SQL data types

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Apache Druid supports two query languages: Druid SQL and native queries. This document describes the SQL language.

Druid associates each column with a specific data type. This topic describes supported data types in Druid SQL.

Standard types

Druid natively supports the following basic column types:

  • LONG: 64-bit signed int
  • FLOAT: 32-bit float
  • DOUBLE: 64-bit float
  • STRING: UTF-8 encoded strings and string arrays
  • COMPLEX: non-standard data types, such as nested JSON, hyperUnique and approxHistogram, and DataSketches
  • ARRAY: arrays composed of any of these types

Druid treats timestamps (including the __time column) as LONG, with the value being the number of milliseconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC, not counting leap seconds. Therefore, timestamps in Druid do not carry any timezone information. They only carry information about the exact moment in time they represent. See Time functions for more information about timestamp handling.

The following table describes how Druid maps SQL types onto native types when running queries:

SQL typeDruid runtime typeDefault value*Notes
CHARSTRING‘’
VARCHARSTRING‘’Druid STRING columns are reported as VARCHAR. Can include multi-value strings as well.
DECIMALDOUBLE0.0DECIMAL uses floating point, not fixed point math
FLOATFLOAT0.0Druid FLOAT columns are reported as FLOAT
REALDOUBLE0.0
DOUBLEDOUBLE0.0Druid DOUBLE columns are reported as DOUBLE
BOOLEANLONGfalse
TINYINTLONG0
SMALLINTLONG0
INTEGERLONG0
BIGINTLONG0Druid LONG columns (except time) are reported as BIGINT
TIMESTAMPLONG0, meaning 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTCDruid’s time column is reported as TIMESTAMP. Casts between string and timestamp types assume standard SQL formatting, such as 2000-01-02 03:04:05, not ISO 8601 formatting. For handling other formats, use one of the time functions.
DATELONG0, meaning 1970-01-01Casting TIMESTAMP to DATE rounds down the timestamp to the nearest day. Casts between string and date types assume standard SQL formatting—for example, 2000-01-02. For handling other formats, use one of the time functions.
ARRAYARRAYNULLDruid native array types work as SQL arrays, and multi-value strings can be converted to arrays. See Arrays for more information.
OTHERCOMPLEXnoneMay represent various Druid column types such as hyperUnique, approxHistogram, etc.

* Default value applies if `druid.generic.useDefaultValueForNull = true` (the default mode). Otherwise, the default value is `NULL` for all types.

Casts between two SQL types with the same Druid runtime type have no effect other than the exceptions noted in the table.

Casts between two SQL types that have different Druid runtime types generate a runtime cast in Druid.

If a value cannot be cast to the target type, as in CAST('foo' AS BIGINT), Druid either substitutes a default value (when druid.generic.useDefaultValueForNull = true, the default mode), or substitutes NULL (when druid.generic.useDefaultValueForNull = false). NULL values cast to non-nullable types are also substituted with a default value. For example, if druid.generic.useDefaultValueForNull = true, a null VARCHAR cast to BIGINT is converted to a zero.

Multi-value strings

Druid’s native type system allows strings to have multiple values. These multi-value string dimensions are reported in SQL as type VARCHAR and can be syntactically used like any other VARCHAR. Regular string functions that refer to multi-value string dimensions are applied to all values for each row individually.

You can treat multi-value string dimensions as arrays using special multi-value string functions, which perform powerful array-aware operations, but retain their VARCHAR type and behavior.

Grouping by multi-value dimensions observes the native Druid multi-value aggregation behavior, which is similar to an implicit SQL UNNEST. See Grouping for more information.

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Because the SQL planner treats multi-value dimensions as VARCHAR, there are some inconsistencies between how they are handled in Druid SQL and in native queries. For instance, expressions involving multi-value dimensions may be incorrectly optimized by the Druid SQL planner. For example, multi_val_dim = 'a' AND multi_val_dim = 'b' is optimized to false, even though it is possible for a single row to have both 'a' and 'b' as values for multi_val_dim.

The SQL behavior of multi-value dimensions may change in a future release to more closely align with their behavior in native queries, but the multi-value string functions should be able to provide nearly all possible native functionality.

Arrays

Druid supports ARRAY types constructed at query time. ARRAY types behave as standard SQL arrays, where results are grouped by matching entire arrays. This is in contrast to the implicit UNNEST that occurs when grouping on multi-value dimensions directly or when used with multi-value functions.

You can convert multi-value dimensions to standard SQL arrays explicitly with MV_TO_ARRAY or implicitly using array functions. You can also use the array functions to construct arrays from multiple columns.

You can use schema auto-discovery to detect and ingest arrays as ARRAY typed columns.

Multi-value strings behavior

The behavior of Druid multi-value string dimensions varies depending on the context of their usage.

When used with standard VARCHAR functions which expect a single input value per row, such as CONCAT, Druid will map the function across all values in the row. If the row is null or empty, the function receives NULL as its input.

When used with the explicit multi-value string functions, Druid processes the row values as if they were ARRAY typed. Any operations which produce null and empty rows are distinguished as separate values (unlike implicit mapping behavior). These multi-value string functions, typically denoted with an MV_ prefix, retain their VARCHAR type after the computation is complete. Note that Druid multi-value columns do not distinguish between empty and null rows. An empty row will never appear natively as input to a multi-valued function, but any multi-value function which manipulates the array form of the value may produce an empty array, which is handled separately while processing.

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Do not mix the usage of multi-value functions and normal scalar functions within the same expression, as the planner will be unable to determine how to properly process the value given its ambiguous usage. A multi-value string must be treated consistently within an expression.

When converted to ARRAY or used with array functions, multi-value strings behave as standard SQL arrays and can no longer be manipulated with non-array functions.

Druid serializes multi-value VARCHAR results as a JSON string of the array, if grouping was not applied on the value. If the value was grouped, due to the implicit UNNEST behavior, all results will always be standard single value VARCHAR. ARRAY typed results will be serialized into stringified JSON arrays if the context parameter sqlStringifyArrays is set, otherwise they remain in their array format.

NULL values

The druid.generic.useDefaultValueForNull runtime property controls Druid’s NULL handling mode. For the most SQL compliant behavior, set this to false.

When druid.generic.useDefaultValueForNull = true (the default mode), Druid treats NULLs and empty strings interchangeably, rather than according to the SQL standard. In this mode Druid SQL only has partial support for NULLs. For example, the expressions col IS NULL and col = '' are equivalent, and both evaluate to true if col contains an empty string. Similarly, the expression COALESCE(col1, col2) returns col2 if col1 is an empty string. While the COUNT(*) aggregator counts all rows, the COUNT(expr) aggregator counts the number of rows where expr is neither null nor the empty string. Numeric columns in this mode are not nullable; any null or missing values are treated as zeroes.

When druid.generic.useDefaultValueForNull = false, NULLs are treated more closely to the SQL standard. In this mode, numeric NULL is permitted, and NULLs and empty strings are no longer treated as interchangeable. This property affects both storage and querying, and must be set on all Druid service types to be available at both ingestion time and query time. There is some overhead associated with the ability to handle NULLs; see the segment internals documentation for more details.

Boolean logic

The druid.expressions.useStrictBooleans runtime property controls Druid’s boolean logic mode. For the most SQL compliant behavior, set this to true.

When druid.expressions.useStrictBooleans = false (the default mode), Druid uses two-valued logic.

When druid.expressions.useStrictBooleans = true, Druid uses three-valued logic for expressions evaluation, such as expression virtual columns or expression filters. However, even in this mode, Druid uses two-valued logic for filter types other than expression.

Nested columns

Druid supports storing nested data structures in segments using the native COMPLEX<json> type. See Nested columns for more information.

You can interact with nested data using JSON functions, which can extract nested values, parse from string, serialize to string, and create new COMPLEX<json> structures.

COMPLEX types have limited functionality outside the specialized functions that use them, so their behavior is undefined when:

  • Grouping on complex values.
  • Filtering directly on complex values, such as WHERE json is NULL.
  • Used as inputs to aggregators without specialized handling for a specific complex type.

In many cases, functions are provided to translate COMPLEX value types to STRING, which serves as a workaround solution until COMPLEX type functionality can be improved.