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id | title |
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metadata-storage | Metadata storage |
Apache Druid relies on an external dependency for metadata storage. Druid uses the metadata store to house various metadata about the system, but not to store the actual data. The metadata store retains all metadata essential for a Druid cluster to work.
The metadata store includes the following:
- Segments records
- Rule records
- Configuration records
- Task-related tables
- Audit records
Derby is the default metadata store for Druid, however, it is not suitable for production. MySQL and PostgreSQL are more production suitable metadata stores. See Metadata storage configuration for the default configuration settings.
:::info We also recommend you set up a high availability environment because there is no way to restore lost metadata. :::
Available metadata stores
Druid supports Derby, MySQL, and PostgreSQL for storing metadata.
Derby
:::info For production clusters, consider using MySQL or PostgreSQL instead of Derby. :::
Configure metadata storage with Derby by setting the following properties in your Druid configuration.
druid.metadata.storage.type=derby
druid.metadata.storage.connector.connectURI=jdbc:derby://localhost:1527//opt/var/druid_state/derby;create=true
MySQL
See mysql-metadata-storage extension documentation.
PostgreSQL
See postgresql-metadata-storage.
Adding custom DBCP properties
You can add custom properties to customize the database connection pool (DBCP) for connecting to the metadata store.
Define these properties with a druid.metadata.storage.connector.dbcp.
prefix.
For example:
druid.metadata.storage.connector.dbcp.maxConnLifetimeMillis=1200000
druid.metadata.storage.connector.dbcp.defaultQueryTimeout=30000
Certain properties cannot be set through druid.metadata.storage.connector.dbcp.
and must be set with the prefix druid.metadata.storage.connector.
:
username
password
connectURI
validationQuery
testOnBorrow
See BasicDataSource Configuration for a full list of configurable properties.
Metadata storage tables
This section describes the various tables in metadata storage.
Segments table
This is dictated by the druid.metadata.storage.tables.segments
property.
This table stores metadata about the segments that should be available in the system. (This set of segments is called "used segments" elsewhere in the documentation and throughout the project.) The table is polled by the Coordinator to determine the set of segments that should be available for querying in the system. The table has two main functional columns, the other columns are for indexing purposes.
Value 1 in the used
column means that the segment should be "used" by the cluster (i.e., it should be loaded and
available for requests). Value 0 means that the segment should not be loaded into the cluster. We do this as a means of
unloading segments from the cluster without actually removing their metadata (which allows for simpler rolling back if
that is ever an issue). The used
column has a corresponding used_status_last_updated
column which denotes the time
when the used
status of the segment was last updated. This information can be used by the Coordinator to determine if
a segment is a candidate for deletion (if automated segment killing is enabled).
The payload
column stores a JSON blob that has all of the metadata for the segment.
Some of the data in the payload
column intentionally duplicates data from other columns in the segments table.
As an example, the payload
column may take the following form:
{
"dataSource":"wikipedia",
"interval":"2012-05-23T00:00:00.000Z/2012-05-24T00:00:00.000Z",
"version":"2012-05-24T00:10:00.046Z",
"loadSpec":{
"type":"s3_zip",
"bucket":"bucket_for_segment",
"key":"path/to/segment/on/s3"
},
"dimensions":"comma-delimited-list-of-dimension-names",
"metrics":"comma-delimited-list-of-metric-names",
"shardSpec":{"type":"none"},
"binaryVersion":9,
"size":size_of_segment,
"identifier":"wikipedia_2012-05-23T00:00:00.000Z_2012-05-24T00:00:00.000Z_2012-05-23T00:10:00.046Z"
}
Rule table
The rule table stores the various rules about where segments should land. These rules are used by the Coordinator when making segment (re-)allocation decisions about the cluster.
Config table
The config table stores runtime configuration objects. We do not have many of these yet and we are not sure if we will keep this mechanism going forward, but it is the beginnings of a method of changing some configuration parameters across the cluster at runtime.
Task-related tables
Task-related tables are created and used by the Overlord and MiddleManager when managing tasks.
Audit table
The audit table stores the audit history for configuration changes such as rule changes done by Coordinator and other config changes.
Metadata storage access
Only the following processes access the metadata storage:
- Indexing service processes (if any)
- Realtime processes (if any)
- Coordinator processes
Thus you need to give permissions (e.g., in AWS security groups) for only these machines to access the metadata storage.
Learn more
See the following topics for more information: