local deep storage configuration:
druid.storage.type=local
druid.storage.storageDirectory=/druid/segments
If the target hadoopStorageDirectory was /migration/example
, the contents of hdfs:///migration/example/
must be identical to that of /druid/segments
on the old local filesystem.
Additionally, the segments paths in local deep storage contain colons(:
) in their names, e.g.:
wikipedia/2016-06-27T02:00:00.000Z_2016-06-27T03:00:00.000Z/2019-05-03T21:57:15.950Z/1/index.zip
HDFS cannot store files containing colons, and this tool expects the colons to be replaced with underscores (_
) in HDFS.
In this example, the wikipedia
segment above under /druid/segments
in local deep storage would need to be migrated to HDFS under hdfs:///migration/example/
with the following path:
wikipedia/2016-06-27T02_00_00.000Z_2016-06-27T03_00_00.000Z/2019-05-03T21_57_15.950Z/1/index.zip
Migration to New Local Deep Storage Path
By setting the options below, the tool will rewrite the segment load specs to point to a new local deep storage location.
This helps users migrate segments stored in local deep storage to a new path (e.g., a new NFS mount).
--newLocalPath
, -n
: The new path on the local filesystem that will hold the migrated segments
When copying the local deep storage segments to a new path, the rewrite performed by this tool requires that the directory structure of the segments be unchanged.
For example, if the cluster had the following local deep storage configuration:
druid.storage.type=local
druid.storage.storageDirectory=/druid/segments
If the new path was /migration/example
, the contents of /migration/example/
must be identical to that of /druid/segments
on the local filesystem.
Running the tool
To use the tool, you can run the following from the root of the Druid package:
cd ${DRUID_ROOT}
mkdir -p /tmp/csv
java -classpath "lib/*" -Dlog4j.configurationFile=conf/druid/cluster/_common/log4j2.xml -Ddruid.extensions.directory="extensions" -Ddruid.extensions.loadList=[] org.apache.druid.cli.Main tools export-metadata --connectURI "jdbc:derby://localhost:1527/var/druid/metadata.db;" -o /tmp/csv
In the example command above:
lib
is the the Druid lib directoryextensions
is the Druid extensions directory/tmp/csv
is the output directory. Please make sure that this directory exists.
Importing Metadata
After running the tool, the output directory will contain <table-name>_raw.csv
and <table-name>.csv
files.
The <table-name>_raw.csv
files are intermediate files used by the tool, containing the table data as exported by Derby without modification.
The <table-name>.csv
files are used for import into another database such as MySQL and PostgreSQL and have any configured deep storage location rewrites applied.
Example import commands for Derby, MySQL, and PostgreSQL are shown below.
These example import commands expect /tmp/csv
and its contents to be accessible from the server. For other options, such as importing from the client filesystem, please refer to the database's documentation.
Derby
CALL SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE (null,'DRUID_SEGMENTS','/tmp/csv/druid_segments.csv',',','"',null,0);
CALL SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE (null,'DRUID_RULES','/tmp/csv/druid_rules.csv',',','"',null,0);
CALL SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE (null,'DRUID_CONFIG','/tmp/csv/druid_config.csv',',','"',null,0);
CALL SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE (null,'DRUID_DATASOURCE','/tmp/csv/druid_dataSource.csv',',','"',null,0);
CALL SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE (null,'DRUID_SUPERVISORS','/tmp/csv/druid_supervisors.csv',',','"',null,0);
MySQL
LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/csv/druid_segments.csv' INTO TABLE druid_segments FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '\"' (id,dataSource,created_date,start,end,partitioned,version,used,payload); SHOW WARNINGS;
LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/csv/druid_rules.csv' INTO TABLE druid_rules FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '\"' (id,dataSource,version,payload); SHOW WARNINGS;
LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/csv/druid_config.csv' INTO TABLE druid_config FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '\"' (name,payload); SHOW WARNINGS;
LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/csv/druid_dataSource.csv' INTO TABLE druid_dataSource FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '\"' (dataSource,created_date,commit_metadata_payload,commit_metadata_sha1); SHOW WARNINGS;
LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/csv/druid_supervisors.csv' INTO TABLE druid_supervisors FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '\"' (id,spec_id,created_date,payload); SHOW WARNINGS;
PostgreSQL
COPY druid_segments(id,dataSource,created_date,start,"end",partitioned,version,used,payload) FROM '/tmp/csv/druid_segments.csv' DELIMITER ',' CSV;
COPY druid_rules(id,dataSource,version,payload) FROM '/tmp/csv/druid_rules.csv' DELIMITER ',' CSV;
COPY druid_config(name,payload) FROM '/tmp/csv/druid_config.csv' DELIMITER ',' CSV;
COPY druid_dataSource(dataSource,created_date,commit_metadata_payload,commit_metadata_sha1) FROM '/tmp/csv/druid_dataSource.csv' DELIMITER ',' CSV;
COPY druid_supervisors(id,spec_id,created_date,payload) FROM '/tmp/csv/druid_supervisors.csv' DELIMITER ',' CSV;