Encoding
Encoding Methods
To improve the efficiency of data storage, it is necessary to encode data during data writing, thereby reducing the amount of disk space used. In the process of writing and reading data, the amount of data involved in the I/O operations can be reduced to improve performance. IoTDB supports the following encoding methods for different data types:
- PLAIN
PLAIN encoding, the default encoding mode, i.e, no encoding, supports multiple data types. It has high compression and decompression efficiency while suffering from low space storage efficiency.
- TS_2DIFF
Second-order differential encoding is more suitable for encoding monotonically increasing or decreasing sequence data, and is not recommended for sequence data with large fluctuations.
- RLE
Run-length encoding is suitable for storing sequence with continuous values, and is not recommended for sequence data with most of the time different values.
Run-length encoding can also be used to encode floating-point numbers, while it is necessary to specify reserved decimal digits (MAX_POINT_NUMBER) when creating time series. It is more suitable to store sequence data where floating-point values appear continuously, monotonously increasing or decreasing, and it is not suitable for storing sequence data with high precision requirements after the decimal point or with large fluctuations.
TS_2DIFF and RLE have precision limit for data type of float and double. By default, two decimal places are reserved. GORILLA is recommended.
- GORILLA
GORILLA encoding is lossless. It is more suitable for numerical sequence with similar values and is not recommended for sequence data with large fluctuations.
Currently, there are two versions of GORILLA encoding implementation, it is recommended to use GORILLA
instead of GORILLA_V1
(deprecated).
Usage restrictions: When using GORILLA to encode INT32 data, you need to ensure that there is no data point with the value Integer.MIN_VALUE
in the sequence. When using GORILLA to encode INT64 data, you need to ensure that there is no data point with the value Long.MIN_VALUE
in the sequence.
- DICTIONARY
DICTIONARY encoding is lossless. It is suitable for TEXT data with low cardinality (i.e. low number of distinct values). It is not recommended to use it for high-cardinality data.
- FREQ
FREQ encoding is lossy. It transforms the time sequence to the frequency domain and only reserve part of the frequency components with high energy. It is more suitable for sequence with obvious periodicity.
There are two parameters of FREQ encoding in the configuration file:
freq_snr
defines the signal-noise-ratio (SNR). Both the compression ratio and accuracy loss decrease when it increases.freq_block_size
defines the data size in a time-frequency transformation. It is not recommended to modify the default value. The detailed experimental results and analysis of the influences of parameters are in the design document.
- ZIGZAG
ZIGZAG encoding maps signed integers to unsigned integers so that numbers with a small absolute value (for instance, -1) have a small variant encoded value too. It does this in a way that “zig-zags” back and forth through the positive and negative integers.
Correspondence between data type and encoding
The five encodings described in the previous sections are applicable to different data types. If the correspondence is wrong, the time series cannot be created correctly. The correspondence between the data type and its supported encodings is summarized in the Table below.
The correspondence between the data type and its supported encodings
Data Type | Supported Encoding |
---|---|
BOOLEAN | PLAIN, RLE |
INT32 | PLAIN, RLE, TS_2DIFF, GORILLA, FREQ, ZIGZAG |
INT64 | PLAIN, RLE, TS_2DIFF, GORILLA, FREQ, ZIGZAG |
FLOAT | PLAIN, RLE, TS_2DIFF, GORILLA, FREQ |
DOUBLE | PLAIN, RLE, TS_2DIFF, GORILLA, FREQ |
TEXT | PLAIN, DICTIONARY |