Onyx plugin providing read and write facilities for SQL databases with JDBC support.
In your project file:
[org.onyxplatform/onyx-sql "0.13.5.0"]
In your peer boot-up namespace:
(:require [onyx.plugin.sql])
A few notes are warranted on the read functionality of this plugin. Efficient distributed reads are facilitated using the assumption of the presence of a monotonically increasing integer key column on the replicated table. This allows the plugin to evenly break up a database table into chunks which can be read by multiple peers.
Because of this design, two functions are required to read from a database table. The first, partition-keys
or partition-keys-by-uuid
take care of breaking up the database table into discrete chunks. partition-keys
is used to partition a table with an integer key, while partition-keys-by-uuid
is used to partition a table with an UUID key. The second, read-rows
, takes the output of partition-keys
or partition-keys-by-uuid
and performs the actual reading of rows based on these partitions. Note, partition-keys-by-uuid
is only supported on MySQL.
If there's any possibility of data being modified in the table being read from while the job runs, it's recommended that you obtain a lock on the table to ensure data consistency. This is best accomplished by adding lifecycle functions to the read-rows
step which lock and unlock the table before and after the job's start and completion (respectively).
Reading from tables without an integer key column is currently not supported, though there's the possibility of work in this direction. In the mean time, if you don't have an integer key column it's recommended you use the onyx-seq plugin included in onyx core, and read rows in using a single SELECT
query. Keep in mind that this restricts you to a single reader, which may consequently become a bottleneck in your throughput. Also, keep in mind that in this approach, it's still advised to lock the database table for consistency over the course of the read.
Below are the details of the functions offered by this plugin.
Partitions a table of rows into chunks to be read by another task. Requires a column in the table to be numerically ordered.
Catalog entry:
{:onyx/name :partition-keys
:onyx/plugin :onyx.plugin.sql/partition-keys
:onyx/type :input
:onyx/medium :sql
:sql/classname "my.class.name"
:sql/subprotocol "db-sub-protocol"
:sql/subname "db-subname"
:sql/user "db-user"
:sql/password "db-pass"
:sql/table :table-name
:sql/id :column-to-split-by
:sql/columns [:*]
;; Optional
:sql/lower-bound selected-min
;; Optional
:sql/upper-bound selected-max
;; 500 * 1000 = 50,000 rows
;; to be processed within :onyx/pending-timeout, 60s by default
:sql/rows-per-segment 500
:onyx/max-pending 1000
:onyx/batch-size batch-size
:onyx/max-peers 1
:onyx/doc "Partitions a range of primary keys into subranges"}
:sql/columns
supports restricting the select to only certain columns, e.g. :sql/columns [:id :name]
.
:sql/lower-bound
overrides partition-key
calculation of min from the :sql/id
column.
:sql/upper-bound
overrides partition-key
calculation of max from the :sql/id
column.
Reads a partition of a rows from a SQL table.
Catalog entry:
{:onyx/name :read-rows
:onyx/tenancy-ident :sql/read-rows
:onyx/fn :onyx.plugin.sql/read-rows
:onyx/type :function
:onyx/batch-size batch-size
:sql/classname "my.class.name"
:sql/subprotocol "db-subprotocol"
:sql/subname "db-sub-name"
:sql/user "db-user"
:sql/password "db-pass"
:sql/table :table-name
:sql/id :column-to-split-by
:onyx/doc "Reads rows of a SQL table bounded by a key range"}
Writes segments to a SQL database. Expects segments with the same schema as the table they are being inserted into. They must be batched together into a single segment.
{:rows [{:id 1 :column1 "hello" :column2 "world}]}
Catalog entry:
{:onyx/name :write-rows
:onyx/plugin :onyx.plugin.sql/write-rows
:onyx/type :output
:onyx/medium :sql
:sql/classname "my.class.name"
:sql/subprotocol "db-subprotocol"
:sql/subname "db-sub-name"
:sql/user "db-user"
:sql/password "db-pass"
:sql/table :table-name
:sql/copy? boolean
:sql/copy-fields [:first :second :third]
:onyx/batch-size batch-size
:onyx/doc "Writes segments from the :rows keys to the SQL database"}
When sql/copy?
is true, attempts to import rows using the COPY
statement for
supported databases (currently only PostgreSQL). If enables, expects
sql/copy-fields
to be a vector that determines the order in which columns will
be rendered.
Upserts segments to a SQL database. The :where
map must include the primary
key. If the primary key's value exists, an update will be performed. If it does
not exist, an insert will be performed. Upserts work with MySQL and PostgreSQL
databases.
In the example below :id
is the primary key.
{:rows [{:column1 "hello" :column2 "world}] :where {:id 1}}
Catalog entry:
{:onyx/name :write-rows
:onyx/plugin :onyx.plugin.sql/upsert-rows
:onyx/type :output
:onyx/medium :sql
:sql/classname "my.class.name"
:sql/subprotocol "db-subprotocol"
:sql/subname "db-sub-name"
:sql/user "db-user"
:sql/password "db-pass"
:sql/table :table-name
:onyx/batch-size batch-size
:onyx/doc "Upserts segments from the :rows keys to the SQL database"}
key | type | description |
---|---|---|
:sql/classname | string | The JDBC classname driver to use |
:sql/subprotocol | string | The database JDBC subprotocol |
:sql/subname | string | The subname to connect to |
:sql/user | string | The user to authenticate with |
:sql/password | string | The password to authenticate with |
:sql/table | keyword | The table to read/write from/to |
:sql/columns | vector | Columns to select |
:sql/id | keyword | The name of a unique, monotonically increasing integer column |
:sql/lower-bound | integer | Overrides the calculation of min value from the id column. |
:sql/upper-bound | integer | Overrides the calculation of max value from the id column. |
:sql/rows-per-segment | integer | the number of rows to compress into a single segment |
:sql/read-buffer | integer | The number of messages to buffer via core.async, default is 1000 |
Pull requests into the master branch are welcomed.
Running the tests can be easily performed by starting a mysql and postgres container with docker:
docker run -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD="password" -e MYSQL_DATABASE="onyx_input_test" -p 3306:3306 -d mysql:latest
docker run -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password -e POSTGRES_USER=postgresql -e POSTGRES_DB=onyx_input_test -p 5432:5432 -d library/postgres
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