mirror of https://github.com/apache/druid.git
155 lines
6.3 KiB
Markdown
155 lines
6.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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id: tutorial-transform-spec
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title: "Tutorial: Transforming input data"
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sidebar_label: "Transforming input data"
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---
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<!--
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~ Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
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~ or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
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~ distributed with this work for additional information
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~ regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
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~ to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
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~ "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
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~ with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
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~
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~ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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~
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~ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
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~ software distributed under the License is distributed on an
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~ "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
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~ KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
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~ specific language governing permissions and limitations
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~ under the License.
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-->
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This tutorial will demonstrate how to use transform specs to filter and transform input data during ingestion.
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For this tutorial, we'll assume you've already downloaded Apache Druid as described in
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the [single-machine quickstart](index.md) and have it running on your local machine.
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It will also be helpful to have finished [Tutorial: Loading a file](../tutorials/tutorial-batch.md) and [Tutorial: Querying data](../tutorials/tutorial-query.md).
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## Sample data
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We've included sample data for this tutorial at `quickstart/tutorial/transform-data.json`, reproduced here for convenience:
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```json
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{"timestamp":"2018-01-01T07:01:35Z","animal":"octopus", "location":1, "number":100}
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{"timestamp":"2018-01-01T05:01:35Z","animal":"mongoose", "location":2,"number":200}
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{"timestamp":"2018-01-01T06:01:35Z","animal":"snake", "location":3, "number":300}
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{"timestamp":"2018-01-01T01:01:35Z","animal":"lion", "location":4, "number":300}
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```
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## Load data with transform specs
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We will ingest the sample data using the following spec, which demonstrates the use of transform specs:
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```json
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{
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"type" : "index_parallel",
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"spec" : {
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"dataSchema" : {
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"dataSource" : "transform-tutorial",
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"timestampSpec": {
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"column": "timestamp",
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"format": "iso"
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},
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"dimensionsSpec" : {
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"dimensions" : [
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"animal",
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{ "name": "location", "type": "long" }
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]
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},
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"metricsSpec" : [
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{ "type" : "count", "name" : "count" },
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{ "type" : "longSum", "name" : "number", "fieldName" : "number" },
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{ "type" : "longSum", "name" : "triple-number", "fieldName" : "triple-number" }
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],
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"granularitySpec" : {
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"type" : "uniform",
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"segmentGranularity" : "week",
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"queryGranularity" : "minute",
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"intervals" : ["2018-01-01/2018-01-03"],
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"rollup" : true
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},
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"transformSpec": {
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"transforms": [
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{
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"type": "expression",
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"name": "animal",
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"expression": "concat('super-', animal)"
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},
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{
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"type": "expression",
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"name": "triple-number",
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"expression": "number * 3"
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}
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],
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"filter": {
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"type":"or",
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"fields": [
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{ "type": "selector", "dimension": "animal", "value": "super-mongoose" },
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{ "type": "selector", "dimension": "triple-number", "value": "300" },
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{ "type": "selector", "dimension": "location", "value": "3" }
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]
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}
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}
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},
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"ioConfig" : {
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"type" : "index_parallel",
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"inputSource" : {
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"type" : "local",
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"baseDir" : "quickstart/tutorial",
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"filter" : "transform-data.json"
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},
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"inputFormat" : {
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"type" :"json"
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},
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"appendToExisting" : false
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},
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"tuningConfig" : {
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"type" : "index_parallel",
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"maxRowsPerSegment" : 5000000,
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"maxRowsInMemory" : 25000
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}
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}
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}
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```
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In the transform spec, we have two expression transforms:
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* `super-animal`: prepends "super-" to the values in the `animal` column. This will override the `animal` column with the transformed version, since the transform's name is `animal`.
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* `triple-number`: multiplies the `number` column by 3. This will create a new `triple-number` column. Note that we are ingesting both the original and the transformed column.
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Additionally, we have an OR filter with three clauses:
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* `super-animal` values that match "super-mongoose"
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* `triple-number` values that match 300
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* `location` values that match 3
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This filter selects the first 3 rows, and it will exclude the final "lion" row in the input data. Note that the filter is applied after the transformation.
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Let's submit this task now, which has been included at `quickstart/tutorial/transform-index.json`:
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```bash
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bin/post-index-task --file quickstart/tutorial/transform-index.json --url http://localhost:8081
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```
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## Query the transformed data
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Let's run `bin/dsql` and issue a `select * from "transform-tutorial";` query to see what was ingested:
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```bash
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dsql> select * from "transform-tutorial";
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┌──────────────────────────┬────────────────┬───────┬──────────┬────────┬───────────────┐
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│ __time │ animal │ count │ location │ number │ triple-number │
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├──────────────────────────┼────────────────┼───────┼──────────┼────────┼───────────────┤
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│ 2018-01-01T05:01:00.000Z │ super-mongoose │ 1 │ 2 │ 200 │ 600 │
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│ 2018-01-01T06:01:00.000Z │ super-snake │ 1 │ 3 │ 300 │ 900 │
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│ 2018-01-01T07:01:00.000Z │ super-octopus │ 1 │ 1 │ 100 │ 300 │
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└──────────────────────────┴────────────────┴───────┴──────────┴────────┴───────────────┘
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Retrieved 3 rows in 0.03s.
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```
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The "lion" row has been discarded, the `animal` column has been transformed, and we have both the original and transformed `number` column.
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