Schema
Explore the Schema component in Apache Pinot, vital for defining the structure and data types of Pinot tables, enabling efficient data processing and analysis.
Each table in Pinot is associated with a schema. A schema defines what fields are present in the table along with the data types.
The schema is stored in Zookeeper along with the table configuration.
Schema naming in Pinot follows typical database table naming conventions, such as starting names with a letter, not ending with an underscore, and using only alphanumeric characters
Categories
A schema also defines what category a column belongs to. Columns in a Pinot table can be categorized into three categories:
Category | Description |
---|---|
Dimension | Dimension columns are typically used in slice and dice operations for answering business queries. Some operations for which dimension columns are used:
|
Metric | These columns represent the quantitative data of the table. Such columns are used for aggregation. In data warehouse terminology, these can also be referred to as fact or measure columns. Some operation for which metric columns are used:
|
DateTime | Common operations that can be done on time column:
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Pinot does not enforce strict rules on which of these categories columns belong to, rather the categories can be thought of as hints to Pinot to do internal optimizations.
For example, metrics may be stored without a dictionary and can have a different default null value.
The categories are also relevant when doing segment merge and rollups. Pinot uses the dimension and time fields to identify records against which to apply merge/rollups.
Metrics aggregation is another example where Pinot uses dimensions and time are used as the key, and automatically aggregates values for the metric columns.
For configuration details, see Schema configuration reference.
Date and time fields
Since Pinot doesn't have a dedicated DATETIME
datatype support, you need to input time in either STRING, LONG, or INT format. However, Pinot needs to convert the date into an understandable format such as epoch timestamp to do operations. You can refer to DateTime field spec configs for more details on supported formats.
Creating a schema
First, Make sure your cluster is up and running.
Let's create a schema and put it in a JSON file. For this example, we have created a schema for flight data.
For more details on constructing a schema file, see the Schema configuration reference.
Then, we can upload the sample schema provided above using either a Bash command or REST API call.
Check out the schema in the Rest API to make sure it was successfully uploaded