- User guide
- Quick start
- Reference manual
- Application of Table Value Function in Stream Load - http_stream Mode
- Load example
- Setting load timeout and maximum size
- Setting maximum error tolerance rate
- Setting load filtering conditions
- Loading data into specific partitions
- Loading data into specific timezone
- Streamingly import
- Setting CSV first row filtering
- Specifying merge_type for DELETE operations
- Specifying merge_type for MERGE operation
- Specifying sequence column for merge
- Loading data with enclosing characters
- Loading fields containing default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP type
- Simple mode for loading JSON format data
- Matching mode for loading complex JSON format data
- Specifying JSON root node for data load
- Loading array data type
- Loading map data type
- Loading bitmap data type
- Loading HyperLogLog data type
- Label, loading transaction, multi-table atomicity
- Column mapping, derived columns, and filtering
- Enable strict mode import
- Perform partial column updates during import
- More help
- Relevant System Configuration
- Best Practices
- Common Questions
- More Help
Stream Load supports importing local files or data streams into Doris through the HTTP protocol.
Stream Load is a synchronous import method that returns the import result after the import is executed, allowing you to determine the success of the import through the request response. Generally, user can use Stream Load to import files under 10GB. If the file is too large, it is recommended to split the file and then use Stream Load for importing. Stream Load can ensure the atomicity of a batch of import tasks, meaning that either all of them succeed or all of them fail.
tip
In comparison to single-threaded load using curl
, Doris Streamloader is a client tool designed for loading data into Apache Doris. it reduces the ingestion latency of large datasets by its concurrent loading capabilities. It comes with the following features:
- Parallel loading: multi-threaded load for the Stream Load method. You can set the parallelism level using the
workers
parameter. - Multi-file load: simultaneously load of multiple files and directories with one shot. It supports recursive file fetching and allows you to specify file names with wildcard characters.
- Path traversal support: support path traversal when the source files are in directories
- Resilience and continuity: in case of partial load failures, it can resume data loading from the point of failure.
- Automatic retry mechanism: in case of loading failures, it can automatically retry a default number of times. If the loading remains unsuccessful, it will print the command for manual retry.
See Doris Streamloader for detailed instructions and best practices.
User guide
Supported formats
Stream Load supports importing data in CSV, JSON, Parquet, and ORC formats.
Usage limitations
When importing CSV files, it is necessary to clearly distinguish between null values and empty strings:
- Null values need to be represented by
\N
. For example, the data “a,\N,b” indicates that the middle column is a null value. - Empty strings can be represented by leaving the data empty. For example, the data “a, ,b” indicates that the middle column is an empty string.
Basic principles
When using Stream Load, it is necessary to initiate an import job through the HTTP protocol to the FE (Frontend) node. The FE will redirect the request to a BE (Backend) node in a round-robin manner to achieve load balancing. It is also possible to send HTTP requests directly to a specific BE node. In Stream Load, Doris selects one node to serve as the Coordinator node. The Coordinator node is responsible for receiving data and distributing it to other nodes.
The following figure shows the main flow of Stream load, omitting some import details.
- The client submits a Stream Load import job request to the FE (Frontend).
- The FE randomly selects a BE (Backend) as the Coordinator node, which is responsible for scheduling the import job, and then returns an HTTP redirect to the client.
- The client connects to the Coordinator BE node and submits the import request.
- The Coordinator BE distributes the data to the appropriate BE nodes and returns the import result to the client once the import is complete.
- Alternatively, the client can directly specify a BE node as the Coordinator and distribute the import job directly.
Quick start
Stream Load import data through the HTTP protocol. The following example uses the curl tool to demonstrate submitting an import job through Stream Load.
For detailed syntax, please refer to STREAM LOAD.
Prerequisite check
Stream Load requires INSERT
privileges on the target table. If there are no INSERT
privileges, it can be granted to the user through the GRANT command.
Create load job
Loading CSV
Creating loading data
Create a CSV file named
streamload_example.csv
. The specific content is as follows
1,Emily,25
2,Benjamin,35
3,Olivia,28
4,Alexander,60
5,Ava,17
6,William,69
7,Sophia,32
8,James,64
9,Emma,37
10,Liam,64
Creating a table for loading
Create the table that will be imported into, using the specific syntax as follows:
CREATE TABLE testdb.test_streamload(
user_id BIGINT NOT NULL COMMENT "User ID",
name VARCHAR(20) COMMENT "User name",
age INT COMMENT "User age"
)
DUPLICATE KEY(user_id)
DISTRIBUTED BY HASH(user_id) BUCKETS 10;
Enabling the load job
The Stream Load job can be submitted using the
curl
command.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Stream Load is a synchronous method, where the result is directly returned to the user.
{
"TxnId": 3,
"Label": "123",
"Comment": "",
"TwoPhaseCommit": "false",
"Status": "Success",
"Message": "OK",
"NumberTotalRows": 10,
"NumberLoadedRows": 10,
"NumberFilteredRows": 0,
"NumberUnselectedRows": 0,
"LoadBytes": 118,
"LoadTimeMs": 173,
"BeginTxnTimeMs": 1,
"StreamLoadPutTimeMs": 70,
"ReadDataTimeMs": 2,
"WriteDataTimeMs": 48,
"CommitAndPublishTimeMs": 52
}
- View data
mysql> select count(*) from testdb.test_streamload;
+----------+
| count(*) |
+----------+
| 10 |
+----------+
Loading JSON
- Creating loading data
Create a JSON file named streamload_example.json
. The specific content is as follows
[
{"userid":1,"username":"Emily","userage":25},
{"userid":2,"username":"Benjamin","userage":35},
{"userid":3,"username":"Olivia","userage":28},
{"userid":4,"username":"Alexander","userage":60},
{"userid":5,"username":"Ava","userage":17},
{"userid":6,"username":"William","userage":69},
{"userid":7,"username":"Sophia","userage":32},
{"userid":8,"username":"James","userage":64},
{"userid":9,"username":"Emma","userage":37},
{"userid":10,"username":"Liam","userage":64}
]
Creating a table for loading
Create the table that will be imported into, using the specific syntax as follows:
CREATE TABLE testdb.test_streamload(
user_id BIGINT NOT NULL COMMENT "User ID",
name VARCHAR(20) COMMENT "User name",
age INT COMMENT "User age"
)
DUPLICATE KEY(user_id)
DISTRIBUTED BY HASH(user_id) BUCKETS 10;
Enabling the load job
The Stream Load job can be submitted using the
curl
command.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "label:124" \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "format:json" -H "strip_outer_array:true" \
-H "jsonpaths:[\"$.userid\", \"$.username\", \"$.userage\"]" \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.json \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Note
If the JSON file is not a JSON array but each line is a JSON object, add the headers -H "strip_outer_array:false"
and -H "read_json_by_line:true"
.
Stream Load is a synchronous method, where the result is directly returned to the user.
{
"TxnId": 7,
"Label": "125",
"Comment": "",
"TwoPhaseCommit": "false",
"Status": "Success",
"Message": "OK",
"NumberTotalRows": 10,
"NumberLoadedRows": 10,
"NumberFilteredRows": 0,
"NumberUnselectedRows": 0,
"LoadBytes": 471,
"LoadTimeMs": 52,
"BeginTxnTimeMs": 0,
"StreamLoadPutTimeMs": 11,
"ReadDataTimeMs": 0,
"WriteDataTimeMs": 23,
"CommitAndPublishTimeMs": 16
}
View load job
By default, Stream Load synchronously returns results to the client, so the system does not record Stream Load historical jobs. If recording is required, add the configuration enable_stream_load_record=true
in be.conf
. Refer to the BE configuration options for specific details.
After configuring, you can use the show stream load
command to view completed Stream Load jobs.
mysql> show stream load from testdb;
+-------+--------+-----------------+---------------+---------+---------+------+-----------+------------+--------------+----------------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------+------+---------+
| Label | Db | Table | ClientIp | Status | Message | Url | TotalRows | LoadedRows | FilteredRows | UnselectedRows | LoadBytes | StartTime | FinishTime | User | Comment |
+-------+--------+-----------------+---------------+---------+---------+------+-----------+------------+--------------+----------------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------+------+---------+
| 12356 | testdb | test_streamload | 192.168.88.31 | Success | OK | N/A | 10 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 118 | 2023-11-29 08:53:00.594 | 2023-11-29 08:53:00.650 | root | |
+-------+--------+-----------------+---------------+---------+---------+------+-----------+------------+--------------+----------------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------+------+---------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
Cancel load job
Users cannot manually cancel a Stream Load operation. A Stream Load job will be automatically canceled by the system if it encounters a timeout (set to 0) or an import error.
Reference manual
Command
The syntax for Stream Load is as follows:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" [-H ""...] \
-T <file_path> \
-XPUT http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load
Stream Load operations support both HTTP chunked and non-chunked import methods. For non-chunked imports, it is necessary to have a Content-Length header to indicate the length of the uploaded content, which ensures data integrity.
Load configuration parameters
FE configuration
stream_load_default_timeout_second
Default Value: 259200 (s)
Dynamic Configuration: Yes
FE Master-only Configuration: Yes
Parameter Description: The default timeout for Stream Load. The load job will be canceled by the system if it is not completed within the set timeout (in seconds). If the source file cannot be imported within the specified time, the user can set an individual timeout in the Stream Load request. Alternatively, adjust the stream_load_default_timeout_second
parameter on the FE to set the global default timeout.
enable_pipeline_load
Determines whether to enable the Pipeline engine to execute Streamload tasks. See the import documentation for more details.
BE configuration
streaming_load_max_mb
- Default value: 10240 (MB)
- Dynamic configuration: Yes
- Parameter description: The maximum import size for Stream load. If the user’s original file exceeds this value, the
streaming_load_max_mb
parameter on the BE needs to be adjusted.
Header parameters
Load parameters can be passed through the HTTP Header section. See below for specific parameter descriptions.
Parameters | Parameters description |
---|---|
label | Used to specify a label for this Doris import. Data with the same label cannot be imported multiple times. If no label is specified, Doris will automatically generate one. Users can avoid duplicate imports of the same data by specifying a label. Doris retains import job labels for three days by default, but this duration can be adjusted using labelkeepmaxsecond . For example, to specify the label for this import as 123, use the command -H “label:123” . The use of labels prevents users from importing the same data repeatedly. It is strongly recommended that users use the same label for the same batch of data. This ensures that duplicate requests for the same batch of data are only accepted once, guaranteeing At-Most-Once semantics. When the status of an import job corresponding to a label is CANCELLED, that label can be used again. |
columnseparator | Used to specify the column separator in the import file, which defaults to \t . If the separator is an invisible character, it needs to be prefixed with \x and represented in hexadecimal format. Multiple characters can be combined as a column separator. For example, to specify the separator as \x01 for a Hive file, use the command -H “columnseparator:\x01” . |
linedelimiter | Used to specify the line delimiter in the import file, which defaults to \n . Multiple characters can be combined as a line delimiter. For example, to specify the line delimiter as \n , use the command -H “line_delimiter:\n” . |
columns | Used to specify the correspondence between columns in the import file and columns in the table. If the columns in the source file exactly match the content of the table, this field does not need to be specified. If the schema of the source file does not match the table, this field is required for data transformation. There are two formats: direct column correspondence to fields in the import file, and derived columns represented by expressions. Refer to Data Transformation for detailed examples. |
where | Used to filter out unnecessary data. If users need to exclude certain data, they can achieve this by setting this option. For example, to import only data where the k1 column is equal to 20180601, specify -H “where: k1 = 20180601” during the import. |
max_filter_ratio | Used to specify the maximum tolerable ratio of filterable (irregular or otherwise problematic) data, which defaults to zero tolerance. The value range is 0 to 1. If the error rate of the imported data exceeds this value, the import will fail. Irregular data does not include rows filtered out by the where condition. For example, to maximize the import of all correct data (100% tolerance), specify the command -H “max_filter_ratio:1” . |
partitions | Used to specify the partitions involved in this import. If users can determine the corresponding partitions for the data, it is recommended to specify this option. Data that does not meet these partition criteria will be filtered out. For example, to specify importing into partitions p1 and p2, use the command -H “partitions: p1, p2” . |
timeout | Used to specify the timeout for the import in seconds. The default is 600 seconds, and the configurable range is from 1 second to 259200 seconds. For example, to specify an import timeout of 1200 seconds, use the command -H “timeout:1200” . |
strict_mode | Used to specify whether to enable strict mode for this import, which is disabled by default. For example, to enable strict mode, use the command -H “strict_mode:true” . |
timezone | Used to specify the timezone to be used for this import, which defaults to GMT+8. This parameter affects the results of all timezone-related functions involved in the import. For example, to specify the import timezone as Africa/Abidjan, use the command -H “timezone:Africa/Abidjan” . |
exec_mem_limit | The memory limit for the import, which defaults to 2GB. The unit is bytes. |
format | Used to specify the format of the imported data, which defaults to CSV. Currently supported formats include: csv, json, arrow, csv_with_names (supports filtering the first row of the csv file), csv_with_names_and_types (supports filtering the first two rows of the csv file), parquet, and orc. For example, to specify the imported data format as json, use the command -H “format:json” . |
jsonpaths | There are two ways to import JSON data format: Simple Mode and Matching Mode. If no jsonpaths are specified, it is the simple mode that requires the JSON data to be of the object type.Matching mode used when the JSON data is relatively complex and requires matching the corresponding values through the jsonpaths parameter.In simple mode, the keys in JSON are required to correspond one-to-one with the column names in the table. For example, in the JSON data {“k1”:1, “k2”:2, “k3”:”hello”} , k1, k2, and k3 correspond to the columns in the table respectively. |
strip_outer_array | When strip_outer_array is set to true, it indicates that the JSON data starts with an array object and flattens the objects within the array. The default value is false. When the outermost layer of the JSON data is represented by [] , which denotes an array, strip_outer_array should be set to true. For example, with the following data, setting strip_outer_array to true will result in two rows of data being generated when imported into Doris: [{“k1”: 1, “v1”: 2}, {“k1”: 3, “v1”: 4}] . |
json_root | json_root is a valid jsonpath string that specifies the root node of a JSON document, with a default value of “”. |
merge_type | There are three types of data merging: APPEND, DELETE, and MERGE. APPEND is the default value, indicating that this batch of data needs to be appended to the existing data. DELETE means to remove all rows that have the same keys as this batch of data. MERGE semantics need to be used in conjunction with delete conditions. It means that data satisfying the delete conditions will be processed according to DELETE semantics, while the rest will be processed according to APPEND semantics. For example, to specify the merge mode as MERGE, you need to specify the commands -H “merge_type: MERGE” -H “delete: flag=1” . |
delete | It is only meaningful under MERGE, representing the deletion conditions for data. |
function_column.sequence_col | It is suitable only for the UNIQUE KEYS model. Within the same Key column, it ensures that the Value column is replaced according to the specified source_sequence column. The source_sequence can either be a column from the data source or an existing column in the table structure. |
fuzzy_parse | It is a boolean type. If set to true, the JSON will be parsed with the first row as the schema. Enabling this option can improve the efficiency of JSON imports, but it requires that the order of the keys in all JSON objects be consistent with the first line. The default is false and it is only used for JSON format. |
num_as_string | It is a boolean type. When set to true, indicates that numeric types will be converted to strings during JSON parsing to ensure no loss of precision during the import process. |
read_json_by_line | It is a boolean type. When set to true, indicates support for reading one JSON object per line, defaulting to false. |
send_batch_parallelism | An integer used to set the parallelism for sending batch-processed data. If the parallelism value exceeds the max_send_batch_parallelism_per_job configured in BE, the coordinating BE will use the max_send_batch_parallelism_per_job value . |
hidden_columns | Used to specify hidden columns in the imported data, which takes effect when the Header does not include Columns. Multiple hidden columns are separated by commas. The system will use the user-specified data for import. In the following example, the last column of data in the imported data is __DORIS_SEQUENCE_COL . hidden_columns: __DORIS_DELETE_SIGN,__DORIS_SEQUENCE_COL . |
load_to_single_tablet | It is a boolean type. When set to true, indicates support for importing data only to a single Tablet corresponding to the partition, defaulting to false. This parameter is only allowed when importing to an OLAP table with random bucketing. |
compress_type | Currently, only compression of CSV files is supported. Compression formats include gz, lzo, bz2, lz4, lzop, and deflate. |
trim_double_quotes | It is a boolean type. When set to true, indicates trimming of the outermost double quotes for each field in the CSV file, defaulting to false. |
skip_lines | It is an integer type. Used to specify the number of lines to skip at the beginning of the CSV file, defaulting to 0. When the format is set to csv_with_names or csv_with_names_and_types , this parameter will become invalid. |
comment | It is a String type, with an empty string as the default value. Used to add additional information to the task. |
enclose | Specify the enclosure character. When a CSV data field contains a row delimiter or column delimiter, to prevent unexpected truncation, you can specify a single-byte character as the enclosure for protection. For example, if the column delimiter is “,” and the enclosure is “‘“, the data “a,’b,c’” will have “b,c” parsed as a single field. Note: When the enclosure is set to a double quote (“), make sure to set trim_double_quotes to true. |
escape | Specify the escape character. It is used to escape characters that are the same as the enclosure character within a field. For example, if the data is “a,’b,’c’”, and the enclosure is “‘“, and you want “b,’c” to be parsed as a single field, you need to specify a single-byte escape character, such as “”, and modify the data to “a,’b’,’c’”. |
memtable_on_sink_node | Whether to enable MemTable on DataSink node when loading data, default is false. |
Load return value
Stream Load is a synchronous import method, and the load result is directly provided to the user through the creation of an load return value, as shown below:
{
"TxnId": 1003,
"Label": "b6f3bc78-0d2c-45d9-9e4c-faa0a0149bee",
"Status": "Success",
"ExistingJobStatus": "FINISHED", // optional
"Message": "OK",
"NumberTotalRows": 1000000,
"NumberLoadedRows": 1000000,
"NumberFilteredRows": 1,
"NumberUnselectedRows": 0,
"LoadBytes": 40888898,
"LoadTimeMs": 2144,
"BeginTxnTimeMs": 1,
"StreamLoadPutTimeMs": 2,
"ReadDataTimeMs": 325,
"WriteDataTimeMs": 1933,
"CommitAndPublishTimeMs": 106,
"ErrorURL": "http://192.168.1.1:8042/api/_load_error_log?file=__shard_0/error_log_insert_stmt_db18266d4d9b4ee5-abb00ddd64bdf005_db18266d4d9b4ee5_abb00ddd64bdf005"
}
The return result parameters are explained in the following table:
Parameters | Parameters description |
---|---|
TxnId | Import transaction ID |
Label | Label of load job,specified via -H “label:<label_id>” . |
Status | Final load Status. Success: The load job was successful.Publish Timeout: The load job has been completed, but there may be a delay in data visibility. Label Already Exists: The label is duplicated, requiring a new label. Fail: The load job failed. |
ExistingJobStatus | The status of the load job corresponding to the already existing label. This field is only displayed when the Status is Label Already Exists. Users can use this status to know the status of the import job corresponding to the existing label. RUNNING means the job is still executing, and FINISHED means the job was successful. |
Message | Error information related to the load job. |
NumberTotalRows | The total number of rows processed during the load job. |
NumberLoadedRows | The number of rows that were successfully loaded. |
NumberFilteredRows | The number of rows that did not meet the data quality standards. |
NumberUnselectedRows | The number of rows that were filtered out based on the WHERE condition. |
LoadBytes | The amount of data in bytes. |
LoadTimeMs | The time taken for the load job to complete, measured in milliseconds. |
BeginTxnTimeMs | The time taken to request the initiation of a transaction from the Frontend node (FE), measured in milliseconds. |
StreamLoadPutTimeMs | The time taken to request the execution plan for the load job data from the FE, measured in milliseconds. |
ReadDataTimeMs | The time spent reading the data during the load job, measured in milliseconds. |
WriteDataTimeMs | The time taken to perform the data writing operations during the load job, measured in milliseconds. |
CommitAndPublishTimeMs | The time taken to request the commit and publish the transaction from the FE, measured in milliseconds. |
ErrorURL | If there are data quality issues, users can access this URL to view the specific rows with errors. |
Users can access the ErrorURL to review data that failed to import due to issues with data quality. By executing the command curl "<ErrorURL>"
, users can directly retrieve information about the erroneous data.
Application of Table Value Function in Stream Load - http_stream Mode
Leveraging the recently introduced functionality of Table Value Function (TVF) in Doris, Stream Load now allows the expression of import parameters through SQL statements. Specifically, a TVF named http_stream
has been dedicated for Stream Load operations.
tip
When performing Stream Load using the TVF http_stream
, the Rest API URL differs from the standard URL used for regular Stream Load imports.
- Standard Stream Load URL:
http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load
- URL for Stream Load using TVF
http_stream
:http://fe_host:http_port/api/_http_stream
Using curl for Stream Load in http_stream Mode:
curl --location-trusted -u user:passwd [-H "sql: ${load_sql}"...] -T data.file -XPUT http://fe_host:http_port/api/_http_stream
Adding a SQL parameter in the header to replace the previous parameters such as column_separator
, line_delimiter
, where
, columns
, etc., makes it very convenient to use.
Example of load SQL:
insert into db.table (col, ...) select stream_col, ... from http_stream("property1"="value1");
http_stream parameter:
“column_separator” = “,”
“format” = “CSV”
…
For example:
curl --location-trusted -u root: -T test.csv -H "sql:insert into demo.example_tbl_1(user_id, age, cost) select c1, c4, c7 * 2 from http_stream(\"format\" = \"CSV\", \"column_separator\" = \",\" ) where age >= 30" http://127.0.0.1:28030/api/_http_stream
Load example
Setting load timeout and maximum size
The timeout for a load job is measured in seconds. If the load job is not completed within the specified timeout period, it will be cancelled by the system and marked as CANCELLED
. You can adjust the timeout for a Stream Load job by specifying the timeout
parameter or adding the stream_load_default_timeout_second
parameter in the fe.conf file.
Before initiating the load, you need to calculate the timeout based on the file size. For example, for a 100GB file with an estimated load performance of 50MB/s:
Load time ≈ 100GB / 50MB/s ≈ 2048s
You can use the following command to specify a timeout of 3000 seconds for creating a Stream Load job:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "timeout:3000"
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Setting maximum error tolerance rate
Load job can tolerate a certain amount of data with formatting errors. The tolerance rate is configured using the max_filter_ratio
parameter. By default, it is set to 0, meaning that if there is even a single erroneous data row, the entire load job will fail. If users wish to ignore some problematic data rows, they can set this parameter to a value between 0 and 1. Doris will automatically skip rows with incorrect data formats. For more information on calculating the tolerance rate, please refer to the Data Transformation documentation.
You can use the following command to specify a max_filter_ratio
tolerance of 0.4 for creating a Stream Load job:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "max_filter_ratio:0.4" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Setting load filtering conditions
During the load job, you can use the WHERE parameter to apply conditional filtering to the imported data. The filtered data will not be included in the calculation of the filter ratio and will not affect the setting of max_filter_ratio
. After the load job is complete, you can view the number of filtered rows by checking num_rows_unselected
.
You can use the following command to specify WHERE filtering conditions for creating a Stream Load job:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "where:age>=35" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Loading data into specific partitions
Loading data from local files into partitions p1 and p2 of the table, allowing a 20% error rate.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "label:123" \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "max_filter_ratio:0.2" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-H "partitions: p1, p2" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Loading data into specific timezone
Since Doris currently does not have a built-in time zone time type, all DATETIME
related types only represent absolute time points, do not contain time zone information, and will not change due to changes in the Doris system time zone. Therefore, for the import of data with time zones, our unified processing method is to convert it into data in a specific target time zone. In the Doris system, it is the time zone represented by the session variable time_zone
.
In the import, our target time zone is specified through the parameter timezone
. This variable will replace the session variable time_zone
when time zone conversion occurs and time zone sensitive functions are calculated. Therefore, if there are no special circumstances, the timezone
should be set in the import transaction to be consistent with the time_zone
of the current Doris cluster. This means that all time data with a time zone will be converted to this time zone.
For example, the Doris system time zone is “+08:00”, and the time column in the imported data contains two pieces of data, namely “2012-01-01 01:00:00+00:00” and “2015-12-12 12 :12:12-08:00”, then after we specify the time zone of the imported transaction through -H "timezone: +08:00"
when importing, both pieces of data will be converted to the time zone to obtain the result.” 2012-01-01 09:00:00” and “2015-12-13 04:12:12”.
For more information on time zone interpretation, please refer to the document Time Zone.
Streamingly import
Stream Load is based on the HTTP protocol for importing, which supports using programming languages such as Java, Go, or Python for streaming import. This is why it is named Stream Load.
The following example demonstrates this usage through a bash command pipeline. The imported data is generated streamingly by the program rather than from a local file.
seq 1 10 | awk '{OFS="\t"}{print $1, $1 * 10}' | curl --location-trusted -u root -T - http://host:port/api/testDb/testTbl/_stream_load
Setting CSV first row filtering
File data:
id,name,age
1,doris,20
2,flink,10
Filtering the first row during load by specifying format=csv_with_names
curl --location-trusted -u root -T test.csv -H "label:1" -H "format:csv_with_names" -H "column_separator:," http://host:port/api/testDb/testTbl/_stream_load
Specifying merge_type for DELETE operations
In stream load, there are three import types: APPEND, DELETE, and MERGE. These can be adjusted by specifying the parameter merge_type
. If you want to specify that all data with the same key as the imported data should be deleted, you can use the following command:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "merge_type: DELETE" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Before loading:
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| siteid | citycode | username | pv |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| 3 | 2 | tom | 2 |
| 4 | 3 | bush | 3 |
| 5 | 3 | helen | 3 |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
The imported data is:
3,2,tom,0
After importing, the original table data will be deleted, resulting in the following result:
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| siteid | citycode | username | pv |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| 4 | 3 | bush | 3 |
| 5 | 3 | helen | 3 |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
Specifying merge_type for MERGE operation
By specifying merge_type
as MERGE, the imported data can be merged into the table. The MERGE semantics need to be used in combination with the DELETE condition, which means that data satisfying the DELETE condition is processed according to the DELETE semantics, and the rest is added to the table according to the APPEND semantics. The following operation represents deleting the row with siteid
of 1, and adding the rest of the data to the table:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "merge_type: MERGE" \
-H "delete: siteid=1" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Before loading:
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| siteid | citycode | username | pv |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| 4 | 3 | bush | 3 |
| 5 | 3 | helen | 3 |
| 1 | 1 | jim | 2 |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
The imported data is:
2,1,grace,2
3,2,tom,2
1,1,jim,2
After loading, the row with siteid = 1
will be deleted according to the condition, and the rows with siteid
of 2 and 3 will be added to the table:
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| siteid | citycode | username | pv |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
| 4 | 3 | bush | 3 |
| 2 | 1 | grace | 2 |
| 3 | 2 | tom | 2 |
| 5 | 3 | helen | 3 |
+--------+----------+----------+------+
Specifying sequence column for merge
When a table with a Unique Key has a Sequence column, the value of the Sequence column serves as the basis for the replacement order in the REPLACE aggregation function under the same Key column. A larger value can replace a smaller one. When marking deletions based on DORIS_DELETE_SIGN
for such a table, it is necessary to ensure that the Key is the same and that the Sequence column value is greater than or equal to the current value. By specifying the function_column.sequence_col
parameter, deletion operations can be performed in combination with merge_type: DELETE
.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "merge_type: DELETE" \
-H "function_column.sequence_col: age"
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "columns: name, gender, age"
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Given the following table schema:
mysql> SET show_hidden_columns=true;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> DESC table1;
+------------------------+--------------+------+-------+---------+---------+
| Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+------------------------+--------------+------+-------+---------+---------+
| name | VARCHAR(100) | No | true | NULL | |
| gender | VARCHAR(10) | Yes | false | NULL | REPLACE |
| age | INT | Yes | false | NULL | REPLACE |
| __DORIS_DELETE_SIGN__ | TINYINT | No | false | 0 | REPLACE |
| __DORIS_SEQUENCE_COL__ | INT | Yes | false | NULL | REPLACE |
+------------------------+--------------+------+-------+---------+---------+
4 rows in set (0.00 sec)
The original table data is:
+-------+--------+------+
| name | gender | age |
+-------+--------+------+
| li | male | 10 |
| wang | male | 14 |
| zhang | male | 12 |
+-------+--------+------+
Sequence parameter takes Eeffect, loading sequence column value is larger than or equal to the existing data in the table.
loading data as:
li,male,10
Since function_column.sequence_col
is specified as age
, and the age
value is larger than or equal to the existing column in the table, the original table data is deleted. The table data becomes:
+-------+--------+------+
| name | gender | age |
+-------+--------+------+
| wang | male | 14 |
| zhang | male | 12 |
+-------+--------+------+
Sequence parameter do not take effect, loading sequence column value is less than or equal to the existing data in the table:
loading data as:
li,male,9
Since function_column.sequence_col
is specified as age
, but the age
value is less than the existing column in the table, the delete operation does not take effect. The table data remains unchanged, and the row with the primary key of li
is still visible:
+-------+--------+------+
| name | gender | age |
+-------+--------+------+
| li | male | 10 |
| wang | male | 14 |
| zhang | male | 12 |
+-------+--------+------+
It is not deleted because that, at the underlying dependency level, it first checks for rows with the same key. It displays the row data with the larger sequence column value. Then, it checks the DORIS_DELETE_SIGN
value for that row. If it is 1, it is not displayed externally. If it is 0, it is still read and displayed.
Loading data with enclosing characters
When the data in a CSV file contains delimiters or separators, single-byte characters can be specified as enclosing characters to protect the data from being truncated.
For example, in the following data where a comma is used as the separator but also exists within a field:
zhangsan,30,'Shanghai, HuangPu District, Dagu Road'
By specifying an enclosing character such as a single quotation mark ‘, the entire Shanghai, HuangPu District, Dagu Road
can be treated as a single field.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "enclose:'" \
-H "escape:\" \
-H "columns:username,age,address" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
If the enclosing character also appears within a field, such as wanting to treat Shanghai City, Huangpu District, \'Dagu Road
as a single field, it is necessary to first perform string escaping within the column:
Zhang San,30,'Shanghai, Huangpu District, \'Dagu Road'
An escape character, which is a single-byte character, can be specified using the escape parameter. In the example, the backslash \
is used as the escape character.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "column_separator:," \
-H "enclose:'" \
-H "columns:username,age,address" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Loading fields containing default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP type
Here’s an example of loading data into a table that contains a field with the DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP type:
Table schema:
`id` bigint(30) NOT NULL,
`order_code` varchar(30) DEFAULT NULL COMMENT '',
`create_time` datetimev2(3) DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
JSON data type:
{"id":1,"order_Code":"avc"}
Command:
curl --location-trusted -u root -T test.json -H "label:1" -H "format:json" -H 'columns: id, order_code, create_time=CURRENT_TIMESTAMP()' http://host:port/api/testDb/testTbl/_stream_load
Simple mode for loading JSON format data
When the JSON fields correspond one-to-one with the column names in the table, you can import JSON data format into the table by specifying the parameters “strip_outer_array:true” and “format:json”.
For example, if the table is defined as follows:
CREATE TABLE testdb.test_streamload(
user_id BIGINT NOT NULL COMMENT "User ID",
name VARCHAR(20) COMMENT "User name",
age INT COMMENT "User age"
)
DUPLICATE KEY(user_id)
DISTRIBUTED BY HASH(user_id) BUCKETS 10;
And the data field names correspond one-to-one with the column names in the table:
[
{"user_id":1,"name":"Emily","age":25},
{"user_id":2,"name":"Benjamin","age":35},
{"user_id":3,"name":"Olivia","age":28},
{"user_id":4,"name":"Alexander","age":60},
{"user_id":5,"name":"Ava","age":17},
{"user_id":6,"name":"William","age":69},
{"user_id":7,"name":"Sophia","age":32},
{"user_id":8,"name":"James","age":64},
{"user_id":9,"name":"Emma","age":37},
{"user_id":10,"name":"Liam","age":64}
]
You can use the following command to load JSON data into the table:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "format:json" \
-H "strip_outer_array:true" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Matching mode for loading complex JSON format data
When the JSON data is more complex and cannot correspond one-to-one with the column names in the table, or there are extra columns, you can use the jsonpaths parameter to complete the column name mapping and perform data matching import. For example, with the following data:
[
{"userid":1,"hudi":"lala","username":"Emily","userage":25,"userhp":101},
{"userid":2,"hudi":"kpkp","username":"Benjamin","userage":35,"userhp":102},
{"userid":3,"hudi":"ji","username":"Olivia","userage":28,"userhp":103},
{"userid":4,"hudi":"popo","username":"Alexander","userage":60,"userhp":103},
{"userid":5,"hudi":"uio","username":"Ava","userage":17,"userhp":104},
{"userid":6,"hudi":"lkj","username":"William","userage":69,"userhp":105},
{"userid":7,"hudi":"komf","username":"Sophia","userage":32,"userhp":106},
{"userid":8,"hudi":"mki","username":"James","userage":64,"userhp":107},
{"userid":9,"hudi":"hjk","username":"Emma","userage":37,"userhp":108},
{"userid":10,"hudi":"hua","username":"Liam","userage":64,"userhp":109}
]
You can specify the jsonpaths parameter to match the specified columns:
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "format:json" \
-H "strip_outer_array:true" \
-H "jsonpaths:[\"$.userid\", \"$.username\", \"$.userage\"]" \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Specifying JSON root node for data load
If the JSON data contains nested JSON fields, you need to specify the root node of the imported JSON. The default value is “”.
For example, with the following data, if you want to import the data in the comment column into the table:
[
{"user":1,"comment":{"userid":101,"username":"Emily","userage":25}},
{"user":2,"comment":{"userid":102,"username":"Benjamin","userage":35}},
{"user":3,"comment":{"userid":103,"username":"Olivia","userage":28}},
{"user":4,"comment":{"userid":104,"username":"Alexander","userage":60}},
{"user":5,"comment":{"userid":105,"username":"Ava","userage":17}},
{"user":6,"comment":{"userid":106,"username":"William","userage":69}},
{"user":7,"comment":{"userid":107,"username":"Sophia","userage":32}},
{"user":8,"comment":{"userid":108,"username":"James","userage":64}},
{"user":9,"comment":{"userid":109,"username":"Emma","userage":37}},
{"user":10,"comment":{"userid":110,"username":"Liam","userage":64}}
]
First, you need to specify the root node as comment using the json_root parameter, and then complete the column name mapping according to the jsonpaths parameter.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "format:json" \
-H "strip_outer_array:true" \
-H "json_root: $.comment" \
-H "jsonpaths:[\"$.userid\", \"$.username\", \"$.userage\"]" \
-H "columns:user_id,name,age" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Loading array data type
For example, if the following data contains an array type:
1|Emily|[1,2,3,4]
2|Benjamin|[22,45,90,12]
3|Olivia|[23,16,19,16]
4|Alexander|[123,234,456]
5|Ava|[12,15,789]
6|William|[57,68,97]
7|Sophia|[46,47,49]
8|James|[110,127,128]
9|Emma|[19,18,123,446]
10|Liam|[89,87,96,12]
Load data into the following table structure:
CREATE TABLE testdb.test_streamload(
typ_id BIGINT NOT NULL COMMENT "ID",
name VARCHAR(20) NULL COMMENT "Name",
arr ARRAY<int(10)> NULL COMMENT "Array"
)
DUPLICATE KEY(typ_id)
DISTRIBUTED BY HASH(typ_id) BUCKETS 10;
You can directly load the ARRAY type from a text file into the table using a Stream Load job.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "column_separator:|" \
-H "columns:typ_id,name,arr" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Loading map data type
When the imported data contains a map type, as in the following example:
[
{"user_id":1,"namemap":{"Emily":101,"age":25}},
{"user_id":2,"namemap":{"Benjamin":102,"age":35}},
{"user_id":3,"namemap":{"Olivia":103,"age":28}},
{"user_id":4,"namemap":{"Alexander":104,"age":60}},
{"user_id":5,"namemap":{"Ava":105,"age":17}},
{"user_id":6,"namemap":{"William":106,"age":69}},
{"user_id":7,"namemap":{"Sophia":107,"age":32}},
{"user_id":8,"namemap":{"James":108,"age":64}},
{"user_id":9,"namemap":{"Emma":109,"age":37}},
{"user_id":10,"namemap":{"Liam":110,"age":64}}
]
Load data into the following table structure:
CREATE TABLE testdb.test_streamload(
user_id BIGINT NOT NULL COMMENT "ID",
namemap Map<STRING, INT> NULL COMMENT "Name"
)
DUPLICATE KEY(user_id)
DISTRIBUTED BY HASH(user_id) BUCKETS 10;
You can directly load the map type from a text file into the table using a Stream Load task.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "format: json" \
-H "strip_outer_array:true" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Loading bitmap data type
During the import process, when encountering Bitmap type data, you can use to_bitmap to convert the data into Bitmap, or use the bitmap_empty function to fill the Bitmap.
For example, with the following data:
1|koga|17723
2|nijg|146285
3|lojn|347890
4|lofn|489871
5|jfin|545679
6|kon|676724
7|nhga|767689
8|nfubg|879878
9|huang|969798
10|buag|97997
Load data into the following table containing the Bitmap type:
CREATE TABLE testdb.test_streamload(
typ_id BIGINT NULL COMMENT "ID",
hou VARCHAR(10) NULL COMMENT "one",
arr BITMAP BITMAP_UNION NULL COMMENT "two"
)
AGGREGATE KEY(typ_id,hou)
DISTRIBUTED BY HASH(typ_id,hou) BUCKETS 10;
And use to_bitmap to convert the data into the Bitmap type.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "Expect:100-continue" \
-H "columns:typ_id,hou,arr,arr=to_bitmap(arr)"
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Loading HyperLogLog data type
You can use the hll_hash function to convert data into the hll type, as in the following example:
1001|koga
1002|nijg
1003|lojn
1004|lofn
1005|jfin
1006|kon
1007|nhga
1008|nfubg
1009|huang
1010|buag
Load data into the following table:
CREATE TABLE testdb.test_streamload(
typ_id BIGINT NULL COMMENT "ID",
typ_name VARCHAR(10) NULL COMMENT "NAME",
pv hll hll_union NULL COMMENT "hll"
)
AGGREGATE KEY(typ_id,typ_name)
DISTRIBUTED BY HASH(typ_id) BUCKETS 10;
And use the hll_hash command for import.
curl --location-trusted -u <doris_user>:<doris_password> \
-H "column_separator:|" \
-H "columns:typ_id,typ_name,pv=hll_hash(typ_id)" \
-T streamload_example.csv \
-XPUT http://<fe_ip>:<fe_http_port>/api/testdb/test_streamload/_stream_load
Label, loading transaction, multi-table atomicity
All load jobs in Doris are atomically effective. And multiple tables loading in the same load job can also guarantee atomicity. At the same time, Doris can also use the Label mechanism to ensure that data loading is not lost or duplicated. For specific instructions, please refer to the Import Transactions and Atomicity documentation.
Column mapping, derived columns, and filtering
Doris supports a very rich set of column transformations and filtering operations in load statements. Supports most built-in functions and UDFs. For how to use this feature correctly, please refer to the Data Transformation documentation.
Enable strict mode import
The strict_mode attribute is used to set whether the import task runs in strict mode. This attribute affects the results of column mapping, transformation, and filtering, and it also controls the behavior of partial column updates. For specific instructions on strict mode, please refer to the Strict Mode documentation.
Perform partial column updates during import
For how to express partial column updates during import, please refer to the Data Manipulation/Data Update documentation.
More help
For more detailed syntax and best practices on using Stream Load, please refer to the Stream Load Command Manual. You can also enter HELP STREAM LOAD in the MySql client command line to get more help information.
Stream load submits and transfers data through HTTP protocol. Here, the curl
command shows how to submit an import.
Users can also operate through other HTTP clients.
curl --location-trusted -u user:passwd [-H ""...] -T data.file -XPUT http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load
The properties supported in the header are described in "Load Parameters" below
The format is: - H "key1: value1"
Examples:
curl --location-trusted -u root -T date -H "label:123" http://abc.com:8030/api/test/date/_stream_load
The detailed syntax for creating imports helps to execute HELP STREAM LOAD
view. The following section focuses on the significance of creating some parameters of Stream load.
Signature parameters
user/passwd
Stream load uses the HTTP protocol to create the imported protocol and signs it through the Basic Access authentication. The Doris system verifies user identity and import permissions based on signatures.
Load Parameters
Stream load uses HTTP protocol, so all parameters related to import tasks are set in the header. The significance of some parameters of the import task parameters of Stream load is mainly introduced below.
label
Identity of import task. Each import task has a unique label inside a single database. Label is a user-defined name in the import command. With this label, users can view the execution of the corresponding import task.
Another function of label is to prevent users from importing the same data repeatedly. It is strongly recommended that users use the same label for the same batch of data. This way, repeated requests for the same batch of data will only be accepted once, guaranteeing at-Most-Once
When the corresponding import operation state of label is CANCELLED, the label can be used again.
column_separator
Used to specify the column separator in the load file. The default is
\t
. If it is an invisible character, you need to add\x
as a prefix and hexadecimal to indicate the separator.For example, the separator
\x01
of the hive file needs to be specified as-H "column_separator:\x01"
.You can use a combination of multiple characters as the column separator.
line_delimiter
Used to specify the line delimiter in the load file. The default is
\n
.You can use a combination of multiple characters as the column separator.
max_filter_ratio
The maximum tolerance rate of the import task is 0 by default, and the range of values is 0-1. When the import error rate exceeds this value, the import fails.
If the user wishes to ignore the wrong row, the import can be successful by setting this parameter greater than 0.
The calculation formula is as follows:
(dpp.abnorm.ALL / (dpp.abnorm.ALL + dpp.norm.ALL ) ) > max_filter_ratio
dpp.abnorm.ALL
denotes the number of rows whose data quality is not up to standard. Such as type mismatch, column mismatch, length mismatch and so on.dpp.norm.ALL
refers to the number of correct data in the import process. The correct amount of data for the import task can be queried by the `SHOW LOAD
command.The number of rows in the original file =
dpp.abnorm.ALL + dpp.norm.ALL
where
Import the filter conditions specified by the task. Stream load supports filtering of where statements specified for raw data. The filtered data will not be imported or participated in the calculation of filter ratio, but will be counted as
num_rows_unselected
.partitions
Partitions information for tables to be imported will not be imported if the data to be imported does not belong to the specified Partition. These data will be included in
dpp.abnorm.ALL
.columns
The function transformation configuration of data to be imported includes the sequence change of columns and the expression transformation, in which the expression transformation method is consistent with the query statement.
Examples of column order transformation: There are three columns of original data (src_c1,src_c2,src_c3), and there are also three columns (dst_c1,dst_c2,dst_c3) in the doris table at present.
when the first column src_c1 of the original file corresponds to the dst_c1 column of the target table, while the second column src_c2 of the original file corresponds to the dst_c2 column of the target table and the third column src_c3 of the original file corresponds to the dst_c3 column of the target table,which is written as follows:
columns: dst_c1, dst_c2, dst_c3
when the first column src_c1 of the original file corresponds to the dst_c2 column of the target table, while the second column src_c2 of the original file corresponds to the dst_c3 column of the target table and the third column src_c3 of the original file corresponds to the dst_c1 column of the target table,which is written as follows:
columns: dst_c2, dst_c3, dst_c1
Example of expression transformation: There are two columns in the original file and two columns in the target table (c1, c2). However, both columns in the original file need to be transformed by functions to correspond to the two columns in the target table.
columns: tmp_c1, tmp_c2, c1 = year(tmp_c1), c2 = mouth(tmp_c2)
Tmp_* is a placeholder, representing two original columns in the original file.
format
Specify the import data format, support csv, json, the default is csv
supports
csv_with_names
(csv file line header filter),csv_with_names_and_types
(csv file first two lines filter), parquet, orcexec_mem_limit
Memory limit. Default is 2GB. Unit is Bytes
merge_type
The type of data merging supports three types: APPEND, DELETE, and MERGE. APPEND is the default value, which means that all this batch of data needs to be appended to the existing data. DELETE means to delete all rows with the same key as this batch of data. MERGE semantics Need to be used in conjunction with the delete condition, which means that the data that meets the delete condition is processed according to DELETE semantics and the rest is processed according to APPEND semantics
two_phase_commit
Stream load import can enable two-stage transaction commit mode: in the stream load process, the data is written and the information is returned to the user. At this time, the data is invisible and the transaction status is
PRECOMMITTED
. After the user manually triggers the commit operation, the data is visible.enclose
When the csv data field contains row delimiters or column delimiters, to prevent accidental truncation, single-byte characters can be specified as brackets for protection. For example, the column separator is “,”, the bracket is “‘“, and the data is “a,’b,c’”, then “b,c” will be parsed as a field. Note: when the bracket is
"
, trim_double_quotes must be set to true.escape
Used to escape characters that appear in a csv field identical to the enclosing characters. For example, if the data is “a,’b,’c’”, enclose is “‘“, and you want “b,’c to be parsed as a field, you need to specify a single-byte escape character, such as “\“, and then modify the data to “a,’ b,\‘c’”.
Example:
- Initiate a stream load pre-commit operation
curl --location-trusted -u user:passwd -H "two_phase_commit:true" -T test.txt http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load
{
"TxnId": 18036,
"Label": "55c8ffc9-1c40-4d51-b75e-f2265b3602ef",
"TwoPhaseCommit": "true",
"Status": "Success",
"Message": "OK",
"NumberTotalRows": 100,
"NumberLoadedRows": 100,
"NumberFilteredRows": 0,
"NumberUnselectedRows": 0,
"LoadBytes": 1031,
"LoadTimeMs": 77,
"BeginTxnTimeMs": 1,
"StreamLoadPutTimeMs": 1,
"ReadDataTimeMs": 0,
"WriteDataTimeMs": 58,
"CommitAndPublishTimeMs": 0
}
- Trigger the commit operation on the transaction. Note 1) requesting to fe and be both works Note 2)
{table}
in url can be omit when commit using txn id
curl -X PUT --location-trusted -u user:passwd -H "txn_id:18036" -H "txn_operation:commit" http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load_2pc
{
"status": "Success",
"msg": "transaction [18036] commit successfully."
}
using label
curl -X PUT --location-trusted -u user:passwd -H "label:55c8ffc9-1c40-4d51-b75e-f2265b3602ef" -H "txn_operation:commit" http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load_2pc
{
"status": "Success",
"msg": "label [55c8ffc9-1c40-4d51-b75e-f2265b3602ef] commit successfully."
}
- Trigger an abort operation on a transaction Note 1) requesting to fe and be both works Note 2)
{table}
in url can be omit when abort using txn id
curl -X PUT --location-trusted -u user:passwd -H "txn_id:18037" -H "txn_operation:abort" http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load_2pc
{
"status": "Success",
"msg": "transaction [18037] abort successfully."
}
using label
curl -X PUT --location-trusted -u user:passwd -H "label:55c8ffc9-1c40-4d51-b75e-f2265b3602ef" -H "txn_operation:abort" http://fe_host:http_port/api/{db}/{table}/_stream_load_2pc
{
"status": "Success",
"msg": "label [55c8ffc9-1c40-4d51-b75e-f2265b3602ef] abort successfully."
}
enable_profile
When
enable_profile
is true, the Stream Load profile will be printed to logs (be.INFO).memtable_on_sink_node
Whether to enable MemTable on DataSink node when loading data, default is false.
Build MemTable on DataSink node, and send segments to other backends through brpc streaming. It reduces duplicate work among replicas, and saves time in data serialization & deserialization.
partial_columns Whether to enable partial column updates, Boolean type, True means that use partial column update, the default value is false, this parameter is only allowed to be set when the table model is Unique and Merge on Write is used.
eg:
curl --location-trusted -u root: -H "partial_columns:true" -H "column_separator:," -H "columns:id,balance,last_access_time" -T /tmp/test.csv http://127.0.0.1:48037/api/db1/user_profile/_stream_load
Use stream load with SQL
You can add a sql
parameter to the Header
to replace the column_separator
, line_delimiter
, where
, columns
in the previous parameter, which is convenient to use.
curl --location-trusted -u user:passwd [-H "sql: ${load_sql}"...] -T data.file -XPUT http://fe_host:http_port/api/_http_stream
# -- load_sql
# insert into db.table (col, ...) select stream_col, ... from http_stream("property1"="value1");
# http_stream
# (
# "column_separator" = ",",
# "format" = "CSV",
# ...
# )
Examples:
curl --location-trusted -u root: -T test.csv -H "sql:insert into demo.example_tbl_1(user_id, age, cost) select c1, c4, c7 * 2 from http_stream("format" = "CSV", "column_separator" = "," ) where age >= 30" http://127.0.0.1:28030/api/_http_stream
Return results
Since Stream load is a synchronous import method, the result of the import is directly returned to the user by creating the return value of the import.
Examples:
{
"TxnId": 1003,
"Label": "b6f3bc78-0d2c-45d9-9e4c-faa0a0149bee",
"Status": "Success",
"ExistingJobStatus": "FINISHED", // optional
"Message": "OK",
"NumberTotalRows": 1000000,
"NumberLoadedRows": 1000000,
"NumberFilteredRows": 1,
"NumberUnselectedRows": 0,
"LoadBytes": 40888898,
"LoadTimeMs": 2144,
"BeginTxnTimeMs": 1,
"StreamLoadPutTimeMs": 2,
"ReadDataTimeMs": 325,
"WriteDataTimeMs": 1933,
"CommitAndPublishTimeMs": 106,
"ErrorURL": "http://192.168.1.1:8042/api/_load_error_log?file=__shard_0/error_log_insert_stmt_db18266d4d9b4ee5-abb00ddd64bdf005_db18266d4d9b4ee5_abb00ddd64bdf005"
}
The following main explanations are given for the Stream load import result parameters:
TxnId: The imported transaction ID. Users do not perceive.
Label: Import Label. User specified or automatically generated by the system.
Status: Import completion status.
“Success”: Indicates successful import.
“Publish Timeout”: This state also indicates that the import has been completed, except that the data may be delayed and visible without retrying.
“Label Already Exists”: Label duplicate, need to be replaced Label.
“Fail”: Import failed.
ExistingJobStatus: The state of the load job corresponding to the existing Label.
This field is displayed only when the status is “Label Already Exists”. The user can know the status of the load job corresponding to Label through this state. “RUNNING” means that the job is still executing, and “FINISHED” means that the job is successful.
Message: Import error messages.
NumberTotalRows: Number of rows imported for total processing.
NumberLoadedRows: Number of rows successfully imported.
NumberFilteredRows: Number of rows that do not qualify for data quality.
NumberUnselectedRows: Number of rows filtered by where condition.
LoadBytes: Number of bytes imported.
LoadTimeMs: Import completion time. Unit milliseconds.
BeginTxnTimeMs: The time cost for RPC to Fe to begin a transaction, Unit milliseconds.
StreamLoadPutTimeMs: The time cost for RPC to Fe to get a stream load plan, Unit milliseconds.
ReadDataTimeMs: Read data time, Unit milliseconds.
WriteDataTimeMs: Write data time, Unit milliseconds.
CommitAndPublishTimeMs: The time cost for RPC to Fe to commit and publish a transaction, Unit milliseconds.
ErrorURL: If you have data quality problems, visit this URL to see specific error lines.
Note
Since Stream load is a synchronous import mode, import information will not be recorded in Doris system. Users cannot see Stream load asynchronously by looking at import commands. You need to listen for the return value of the create import request to get the import result.
Cancel Load
Users can’t cancel Stream load manually. Stream load will be cancelled automatically by the system after a timeout or import error.
View Stream Load
Users can view completed stream load tasks through show stream load
.
By default, BE does not record Stream Load records. If you want to view records that need to be enabled on BE, the configuration parameter is: enable_stream_load_record=true
. For details, please refer to [BE Configuration Items](https://doris.apache. org/zh-CN/docs/admin-manual/config/be-config)
Relevant System Configuration
FE configuration
stream_load_default_timeout_second
The timeout time of the import task (in seconds) will be cancelled by the system if the import task is not completed within the set timeout time, and will become CANCELLED.
At present, Stream load does not support custom import timeout time. All Stream load import timeout time is uniform. The default timeout time is 600 seconds. If the imported source file can no longer complete the import within the specified time, the FE parameter
stream_load_default_timeout_second
needs to be adjusted.enable_pipeline_load
Whether or not to enable the Pipeline engine to execute Streamload tasks. See the Import documentation.
BE configuration
streaming_load_max_mb
The maximum import size of Stream load is 10G by default, in MB. If the user’s original file exceeds this value, the BE parameter
streaming_load_max_mb
needs to be adjusted.
Best Practices
Application scenarios
The most appropriate scenario for using Stream load is that the original file is in memory or on disk. Secondly, since Stream load is a synchronous import method, users can also use this import if they want to obtain the import results in a synchronous manner.
Data volume
Since Stream load is based on the BE initiative to import and distribute data, the recommended amount of imported data is between 1G and 10G. Since the default maximum Stream load import data volume is 10G, the configuration of BE streaming_load_max_mb
needs to be modified if files exceeding 10G are to be imported.
For example, the size of the file to be imported is 15G
Modify the BE configuration streaming_load_max_mb to 16000
Stream load default timeout is 600 seconds, according to Doris currently the largest import speed limit, about more than 3G files need to modify the import task default timeout.
Import Task Timeout = Import Data Volume / 10M / s (Specific Average Import Speed Requires Users to Calculate Based on Their Cluster Conditions)
For example, import a 10G file
Timeout = 1000s -31561;. 20110G / 10M /s
Complete examples
Data situation: In the local disk path /home/store_sales of the sending and importing requester, the imported data is about 15G, and it is hoped to be imported into the table store_sales of the database bj_sales.
Cluster situation: The concurrency of Stream load is not affected by cluster size.
Step 1: Does the import file size exceed the default maximum import size of 10G
BE conf
streaming_load_max_mb = 16000
Step 2: Calculate whether the approximate import time exceeds the default timeout value
Import time 15000/10 = 1500s
Over the default timeout time, you need to modify the FE configuration
stream_load_default_timeout_second = 1500
Step 3: Create Import Tasks
curl --location-trusted -u user:password -T /home/store_sales -H "label:abc" http://abc.com:8030/api/bj_sales/store_sales/_stream_load
Coding with StreamLoad
You can initiate HTTP requests for Stream Load using any language. Before initiating HTTP requests, you need to set several necessary headers:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Expect: 100-continue
Authorization: Basic <Base64 encoded username and password>
<Base64 encoded username and password>
: a string consist with Doris’s username
, :
and password
and then do a base64 encode.
Additionally, it should be noted that if you directly initiate an HTTP request to FE, as Doris will redirect to BE, some frameworks will remove the Authorization
HTTP header during this process, which requires manual processing.
Doris provides StreamLoad examples in three languages: Java, Go, and Python for reference.
Common Questions
Label Already Exists
The Label repeat checking steps of Stream load are as follows:
Is there an import Label conflict that already exists with other import methods?
Because imported Label in Doris system does not distinguish between import methods, there is a problem that other import methods use the same Label.
Through
SHOW LOAD WHERE LABEL = "xxx"'
, where XXX is a duplicate Label string, see if there is already a Label imported by FINISHED that is the same as the Label created by the user.Are Stream loads submitted repeatedly for the same job?
Since Stream load is an HTTP protocol submission creation import task, HTTP Clients in various languages usually have their own request retry logic. After receiving the first request, the Doris system has started to operate Stream load, but because the result is not returned to the Client side in time, the Client side will retry to create the request. At this point, the Doris system is already operating on the first request, so the second request will be reported to Label Already Exists.
To sort out the possible methods mentioned above: Search FE Master’s log with Label to see if there are two
redirect load action to destination =
redirect load action to destination cases in the same Label. If so, the request is submitted repeatedly by the Client side.It is recommended that the user calculate the approximate import time based on the amount of data currently requested, and change the request overtime on the client side to a value greater than the import timeout time according to the import timeout time to avoid multiple submissions of the request by the client side.
Connection reset abnormal
In the community version 0.14.0 and earlier versions, the connection reset exception occurred after Http V2 was enabled, because the built-in web container is tomcat, and Tomcat has pits in 307 (Temporary Redirect). There is a problem with the implementation of this protocol. All In the case of using Stream load to import a large amount of data, a connect reset exception will occur. This is because tomcat started data transmission before the 307 jump, which resulted in the lack of authentication information when the BE received the data request. Later, changing the built-in container to Jetty solved this problem. If you encounter this problem, please upgrade your Doris or disable Http V2 (
enable_http_server_v2=false
).After the upgrade, also upgrade the http client version of your program to
4.5.13
,Introduce the following dependencies in your pom.xml file<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.httpcomponents</groupId>
<artifactId>httpclient</artifactId>
<version>4.5.13</version>
</dependency>
After enabling the Stream Load record on the BE, the record cannot be queried
This is caused by the slowness of fetching records, you can try to adjust the following parameters:
- Increase the BE configuration
stream_load_record_batch_size
. This configuration indicates how many Stream load records can be pulled from BE each time. The default value is 50, which can be increased to 500. - Reduce the FE configuration
fetch_stream_load_record_interval_second
, this configuration indicates the interval for obtaining Stream load records, the default is to fetch once every 120 seconds, and it can be adjusted to 60 seconds. - If you want to save more Stream load records (not recommended, it will take up more resources of FE), you can increase the configuration
max_stream_load_record_size
of FE, the default is 5000.
- Increase the BE configuration
More Help
For more detailed syntax used by Stream Load, you can enter HELP STREAM LOAD
on the Mysql client command line for more help.