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320 lines
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Markdown
320 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
---
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id: architecture
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title: "Design"
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---
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Druid has a distributed architecture that is designed to be cloud-friendly and easy to operate. You can configure and scale services independently so you have maximum flexibility over cluster operations. This design includes enhanced fault tolerance: an outage of one component does not immediately affect other components.
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## Druid architecture
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The following diagram shows the services that make up the Druid architecture, how they are typically organized into servers, and how queries and data flow through this architecture.
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<img src="../assets/druid-architecture.png" width="800"/>
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The following sections describe the components of this architecture.
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## Druid services
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Druid has several types of services:
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* [**Coordinator**](../design/coordinator.md) service manages data availability on the cluster.
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* [**Overlord**](../design/overlord.md) service controls the assignment of data ingestion workloads.
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* [**Broker**](../design/broker.md) handles queries from external clients.
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* [**Router**](../design/router.md) services are optional; they route requests to Brokers, Coordinators, and Overlords.
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* [**Historical**](../design/historical.md) services store queryable data.
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* [**MiddleManager**](../design/middlemanager.md) services ingest data.
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You can view services in the **Services** tab in the Druid console:
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![Druid services](../assets/services-overview.png "Services in the Druid console")
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## Druid servers
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Druid services can be deployed any way you like, but for ease of deployment we suggest organizing them into three server types: Master, Query, and Data.
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* **Master**: Runs Coordinator and Overlord processes, manages data availability and ingestion.
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* **Query**: Runs Broker and optional Router processes, handles queries from external clients.
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* **Data**: Runs Historical and MiddleManager processes, executes ingestion workloads and stores all queryable data.
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For more details on process and server organization, please see [Druid Processes and Servers](../design/processes.md).
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## External dependencies
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In addition to its built-in process types, Druid also has three external dependencies. These are intended to be able to
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leverage existing infrastructure, where present.
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### Deep storage
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Druid uses deep storage to store any data that has been ingested into the system. Deep storage is shared file
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storage accessible by every Druid server. In a clustered deployment, this is typically a distributed object store like S3 or
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HDFS, or a network mounted filesystem. In a single-server deployment, this is typically local disk.
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Druid uses deep storage only as a backup of your data and as a way to transfer data in the background between
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Druid processes. Druid stores data in files called _segments_. Historical processes cache data segments on
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local disk and serve queries from that cache as well as from an in-memory cache.
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This means that Druid never needs to access deep storage
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during a query, helping it offer the best query latencies possible. It also means that you must have enough disk space
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both in deep storage and across your Historical servers for the data you plan to load.
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Deep storage is an important part of Druid's elastic, fault-tolerant design. Druid bootstraps from deep storage even
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if every single data server is lost and re-provisioned.
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For more details, please see the [Deep storage](../dependencies/deep-storage.md) page.
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### Metadata storage
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The metadata storage holds various shared system metadata such as segment usage information and task information. In a
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clustered deployment, this is typically a traditional RDBMS like PostgreSQL or MySQL. In a single-server
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deployment, it is typically a locally-stored Apache Derby database.
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For more details, please see the [Metadata storage](../dependencies/metadata-storage.md) page.
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### ZooKeeper
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Used for internal service discovery, coordination, and leader election.
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For more details, please see the [ZooKeeper](../dependencies/zookeeper.md) page.
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## Storage design
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### Datasources and segments
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Druid data is stored in _datasources_, which are similar to tables in a traditional RDBMS. Each datasource is
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partitioned by time and, optionally, further partitioned by other attributes. Each time range is called a _chunk_ (for
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example, a single day, if your datasource is partitioned by day). Within a chunk, data is partitioned into one or more
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[_segments_](../design/segments.md). Each segment is a single file, typically comprising up to a few million rows of data. Since segments are
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organized into time chunks, it's sometimes helpful to think of segments as living on a timeline like the following:
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<img src="../assets/druid-timeline.png" width="800" />
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A datasource may have anywhere from just a few segments, up to hundreds of thousands and even millions of segments. Each
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segment is created by a MiddleManager as _mutable_ and _uncommitted_. Data is queryable as soon as it is added to
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an uncommitted segment. The segment
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building process accelerates later queries by producing a data file that is compact and indexed:
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- Conversion to columnar format
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- Indexing with bitmap indexes
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- Compression
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- Dictionary encoding with id storage minimization for String columns
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- Bitmap compression for bitmap indexes
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- Type-aware compression for all columns
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Periodically, segments are _committed_ and _published_ to [deep storage](#deep-storage),
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become immutable, and move from MiddleManagers to the Historical processes. An entry about the segment is also written
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to the [metadata store](#metadata-storage). This entry is a self-describing bit of metadata about the segment, including
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things like the schema of the segment, its size, and its location on deep storage. These entries tell the
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Coordinator what data is available on the cluster.
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For details on the segment file format, please see [segment files](segments.md).
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For details on modeling your data in Druid, see [schema design](../ingestion/schema-design.md).
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### Indexing and handoff
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_Indexing_ is the mechanism by which new segments are created, and _handoff_ is the mechanism by which they are published
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and begin being served by Historical processes. On the indexing side:
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1. An _indexing task_ starts running and building a new segment. It must determine the identifier of the segment before
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it starts building it. For a task that is appending (like a Kafka task, or an index task in append mode) this is
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done by calling an "allocate" API on the Overlord to potentially add a new partition to an existing set of segments. For
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a task that is overwriting (like a Hadoop task, or an index task _not_ in append mode) this is done by locking an
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interval and creating a new version number and new set of segments.
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2. If the indexing task is a realtime task (like a Kafka task) then the segment is immediately queryable at this point.
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It's available, but unpublished.
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3. When the indexing task has finished reading data for the segment, it pushes it to deep storage and then publishes it
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by writing a record into the metadata store.
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4. If the indexing task is a realtime task, then to ensure data is continuously available for queries, it waits for a Historical process to load the segment. If the
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indexing task is not a realtime task, it exits immediately.
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On the Coordinator / Historical side:
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1. The Coordinator polls the metadata store periodically (by default, every 1 minute) for newly published segments.
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2. When the Coordinator finds a segment that is published and used, but unavailable, it chooses a Historical process
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to load that segment and instructs that Historical to do so.
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3. The Historical loads the segment and begins serving it.
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4. At this point, if the indexing task was waiting for handoff, it will exit.
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### Segment identifiers
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Segments all have a four-part identifier with the following components:
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- Datasource name.
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- Time interval (for the time chunk containing the segment; this corresponds to the `segmentGranularity` specified
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at ingestion time).
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- Version number (generally an ISO8601 timestamp corresponding to when the segment set was first started).
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- Partition number (an integer, unique within a datasource+interval+version; may not necessarily be contiguous).
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For example, this is the identifier for a segment in datasource `clarity-cloud0`, time chunk
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`2018-05-21T16:00:00.000Z/2018-05-21T17:00:00.000Z`, version `2018-05-21T15:56:09.909Z`, and partition number 1:
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```
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clarity-cloud0_2018-05-21T16:00:00.000Z_2018-05-21T17:00:00.000Z_2018-05-21T15:56:09.909Z_1
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```
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Segments with partition number 0 (the first partition in a chunk) omit the partition number, like the following
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example, which is a segment in the same time chunk as the previous one, but with partition number 0 instead of 1:
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```
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clarity-cloud0_2018-05-21T16:00:00.000Z_2018-05-21T17:00:00.000Z_2018-05-21T15:56:09.909Z
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```
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### Segment versioning
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You may be wondering what the "version number" described in the previous section is for. Or, you might not be, in which
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case good for you and you can skip this section!
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The version number provides a form of [_multi-version concurrency control_](
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiversion_concurrency_control) (MVCC) to
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support batch-mode overwriting. If all you ever do is append data, then there will be just a
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single version for each time chunk. But when you overwrite data, Druid will seamlessly switch from
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querying the old version to instead query the new, updated versions. Specifically, a new set of
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segments is created with the same datasource, same time interval, but a higher version number. This is a signal to the
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rest of the Druid system that the older version should be removed from the cluster, and the new version should replace
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it.
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The switch appears to happen instantaneously to a user, because Druid handles this by first loading the new data (but
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not allowing it to be queried), and then, as soon as the new data is all loaded, switching all new queries to use those
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new segments. Then it drops the old segments a few minutes later.
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### Segment lifecycle
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Each segment has a lifecycle that involves the following three major areas:
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1. **Metadata store:** Segment metadata (a small JSON payload generally no more than a few KB) is stored in the
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[metadata store](../dependencies/metadata-storage.md) once a segment is done being constructed. The act of inserting
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a record for a segment into the metadata store is called _publishing_. These metadata records have a boolean flag
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named `used`, which controls whether the segment is intended to be queryable or not. Segments created by realtime tasks will be
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available before they are published, since they are only published when the segment is complete and will not accept
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any additional rows of data.
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2. **Deep storage:** Segment data files are pushed to deep storage once a segment is done being constructed. This
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happens immediately before publishing metadata to the metadata store.
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3. **Availability for querying:** Segments are available for querying on some Druid data server, like a realtime task
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or a Historical process.
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You can inspect the state of currently active segments using the Druid SQL
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[`sys.segments` table](../querying/sql-metadata-tables.md#segments-table). It includes the following flags:
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- `is_published`: True if segment metadata has been published to the metadata store and `used` is true.
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- `is_available`: True if the segment is currently available for querying, either on a realtime task or Historical
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process.
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- `is_realtime`: True if the segment is _only_ available on realtime tasks. For datasources that use realtime ingestion,
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this will generally start off `true` and then become `false` as the segment is published and handed off.
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- `is_overshadowed`: True if the segment is published (with `used` set to true) and is fully overshadowed by some other
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published segments. Generally this is a transient state, and segments in this state will soon have their `used` flag
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automatically set to false.
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### Availability and consistency
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Druid has an architectural separation between ingestion and querying, as described above in
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[Indexing and handoff](#indexing-and-handoff). This means that when understanding Druid's availability and
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consistency properties, we must look at each function separately.
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On the **ingestion side**, Druid's primary [ingestion methods](../ingestion/index.md#ingestion-methods) are all
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pull-based and offer transactional guarantees. This means that you are guaranteed that ingestion using these
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methods will publish in an all-or-nothing manner:
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- Supervised "seekable-stream" ingestion methods like [Kafka](../development/extensions-core/kafka-ingestion.md) and
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[Kinesis](../development/extensions-core/kinesis-ingestion.md). With these methods, Druid commits stream offsets to its
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[metadata store](#metadata-storage) alongside segment metadata, in the same transaction. Note that ingestion of data
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that has not yet been published can be rolled back if ingestion tasks fail. In this case, partially-ingested data is
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discarded, and Druid will resume ingestion from the last committed set of stream offsets. This ensures exactly-once
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publishing behavior.
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- [Hadoop-based batch ingestion](../ingestion/hadoop.md). Each task publishes all segment metadata in a single
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transaction.
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- [Native batch ingestion](../ingestion/native-batch.md). In parallel mode, the supervisor task publishes all segment
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metadata in a single transaction after the subtasks are finished. In simple (single-task) mode, the single task
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publishes all segment metadata in a single transaction after it is complete.
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Additionally, some ingestion methods offer an _idempotency_ guarantee. This means that repeated executions of the same
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ingestion will not cause duplicate data to be ingested:
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- Supervised "seekable-stream" ingestion methods like [Kafka](../development/extensions-core/kafka-ingestion.md) and
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[Kinesis](../development/extensions-core/kinesis-ingestion.md) are idempotent due to the fact that stream offsets and
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segment metadata are stored together and updated in lock-step.
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- [Hadoop-based batch ingestion](../ingestion/hadoop.md) is idempotent unless one of your input sources
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is the same Druid datasource that you are ingesting into. In this case, running the same task twice is non-idempotent,
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because you are adding to existing data instead of overwriting it.
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- [Native batch ingestion](../ingestion/native-batch.md) is idempotent unless
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[`appendToExisting`](../ingestion/native-batch.md) is true, or one of your input sources is the same Druid datasource
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that you are ingesting into. In either of these two cases, running the same task twice is non-idempotent, because you
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are adding to existing data instead of overwriting it.
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On the **query side**, the Druid Broker is responsible for ensuring that a consistent set of segments is involved in a
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given query. It selects the appropriate set of segment versions to use when the query starts based on what is currently
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available. This is supported by _atomic replacement_, a feature that ensures that from a user's perspective, queries
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flip instantaneously from an older version of data to a newer set of data, with no consistency or performance impact.
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(See [segment versioning](#segment-versioning) above.)
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This is used for Hadoop-based batch ingestion, native batch ingestion when `appendToExisting` is false, and compaction.
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Note that atomic replacement happens for each time chunk individually. If a batch ingestion task or compaction
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involves multiple time chunks, then each time chunk will undergo atomic replacement soon after the task finishes, but
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the replacements will not all happen simultaneously.
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Typically, atomic replacement in Druid is based on a _core set_ concept that works in conjunction with segment versions.
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When a time chunk is overwritten, a new core set of segments is created with a higher version number. The core set
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must _all_ be available before the Broker will use them instead of the older set. There can also only be one core set
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per version per time chunk. Druid will also only use a single version at a time per time chunk. Together, these
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properties provide Druid's atomic replacement guarantees.
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Druid also supports an experimental _segment locking_ mode that is activated by setting
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[`forceTimeChunkLock`](../ingestion/tasks.md#context) to false in the context of an ingestion task. In this case, Druid
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creates an _atomic update group_ using the existing version for the time chunk, instead of creating a new core set
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with a new version number. There can be multiple atomic update groups with the same version number per time chunk. Each
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one replaces a specific set of earlier segments in the same time chunk and with the same version number. Druid will
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query the latest one that is fully available. This is a more powerful version of the core set concept, because it
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enables atomically replacing a subset of data for a time chunk, as well as doing atomic replacement and appending
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simultaneously.
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If segments become unavailable due to multiple Historicals going offline simultaneously (beyond your replication
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factor), then Druid queries will include only the segments that are still available. In the background, Druid will
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reload these unavailable segments on other Historicals as quickly as possible, at which point they will be included in
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queries again.
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## Query processing
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Queries are distributed across the Druid cluster, and managed by a Broker.
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Queries first enter the [Broker](../design/broker.md), which identifies the segments with data that may pertain to that query.
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The list of segments is always pruned by time, and may also be pruned by other attributes depending on how your
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datasource is partitioned. The Broker will then identify which [Historicals](../design/historical.md) and
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[MiddleManagers](../design/middlemanager.md) are serving those segments and distributes a rewritten subquery to each of those processes.
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The Historical/MiddleManager processes execute each subquery and return results to the Broker. The Broker merges the partial results
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to get the final answer, which it returns to the original caller.
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Time and attribute pruning is an important way that Druid limits the amount of data that must be scanned for each query, but it is
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not the only way. For filters at a more granular level than what the Broker can use for pruning,
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[indexing structures](#datasources-and-segments)
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inside each segment allow Historicals to figure out which (if any) rows match the filter set before looking at any row of
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data. Once a Historical knows which rows match a particular query, it only accesses the specific rows and columns it needs for that
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query.
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So Druid uses three different techniques to maximize query performance:
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- Pruning the set of segments accessed for a query.
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- Within each segment, using indexes to identify which rows must be accessed.
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- Within each segment, only reading the specific rows and columns that are relevant to a particular query.
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For more details about how Druid executes queries, refer to the [Query execution](../querying/query-execution.md)
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documentation.
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