mirror of https://github.com/apache/druid.git
219 lines
9.7 KiB
Markdown
219 lines
9.7 KiB
Markdown
---
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id: segmentmetadataquery
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title: "SegmentMetadata queries"
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sidebar_label: "SegmentMetadata"
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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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~ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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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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~ specific language governing permissions and limitations
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~ under the License.
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:::info
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Apache Druid supports two query languages: [Druid SQL](sql.md) and [native queries](querying.md).
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This document describes a query
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type that is only available in the native language. However, Druid SQL contains similar functionality in
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its [metadata tables](sql-metadata-tables.md).
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:::
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Segment metadata queries return per-segment information about:
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* Number of rows stored inside the segment
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* Interval the segment covers
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* Estimated total segment byte size in if it was stored in a 'flat format' (e.g. a csv file)
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* Segment id
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* Is the segment rolled up
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* Detailed per column information such as:
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- type
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- cardinality
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- min/max values
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- presence of null values
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- estimated 'flat format' byte size
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```json
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{
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"queryType":"segmentMetadata",
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"dataSource":"sample_datasource",
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"intervals":["2013-01-01/2014-01-01"]
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}
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```
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There are several main parts to a segment metadata query:
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|property|description|required?|
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|--------|-----------|---------|
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|queryType|This String should always be "segmentMetadata"; this is the first thing Apache Druid looks at to figure out how to interpret the query|yes|
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|dataSource|A String or Object defining the data source to query, very similar to a table in a relational database. See [DataSource](../querying/datasource.md) for more information.|yes|
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|intervals|A JSON Object representing ISO-8601 Intervals. This defines the time ranges to run the query over.|no|
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|toInclude|A JSON Object representing what columns should be included in the result. Defaults to "all".|no|
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|merge|Merge all individual segment metadata results into a single result|no|
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|context|See [Context](../querying/query-context.md)|no|
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|analysisTypes|A list of Strings specifying what column properties (e.g. cardinality, size) should be calculated and returned in the result. Defaults to ["cardinality", "interval", "minmax"], but can be overridden with using the [segment metadata query config](../configuration/index.md#segmentmetadata-query-config). See section [analysisTypes](#analysistypes) for more details.|no|
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|aggregatorMergeStrategy| The strategy Druid uses to merge aggregators across segments. If true and if the `aggregators` analysis type is enabled, `aggregatorMergeStrategy` defaults to `strict`. Possible values include `strict`, `lenient`, `earliest`, and `latest`. See [`aggregatorMergeStrategy`](#aggregatormergestrategy) for details.|no|
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|lenientAggregatorMerge|Deprecated. Use `aggregatorMergeStrategy` property instead. If true, and if the `aggregators` analysis type is enabled, Druid merges aggregators leniently.|no|
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The format of the result is:
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```json
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[ {
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"id" : "some_id",
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"intervals" : [ "2013-05-13T00:00:00.000Z/2013-05-14T00:00:00.000Z" ],
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"columns" : {
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"__time" : { "type" : "LONG", "hasMultipleValues" : false, "hasNulls": false, "size" : 407240380, "cardinality" : null, "errorMessage" : null },
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"dim1" : { "type" : "STRING", "hasMultipleValues" : false, "hasNulls": false, "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : 1944, "errorMessage" : null },
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"dim2" : { "type" : "STRING", "hasMultipleValues" : true, "hasNulls": true, "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : 1504, "errorMessage" : null },
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"metric1" : { "type" : "FLOAT", "hasMultipleValues" : false, "hasNulls": false, "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : null, "errorMessage" : null }
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},
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"aggregators" : {
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"metric1" : { "type" : "longSum", "name" : "metric1", "fieldName" : "metric1" }
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},
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"queryGranularity" : {
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"type": "none"
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},
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"size" : 300000,
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"numRows" : 5000000
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} ]
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```
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All columns contain a `typeSignature` that Druid uses to represent the column type information internally. The `typeSignature` is typically the same value used to identify the JSON type information at query or ingest time. One of: `STRING`, `FLOAT`, `DOUBLE`, `LONG`, or `COMPLEX<typeName>`, e.g. `COMPLEX<hyperUnique>`.
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Columns also have a legacy `type` name. For some column types, the value may match the `typeSignature` (`STRING`, `FLOAT`, `DOUBLE`, or `LONG`). For `COMPLEX` columns, the `type` only contains the name of the underlying complex type such as `hyperUnique`.
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New applications should use `typeSignature`, not `type`.
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If the `errorMessage` field is non-null, you should not trust the other fields in the response. Their contents are
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undefined.
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Only columns which are dictionary encoded (i.e., have type `STRING`) will have any cardinality. Rest of the columns (timestamp and metric columns) will show cardinality as `null`.
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## intervals
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If an interval is not specified, the query will use a default interval that spans a configurable period before the end time of the most recent segment.
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The length of this default time period is set in the Broker configuration via:
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druid.query.segmentMetadata.defaultHistory
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## toInclude
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There are 3 types of toInclude objects.
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### All
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The grammar is as follows:
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``` json
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"toInclude": { "type": "all"}
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```
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### None
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The grammar is as follows:
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``` json
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"toInclude": { "type": "none"}
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```
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### List
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The grammar is as follows:
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``` json
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"toInclude": { "type": "list", "columns": [<string list of column names>]}
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```
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## analysisTypes
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This is a list of properties that determines the amount of information returned about the columns, i.e. analyses to be performed on the columns.
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By default, the "cardinality", "interval", and "minmax" types will be used. If a property is not needed, omitting it from this list will result in a more efficient query.
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The default analysis types can be set in the Broker configuration via:
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`druid.query.segmentMetadata.defaultAnalysisTypes`
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Types of column analyses are described below:
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### cardinality
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* `cardinality` is the number of unique values present in string columns. It is null for other column types.
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Druid examines the size of string column dictionaries to compute the cardinality value. There is one dictionary per column per
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segment. If `merge` is off (false), this reports the cardinality of each column of each segment individually. If
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`merge` is on (true), this reports the highest cardinality encountered for a particular column across all relevant
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segments.
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### minmax
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* Estimated min/max values for each column. Only reported for string columns.
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### size
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* `size` is the estimated total byte size as if the data were stored in text format. This is _not_ the actual storage
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size of the column in Druid. If you want the actual storage size in bytes of a segment, look elsewhere. Some pointers:
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- To get the storage size in bytes of an entire segment, check the `size` field in the
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[`sys.segments` table](sql-metadata-tables.md#segments-table). This is the size of the memory-mappable content.
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- To get the storage size in bytes of a particular column in a particular segment, unpack the segment and look at the
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`meta.smoosh` file inside the archive. The difference between the third and fourth columns is the size in bytes.
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Currently, there is no API for retrieving this information.
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### interval
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* `intervals` in the result will contain the list of intervals associated with the queried segments.
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### timestampSpec
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* `timestampSpec` in the result will contain timestampSpec of data stored in segments. this can be null if timestampSpec of segments was unknown or unmergeable (if merging is enabled).
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### queryGranularity
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* `queryGranularity` in the result will contain query granularity of data stored in segments. this can be null if query granularity of segments was unknown or unmergeable (if merging is enabled).
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### aggregators
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* `aggregators` in the result will contain the list of aggregators usable for querying metric columns. This may be
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null if the aggregators are unknown or unmergeable (if merging is enabled).
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* Merging can be `strict`, `lenient`, `earliest`, or `latest`. See [`aggregatorMergeStrategy`](#aggregatormergestrategy) for details.
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* The form of the result is a map of column name to aggregator.
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### rollup
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* `rollup` in the result is true/false/null.
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* When merging is enabled, if some are rollup, others are not, result is null.
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### aggregatorMergeStrategy
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Conflicts between aggregator metadata across segments can occur if some segments have unknown aggregators, or if
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two segments use incompatible aggregators for the same column, such as `longSum` changed to `doubleSum`.
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Druid supports the following aggregator merge strategies:
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- `strict`: If there are any segments with unknown aggregators or any conflicts of any kind, the merged aggregators
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list is `null`.
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- `lenient`: Druid ignores segments with unknown aggregators. Conflicts between aggregators set the aggregator for
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that particular column to null.
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- `earliest`: In the event of conflicts between segments, Druid selects the aggregator from the earliest segment
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for that particular column.
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- `latest`: In the event of conflicts between segments, Druid selects the aggregator from the most recent segment
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for that particular column.
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### lenientAggregatorMerge (deprecated)
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Deprecated. Use [`aggregatorMergeStrategy`](#aggregatormergestrategy) instead.
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