SegmentMetadata queries

SegmentMetadata - 图1info

Apache Druid supports two query languages: Druid SQL and native queries. This document describes a query type that is only available in the native language. However, Druid SQL contains similar functionality in its metadata tables.

Segment metadata queries return per-segment information about:

  • Number of rows stored inside the segment
  • Interval the segment covers
  • Estimated total segment byte size in if it was stored in a ‘flat format’ (e.g. a csv file)
  • Segment id
  • Is the segment rolled up
  • Detailed per column information such as:
    • type
    • cardinality
    • min/max values
    • presence of null values
    • estimated ‘flat format’ byte size
  1. {
  2. "queryType":"segmentMetadata",
  3. "dataSource":"sample_datasource",
  4. "intervals":["2013-01-01/2014-01-01"]
  5. }

There are several main parts to a segment metadata query:

propertydescriptionrequired?
queryTypeThis String should always be “segmentMetadata”; this is the first thing Apache Druid looks at to figure out how to interpret the queryyes
dataSourceA String or Object defining the data source to query, very similar to a table in a relational database. See DataSource for more information.yes
intervalsA JSON Object representing ISO-8601 Intervals. This defines the time ranges to run the query over.no
toIncludeA JSON Object representing what columns should be included in the result. Defaults to “all”.no
mergeMerge all individual segment metadata results into a single resultno
contextSee Contextno
analysisTypesA list of Strings specifying what column properties (e.g. cardinality, size) should be calculated and returned in the result. Defaults to [“cardinality”, “interval”, “minmax”], but can be overridden with using the segment metadata query config. See section analysisTypes for more details.no
aggregatorMergeStrategyThe strategy Druid uses to merge aggregators across segments. If true and if the aggregators analysis type is enabled, aggregatorMergeStrategy defaults to strict. Possible values include strict, lenient, earliest, and latest. See aggregatorMergeStrategy for details.no
lenientAggregatorMergeDeprecated. Use aggregatorMergeStrategy property instead. If true, and if the aggregators analysis type is enabled, Druid merges aggregators leniently.no

The format of the result is:

  1. [ {
  2. "id" : "some_id",
  3. "intervals" : [ "2013-05-13T00:00:00.000Z/2013-05-14T00:00:00.000Z" ],
  4. "columns" : {
  5. "__time" : { "type" : "LONG", "hasMultipleValues" : false, "hasNulls": false, "size" : 407240380, "cardinality" : null, "errorMessage" : null },
  6. "dim1" : { "type" : "STRING", "hasMultipleValues" : false, "hasNulls": false, "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : 1944, "errorMessage" : null },
  7. "dim2" : { "type" : "STRING", "hasMultipleValues" : true, "hasNulls": true, "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : 1504, "errorMessage" : null },
  8. "metric1" : { "type" : "FLOAT", "hasMultipleValues" : false, "hasNulls": false, "size" : 100000, "cardinality" : null, "errorMessage" : null }
  9. },
  10. "aggregators" : {
  11. "metric1" : { "type" : "longSum", "name" : "metric1", "fieldName" : "metric1" }
  12. },
  13. "queryGranularity" : {
  14. "type": "none"
  15. },
  16. "size" : 300000,
  17. "numRows" : 5000000
  18. } ]

All columns contain a typeSignature that Druid uses to represent the column type information internally. The typeSignature is typically the same value used to identify the JSON type information at query or ingest time. One of: STRING, FLOAT, DOUBLE, LONG, or COMPLEX<typeName>, e.g. COMPLEX<hyperUnique>.

Columns also have a legacy type name. For some column types, the value may match the typeSignature (STRING, FLOAT, DOUBLE, or LONG). For COMPLEX columns, the type only contains the name of the underlying complex type such as hyperUnique.

New applications should use typeSignature, not type.

If the errorMessage field is non-null, you should not trust the other fields in the response. Their contents are undefined.

Only columns which are dictionary encoded (i.e., have type STRING) will have any cardinality. Rest of the columns (timestamp and metric columns) will show cardinality as null.

intervals

If an interval is not specified, the query will use a default interval that spans a configurable period before the end time of the most recent segment.

The length of this default time period is set in the Broker configuration via: druid.query.segmentMetadata.defaultHistory

toInclude

There are 3 types of toInclude objects.

All

The grammar is as follows:

  1. "toInclude": { "type": "all"}

None

The grammar is as follows:

  1. "toInclude": { "type": "none"}

List

The grammar is as follows:

  1. "toInclude": { "type": "list", "columns": [<string list of column names>]}

analysisTypes

This is a list of properties that determines the amount of information returned about the columns, i.e. analyses to be performed on the columns.

By default, the “cardinality”, “interval”, and “minmax” types will be used. If a property is not needed, omitting it from this list will result in a more efficient query.

The default analysis types can be set in the Broker configuration via: druid.query.segmentMetadata.defaultAnalysisTypes

Types of column analyses are described below:

cardinality

  • cardinality is the number of unique values present in string columns. It is null for other column types.

Druid examines the size of string column dictionaries to compute the cardinality value. There is one dictionary per column per segment. If merge is off (false), this reports the cardinality of each column of each segment individually. If merge is on (true), this reports the highest cardinality encountered for a particular column across all relevant segments.

minmax

  • Estimated min/max values for each column. Only reported for string columns.

size

  • size is the estimated total byte size as if the data were stored in text format. This is not the actual storage size of the column in Druid. If you want the actual storage size in bytes of a segment, look elsewhere. Some pointers:

  • To get the storage size in bytes of an entire segment, check the size field in the sys.segments table. This is the size of the memory-mappable content.

  • To get the storage size in bytes of a particular column in a particular segment, unpack the segment and look at the meta.smoosh file inside the archive. The difference between the third and fourth columns is the size in bytes. Currently, there is no API for retrieving this information.

interval

  • intervals in the result will contain the list of intervals associated with the queried segments.

timestampSpec

  • timestampSpec in the result will contain timestampSpec of data stored in segments. this can be null if timestampSpec of segments was unknown or unmergeable (if merging is enabled).

queryGranularity

  • queryGranularity in the result will contain query granularity of data stored in segments. this can be null if query granularity of segments was unknown or unmergeable (if merging is enabled).

aggregators

  • aggregators in the result will contain the list of aggregators usable for querying metric columns. This may be null if the aggregators are unknown or unmergeable (if merging is enabled).

  • Merging can be strict, lenient, earliest, or latest. See aggregatorMergeStrategy for details.

  • The form of the result is a map of column name to aggregator.

rollup

  • rollup in the result is true/false/null.
  • When merging is enabled, if some are rollup, others are not, result is null.

aggregatorMergeStrategy

Conflicts between aggregator metadata across segments can occur if some segments have unknown aggregators, or if two segments use incompatible aggregators for the same column, such as longSum changed to doubleSum. Druid supports the following aggregator merge strategies:

  • strict: If there are any segments with unknown aggregators or any conflicts of any kind, the merged aggregators list is null.
  • lenient: Druid ignores segments with unknown aggregators. Conflicts between aggregators set the aggregator for that particular column to null.
  • earliest: In the event of conflicts between segments, Druid selects the aggregator from the earliest segment for that particular column.
  • latest: In the event of conflicts between segments, Druid selects the aggregator from the most recent segment for that particular column.

lenientAggregatorMerge (deprecated)

Deprecated. Use aggregatorMergeStrategy instead.