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Markdown
373 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
---
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id: datasource
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title: "Datasources"
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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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Datasources in Apache Druid are things that you can query. The most common kind of datasource is a table datasource,
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and in many contexts the word "datasource" implicitly refers to table datasources. This is especially true
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[during data ingestion](../ingestion/index.md), where ingestion is always creating or writing into a table
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datasource. But at query time, there are many other types of datasources available.
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The word "datasource" is generally spelled `dataSource` (with a capital S) when it appears in API requests and
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responses.
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## Datasource type
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### `table`
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<!--DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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<!--SQL-->
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```sql
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SELECT column1, column2 FROM "druid"."dataSourceName"
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```
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<!--Native-->
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```json
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{
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"queryType": "scan",
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"dataSource": "dataSourceName",
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"columns": ["column1", "column2"],
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"intervals": ["0000/3000"]
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}
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```
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<!--END_DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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The table datasource is the most common type. This is the kind of datasource you get when you perform
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[data ingestion](../ingestion/index.md). They are split up into segments, distributed around the cluster,
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and queried in parallel.
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In [Druid SQL](sql.md#from), table datasources reside in the `druid` schema. This is the default schema, so table
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datasources can be referenced as either `druid.dataSourceName` or simply `dataSourceName`.
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In native queries, table datasources can be referenced using their names as strings (as in the example above), or by
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using JSON objects of the form:
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```json
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"dataSource": {
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"type": "table",
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"name": "dataSourceName"
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}
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```
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To see a list of all table datasources, use the SQL query
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`SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'druid'`.
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### `lookup`
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<!--DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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<!--SQL-->
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```sql
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SELECT k, v FROM lookup.countries
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```
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<!--Native-->
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```json
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{
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"queryType": "scan",
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"dataSource": {
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"type": "lookup",
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"lookup": "countries"
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},
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"columns": ["k", "v"],
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"intervals": ["0000/3000"]
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}
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```
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<!--END_DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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Lookup datasources correspond to Druid's key-value [lookup](lookups.md) objects. In [Druid SQL](sql.md#from),
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they reside in the `lookup` schema. They are preloaded in memory on all servers, so they can be accessed rapidly.
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They can be joined onto regular tables using the [join operator](#join).
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Lookup datasources are key-value oriented and always have exactly two columns: `k` (the key) and `v` (the value), and
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both are always strings.
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To see a list of all lookup datasources, use the SQL query
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`SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'lookup'`.
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> Performance tip: Lookups can be joined with a base table either using an explicit [join](#join), or by using the
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> SQL [`LOOKUP` function](sql.md#string-functions).
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> However, the join operator must evaluate the condition on each row, whereas the
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> `LOOKUP` function can defer evaluation until after an aggregation phase. This means that the `LOOKUP` function is
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> usually faster than joining to a lookup datasource.
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Refer to the [Query execution](query-execution.md#table) page for more details on how queries are executed when you
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use table datasources.
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### `union`
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<!--DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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<!--SQL-->
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```sql
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SELECT column1, column2
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FROM (
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SELECT column1, column2 FROM table1
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UNION ALL
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SELECT column1, column2 FROM table2
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UNION ALL
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SELECT column1, column2 FROM table3
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)
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```
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<!--Native-->
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```json
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{
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"queryType": "scan",
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"dataSource": {
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"type": "union",
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"dataSources": ["table1", "table2", "table3"]
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},
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"columns": ["column1", "column2"],
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"intervals": ["0000/3000"]
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}
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```
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<!--END_DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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Unions allow you to treat two or more tables as a single datasource. In SQL, this is done with the UNION ALL operator
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applied directly to tables, called a ["table-level union"](sql.md#table-level). In native queries, this is done with a
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"union" datasource.
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With SQL [table-level unions](sql.md#table-level) the same columns must be selected from each table in the same order,
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and those columns must either have the same types, or types that can be implicitly cast to each other (such as different
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numeric types). For this reason, it is more robust to write your queries to select specific columns.
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With the native union datasource, the tables being unioned do not need to have identical schemas. If they do not fully
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match up, then columns that exist in one table but not another will be treated as if they contained all null values in
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the tables where they do not exist.
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In either case, features like expressions, column aliasing, JOIN, GROUP BY, ORDER BY, and so on cannot be used with
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table unions.
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Refer to the [Query execution](query-execution.md#union) page for more details on how queries are executed when you
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use union datasources.
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### `inline`
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<!--DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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<!--Native-->
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```json
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{
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"queryType": "scan",
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"dataSource": {
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"type": "inline",
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"columnNames": ["country", "city"],
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"rows": [
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["United States", "San Francisco"],
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["Canada", "Calgary"]
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]
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},
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"columns": ["country", "city"],
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"intervals": ["0000/3000"]
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}
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```
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<!--END_DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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Inline datasources allow you to query a small amount of data that is embedded in the query itself. They are useful when
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you want to write a query on a small amount of data without loading it first. They are also useful as inputs into a
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[join](#join). Druid also uses them internally to handle subqueries that need to be inlined on the Broker. See the
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[`query` datasource](#query) documentation for more details.
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There are two fields in an inline datasource: an array of `columnNames` and an array of `rows`. Each row is an array
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that must be exactly as long as the list of `columnNames`. The first element in each row corresponds to the first
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column in `columnNames`, and so on.
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Inline datasources are not available in Druid SQL.
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Refer to the [Query execution](query-execution.md#inline) page for more details on how queries are executed when you
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use inline datasources.
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### `query`
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<!--DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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<!--SQL-->
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```sql
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-- Uses a subquery to count hits per page, then takes the average.
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SELECT
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AVG(cnt) AS average_hits_per_page
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FROM
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(SELECT page, COUNT(*) AS hits FROM site_traffic GROUP BY page)
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```
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<!--Native-->
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```json
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{
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"queryType": "timeseries",
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"dataSource": {
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"type": "query",
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"query": {
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"queryType": "groupBy",
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"dataSource": "site_traffic",
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"intervals": ["0000/3000"],
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"granularity": "all",
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"dimensions": ["page"],
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"aggregations": [
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{ "type": "count", "name": "hits" }
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]
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}
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},
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"intervals": ["0000/3000"],
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"granularity": "all",
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"aggregations": [
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{ "type": "longSum", "name": "hits", "fieldName": "hits" },
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{ "type": "count", "name": "pages" }
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],
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"postAggregations": [
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{ "type": "expression", "name": "average_hits_per_page", "expression": "hits / pages" }
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]
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}
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```
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<!--END_DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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Query datasources allow you to issue subqueries. In native queries, they can appear anywhere that accepts a
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`dataSource`. In SQL, they can appear in the following places, always surrounded by parentheses:
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- The FROM clause: `FROM (<subquery>)`.
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- As inputs to a JOIN: `<table-or-subquery-1> t1 INNER JOIN <table-or-subquery-2> t2 ON t1.<col1> = t2.<col2>`.
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- In the WHERE clause: `WHERE <column> { IN | NOT IN } (<subquery>)`. These are translated to joins by the SQL planner.
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> Performance tip: In most cases, subquery results are fully buffered in memory on the Broker and then further
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> processing occurs on the Broker itself. This means that subqueries with large result sets can cause performance
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> bottlenecks or run into memory usage limits on the Broker. See the [Query execution](query-execution.md#query)
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> page for more details on how subqueries are executed and what limits will apply.
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### `join`
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<!--DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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<!--SQL-->
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```sql
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-- Joins "sales" with "countries" (using "store" as the join key) to get sales by country.
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SELECT
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store_to_country.v AS country,
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SUM(sales.revenue) AS country_revenue
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FROM
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sales
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INNER JOIN lookup.store_to_country ON sales.store = store_to_country.k
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GROUP BY
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countries.v
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```
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<!--Native-->
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```json
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{
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"queryType": "groupBy",
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"dataSource": {
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"type": "join",
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"left": "sales",
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"right": {
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"type": "lookup",
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"lookup": "store_to_country"
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},
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"rightPrefix": "r.",
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"condition": "store == \"r.k\"",
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"joinType": "INNER"
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},
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"intervals": ["0000/3000"],
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"granularity": "all",
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"dimensions": [
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{ "type": "default", "outputName": "country", "dimension": "r.v" }
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],
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"aggregations": [
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{ "type": "longSum", "name": "country_revenue", "fieldName": "revenue" }
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]
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}
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```
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<!--END_DOCUSAURUS_CODE_TABS-->
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Join datasources allow you to do a SQL-style join of two datasources. Stacking joins on top of each other allows
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you to join arbitrarily many datasources.
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In Druid {{DRUIDVERSION}}, joins are implemented with a broadcast hash-join algorithm. This means that all datasources
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other than the leftmost "base" datasource must fit in memory. It also means that the join condition must be an equality. This
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feature is intended mainly to allow joining regular Druid tables with [lookup](#lookup), [inline](#inline), and
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[query](#query) datasources.
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Refer to the [Query execution](query-execution.md#join) page for more details on how queries are executed when you
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use join datasources.
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#### Joins in SQL
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SQL joins take the form:
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```
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<o1> [ INNER | LEFT [OUTER] ] JOIN <o2> ON <condition>
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```
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The condition must involve only equalities, but functions are okay, and there can be multiple equalities ANDed together.
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Conditions like `t1.x = t2.x`, or `LOWER(t1.x) = t2.x`, or `t1.x = t2.x AND t1.y = t2.y` can all be handled. Conditions
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like `t1.x <> t2.x` cannot currently be handled.
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Note that Druid SQL is less rigid than what native join datasources can handle. In cases where a SQL query does
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something that is not allowed as-is with a native join datasource, Druid SQL will generate a subquery. This can have
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a substantial effect on performance and scalability, so it is something to watch out for. Some examples of when the
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SQL layer will generate subqueries include:
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- Joining a regular Druid table to itself, or to another regular Druid table. The native join datasource can accept
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a table on the left-hand side, but not the right, so a subquery is needed.
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- Join conditions where the expressions on either side are of different types.
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- Join conditions where the right-hand expression is not a direct column access.
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For more information about how Druid translates SQL to native queries, refer to the
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[Druid SQL](sql.md#query-translation) documentation.
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#### Joins in native queries
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Native join datasources have the following properties. All are required.
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|Field|Description|
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|-----|-----------|
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|`left`|Left-hand datasource. Must be of type `table`, `join`, `lookup`, `query`, or `inline`. Placing another join as the left datasource allows you to join arbitrarily many datasources.|
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|`right`|Right-hand datasource. Must be of type `lookup`, `query`, or `inline`. Note that this is more rigid than what Druid SQL requires.|
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|`rightPrefix`|String prefix that will be applied to all columns from the right-hand datasource, to prevent them from colliding with columns from the left-hand datasource. Can be any string, so long as it is nonempty and is not be a prefix of the string `__time`. Any columns from the left-hand side that start with your `rightPrefix` will be shadowed. It is up to you to provide a prefix that will not shadow any important columns from the left side.|
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|`condition`|[Expression](../misc/math-expr.md) that must be an equality where one side is an expression of the left-hand side, and the other side is a simple column reference to the right-hand side. Note that this is more rigid than what Druid SQL requires: here, the right-hand reference must be a simple column reference; in SQL it can be an expression.|
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|`joinType`|`INNER` or `LEFT`.|
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#### Join performance
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Joins are a feature that can significantly affect performance of your queries. Some performance tips and notes:
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1. Joins are especially useful with [lookup datasources](#lookup), but in most cases, the
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[`LOOKUP` function](sql.md#string-functions) performs better than a join. Consider using the `LOOKUP` function if
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it is appropriate for your use case.
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2. When using joins in Druid SQL, keep in mind that it can generate subqueries that you did not explicitly include in
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your queries. Refer to the [Druid SQL](sql.md#query-translation) documentation for more details about when this happens
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and how to detect it.
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3. One common reason for implicit subquery generation is if the types of the two halves of an equality do not match.
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For example, since lookup keys are always strings, the condition `druid.d JOIN lookup.l ON d.field = l.field` will
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perform best if `d.field` is a string.
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4. As of Druid {{DRUIDVERSION}}, the join operator must evaluate the condition for each row. In the future, we expect
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to implement both early and deferred condition evaluation, which we expect to improve performance considerably for
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common use cases.
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5. Currently, Druid does not support pushing down predicates (condition and filter) past a Join (i.e. into
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Join's children). Druid only supports pushing predicates into the join if they originated from
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above the join. Hence, the location of predicates and filters in your Druid SQL is very important.
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Also, as a result of this, comma joins should be avoided.
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#### Future work for joins
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Joins are an area of active development in Druid. The following features are missing today but may appear in
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future versions:
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- Reordering of predicates and filters (pushing up and/or pushing down) to get the most performant plan.
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- Preloaded dimension tables that are wider than lookups (i.e. supporting more than a single key and single value).
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- RIGHT OUTER and FULL OUTER joins. Currently, they are partially implemented. Queries will run but results will not
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always be correct.
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- Performance-related optimizations as mentioned in the [previous section](#join-performance).
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- Join algorithms other than broadcast hash-joins.
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- Join condition on a column compared to a constant value.
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- Join conditions on a column containing a multi-value dimension.
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