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Why you should care about SQL for big data and ...

Why you should care about SQL for big data and how Apache Calcite can help

FOSDEM 2017 talk: http://bit.ly/2xRV7By
Talk video: http://bit.ly/2xScodQ
When working with BigData & IoT systems we often feel the need for a Common Query Language. The platform specific languages are often harder to integrate with and require longer adoption time.

To fill this gap many NoSql (Not-only-Sql) vendors are building SQL layers for their platforms. It is worth exploring the driving forces behind this trend, how it fits in your BigData stacks and how we can adopt it in our favorite tools. However building SQL engine from scratch is a daunting job and frameworks like Apache Calcite can help you with the heavy lifting. Calcite allow you to integrate SQL parser, cost-based optimizer, and JDBC with your big data system.

Calcite has been used to empower many Big-Data platforms such as Hive, Spark, Drill Phoenix to name some.

I will walk you through the process of building a SQL access layer for Apache Geode (In-Memory Data Grid). I will share my experience, pitfalls and technical consideration like balancing between the SQL/RDBMS semantics and the design choices and limitations of the data system.

Hopefully this will enable you to add SQL capabilities to your prefered NoSQL data system.

"It will be interesting to see what happens if an established NoSQL database decides to implement a reasonably standard SQL; the only predictable outcome for such an eventuality is plenty of argument. - NoSQL Distilled, Martin Fowler - 2012"

The Relational Databases (RDBMS) are an essential component of the computing ecosystem. Yet in the past decade we have witnessed a wave of alternative data management technologies often branded as NoSQL and BigData - an ambiguous and lacking prescriptive definition names.

To understand the NoSQL/BigData "movement" one need to understand the forces fueling it:

* The rise of Internet (Web, Mobile, IoT...) leading to Data {Volume, Velocity and Variety} challenges
* Object-relational impedance mismatch
* Cloud computing - Infrastructure Automation and Elasticity
* Shift from Integration to Application databases
* Data-Value vs. Storage-Cost Economics Shift
The various approaches in addressing those challenges have led to a multitude of over 150 commercially supported NoSQL/BigData platforms.

Such diversity means that an organization will adopt a mixture of data storage technologies for handling different circumstances (Polyglot Persistence).

How does an organization integrate the mix of data technologies?

To fill the gap many NoSql/BigData vendors are (or are considering) building SQL and SQL-based layers for their platforms.

It is worth exploring the driving forces behind this trend ...

Christian Tzolov

February 04, 2017
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  1. Christian Tzolov 2 Engineer at Pivotal BigData, Hadoop, Spring Cloud

    Dataflow Apache Committer, PMC member Apache {Crunch, Geode, HAWQ, ...} Disclaimer This talk expresses my personal opinions. It is not read or approved by Pivotal and does not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of Pivotal nor does it constitute any official communication of Pivotal. Pivotal does not support any of the code shared here. blog.tzolov.net twitter.com/christzolov nl.linkedin.com/in/tzolov
  2. 3 “It will be interesting to see what happens if

    an established NoSQL database decides to implement a reasonably standard SQL; The only predictable outcome for such an eventuality is plenty of argument.” 2012, Martin Fowler, P.J.Sadalage, NoSQL Distilled
  3. NoSQL Driving Forces 5 •  Infrastructure Automation and Elasticity (Cloud

    Computing) •  Rise of Internet Web, Mobile, IoT – Data Volume, Velocity, Variety challenges •  Row-based Relational Model. Object-Relational Impedance Mismatch ACID & 2PC clash with Distributed architectures. CAP, PAXOS instead.. More convenient data models: Datastores, Key/Value, Graph, Columnar, Full-text Search, Schema-on-Load… Eliminate operational complexity and cost. Shift from Integration to application databases …
  4. Data Big Bang Implications 6 •  Over 150 commercial NoSQL

    and BigData systems. •  Organizations will have to mix data storage technologies! •  How to integrate such multitude of data systems?
  5. “Standard” Data Process/Query Language? 7 •  Functional - Unified Programming

    Model •  Apache {Beam, Spark, Flink, Apex, Crunch}, Cascading •  Converging around Apache Beam •  Declarative - SQL •  Adopted by many NoSQL Vendors •  Most Hadoop tasks: Hive and SQL-on-Hadoop •  Spark SQL - most used production component for 2016 •  Google F1 pcollection.apply(Read.from(”in.txt")) .apply(FlatMapElements.via((String word) -> asList(word.split("[^a-zA-Z']+"))) .apply(Filter.by((String word)->!word.isEmpty())) .apply(Count.<String>perElement()) SELECT b."totalPrice", c."firstName” FROM "BookOrder" as b INNER JOIN "Customer" as c ON b."customerNumber" = c."customerNumber” WHERE b."totalPrice" > 0; Batch & Streaming, OLTP OLAP, EDW, Exploration
  6. SQL for NoSQL? 8 •  Extended Relational Algebra - already

    present in most NoSql data system •  Relational Expression Optimization – Desirable but hard to implement
  7. Organization Data - Integrated View 9 Single Federated DB (M:1:N)

    HAWQ FDBS NoSQL 1 PXF 1 Native API 1 Apache HAWQ Optimizer, Columnar (HDFS) Organization Data Tools SQL/JDBC NoSQL 1 PXF 2 Native API 2 NoSQL n PXF n Native API n … Organization Data Tools NoSQL 1 Calcite SQLAdapter 1 SQL/JDBC NoSQL 2 Calcite SQLAdapter 2 SQL/JDBC NoSQL n Calcite SQLAdapter n SQL/JDBC … Direct (M:N) https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HAWQ-1235
  8. Single Federated Database 10 Federated External Tables with Apache HAWQ

    - MPP, Shared-Noting, SQL- on-Hadoop CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE MyNoSQL ( customer_id TEXT, first_name TEXT, last_name TEXT, gender TEXT ) LOCATION ('pxf://MyNoSQL-URL>? FRAGMENTER=MyFragmenter& ACCESSOR=MyAccessor& RESOLVER=MyResolver&') FORMAT 'custom'(formatter='pxfwritable_import');
  9. Apache Calcite? Java framework that allows SQL interface and advanced

    query optimization, for virtually any data system •  Query Parser, Validator and Optimizer(s) •  JDBC drivers - local and remote •  Agnostic to data storage and processing
  10. Calcite Application 12 •  Apache Apex •  Apache Drill • 

    Apache Flink •  Apache Hive •  Apache Kylin •  Apache Phoenix •  Apache Samza •  Apache Storm •  Cascading •  Qubole Quark •  SQL-Gremlin … •  Apache Geode
  11. SQL Adapter Design Choices 13 SQL completeness vs. NoSql design

    integrity (simple) Predicate Pushdown: Scan, Filter, Projection (complex) Custom Relational Rules and Operations: Sort, Join, GroupBy ... Catalog – namespaces accessed in queries Schema - collection of schemas and tables Table - single data set, collection of rows RelDataType – SQL fields types in a Table •  Move Computation to Data •  Data Type Conversion
  12. Geode to Calcite Data Types Mapping 14 Geode Cache Region

    1 Region K Val Key v1 k1 v2 k2 … Calcite Schema Table 1 Table K Col1 Col2 ColN V(M,1) RowM V(M,2) V(M,N) V(2,1) Row2 V(2,2) V(2,N) V(1,1) Row1 V(1,2) V(1,N) … Regions are mapped into Tables Geode Cache is mapped into Calcite Schema Geode Key/Value is mapped into Table Row Create Column Types (RelDataType) from Geode Value class (JavaTypeFactoryImpl)
  13. Geode Adapter - Overview Geode API and OQL SQL/JDBC/ODBC Convert

    SQL relational expressions into OQL queries Geode Adapter (Geode Client) Geode Server Geode Server Geode Server Data Data Data Push down the relational expressions supported by Geode OQL and falls back to the Calcite Enumerable Adapter for the rest Enumerable Adapter Apache Calcite Spring Data Geode Spring Data API for interacting with Geode Parse SQL, converts into relational expression and optimizes
  14. Simple SQ L Adapter 16 <<SchemaFactory>> MySchemaFactory +create(operands):Schema <<create>> <<ScannableTable>>

    MyTable +getRowType(RelDataTypeFactor) +scan(ctx):Ennumerator<Object[]> <<Schema>> MySchema +getTableMap():Map<String, Table>) <<on scan() create>> <<Enummerator>> MyEnummerator +moveNext() +convert(Object):E My NoSQL <<create>> <<Get all Data>> defaultSchema: 'MyNoSQL', schemas: [{ name: ’MyNoSQLAdapter, factory: MySchemaFactory’, operand: { myNoSqlUrl: …, } }] !connect jdbc:calcite:model=path-to-model.json Returns an Enumeration over the entire target data store Uses reflection to builds RelDataType from your value’s class type Converts MyNoSQL value response into Calcite row data Defined in the Linq4j sub-project ScannableTable, FilterableTable, ProjectableFilterableTable Initialize Query SELECT b."totalPrice” FROM "BookOrder" as b WHERE b."totalPrice" > 0;
  15. Non-Relational Tables (Simple) 17 Scanned without intermediate relational expression. • 

    ScannableTable - can be scanned •  FilterableTable - can be scanned, applying supplied filter expressions •  ProjectableFilterableTable - can be scanned, applying supplied filter expressions and projecting a given list of columns Enumerable<Object[]> scan(DataContext root, List<RexNode> filters, int[] projects); Enumerable<Object[]> scan(DataContext root, List<RexNode> filters); Enumerable<Object[]> scan(DataContext root);
  16. Calcite Ecosystem 18 Several “semi-independent” projects. JDBC and Avatica Linq4j

    Expression Tree Enumerable Adapter Relational •  Relational Expressions •  Row Expression •  Optimization Rules •  Planner … SQL Parser & AST Port of LINQ (Language-Integrated Query) to Java. Local and Remote JDBC driver Converts SQL queries Into AST (SqlNode …) 3rd party Adapters Method for translating executable code into data (LINQ/MSN port) Default (In-memory) Data Store Adapter implementation. Leverages Linq4j Relational Algebra, expression, optimizations … Interpreter Complies Java code generated from linq4j “Expressions”. Part of the physical plan implementer
  17. Calcite SQL Query Execution Flow 19 Enumerable Interpreter Prepare SQL,

    Relational, Planner Geode Adapter Binder JDBC Geode Cluster 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 7 2. Parse SQL, convert to rel. expressions. Validate and Optimize them 3. Start building a physical plan from the relation expressions 4. Implement the Geode relations and encode them as Expression tree 5. Pass the Expression tree to the Interpreter to generate Java code 6. Generate and Compile a Binder instance that on ‘bind()’ call runs Geodes’ query method 1. On new SQL query JDBC delegates to Prepare to prepare the query execution 7. JDBC uses the newly compiled Binder to perform the query on the Geode Cluster Calcite Framework Geode Adapter 2
  18. Calcite Relational Expressions 20 RelNode Relational expression TableScan Project Filter

    Aggregate Join Intersect Sort RexlNode Row-level expressions Project, Sort fields Filter, Join conditions Input Column Ref Literal Struct field access Function call Window expressions * RelTrait * Physical attribute of a relation
  19. Calcite Relational Expressions 21 RelNode + register(RelOptPlander) + List<RelNode> getInputs();

    RelOptPlanner +findBestExp():RelNode RexNode RelTrait Convention NONE * * EnumberableConvention RelOptRule + onMatch(call) <<register>> <<create>> MyDBConvention ConverterRule + RelNode convert(RelNode) Converts from one calling convention to another Convertor Indicate that it converts a physical attribute only! <<rules>> * <<inputs>> * <<root>> Query optimizer: Transforms a relational expression according to a given set of rules and a cost model. RelOptCluster Rule transforms an expression into another. It has a list of Operands, which determine whether the rule can be applied to a particular section of the tree. RelOptRuleOperand * <<fire criteria>> Calling convention used to represent a single data source. Inputs to a relational expression must be in the same convention
  20. Calcite Adapter Implementation Patterns 22 MyAdapterRel + implement(implContext) MyAdapterConvention Convention.Impl(“MyAdapter”)

    Common interface for all MyAdapter Relation Expressions. Provides implementation callback method called as part of physical plan implementation ImplContext + implParm1 + implParm2 … RelNode MyAdapterTable + toRel(optTable) + asQueryable(provider,…) MyAdapterQueryable + myQuery(params) : Enumetator TranslatableTable <<instance of>> AbstractQueryableTable AbstractTableQueryable <<create>> Can convert queries in Expression myQuery() implements the call to your DB It is called by the auto generated code. It must return an Enumberable instance MyAdapterScan + register(planer) { Registers all MyAdapter Rules } <<create>> MyAdapterToEnumerableConvertorRule operands: (RelNode.class, MyAdapterConvention, EnumerableConvention) ConverterRue TableScan MyAdapterToEnumerableConvertor + implement(EnumerableRelImplementor) { ctx = new MyAdapterRel.ImplContext() getImputs().implement(ctx) return BlockBuild.append( MY_QUERY_REF, Expressions.constant(ctx.implParms1), Expressions.constant(ctx.implParms2) … EnumerableRel ConvertorImpl <<create on match >> MyAdapterProject MyAdapterFilter MyAdapterXXX RelOptRule MyAdapterProjectRu MyAdapterFilterRule MyAdapterXXXRule <<create on match >> Recursively call the implement on each MyAdapter Relation Expression Encode the myQuery(params) call as Expressions MY_QUERY_REF = Types.lookupMethod( MyAdapterQueryable.class, ”myQuery”, String.class String.class); 1 3 4 5 2 6 7 8 9 Calcite Framework MyAdapter components
  21. Relational Algebra 23 Scan Scan Join Filter Project Customer [c]

    BookOrder [b] (on customerNumber) (b.totalPrice > 0) (c.firstName, b.totalPrice) SELECT b."totalPrice", c."firstName” FROM "BookOrder" as b INNER JOIN "Customer" as c ON b."customerNumber" = c."customerNumber” WHERE b."totalPrice" > 0; Scan Scan Join Project Customer [c] BookOrder [b] (on customerNumber) (totalPrice > 0) (c.firstName, b.totalPrice) Project (firstName, customerNumber) Filter (totalPrice, customerNumber) Project optimize
  22. Calcite with Geode - Without Implementation 24 SELECT b."totalPrice", c."firstName”

    FROM "BookOrder" as b INNER JOIN "Customer" as c ON b."customerNumber" = c."customerNumber” WHERE b."totalPrice" > 0;
  23. Calcite with Geode – Scannable Table (Simple) 25 SELECT b."totalPrice",

    c."firstName” FROM "BookOrder" as b INNER JOIN "Customer" as c ON b."customerNumber" = c."customerNumber” WHERE b."totalPrice" > 0;
  24. Calcite with Geode – Relational (Complex) 26 SELECT b."totalPrice", c."firstName”

    FROM "BookOrder" as b INNER JOIN "Customer" as c ON b."customerNumber" = c."customerNumber” WHERE b."totalPrice" > 0;
  25. References 28 •  Big Data is Four Different Problems, 2016,

    M.Stonebraker: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S79-buNhdhI •  Turning Database Inside-Out, 2015 (M. Kleppmann) https://www.confluent.io/blog/turning-the-database-inside-out-with-apache-samza •  NoSQL Distilled, 2012 (Pramod J. Sadalage and M.Fowler) https://martinfowler.com/books/nosql.html •  Architecture of a Database System, 2007 (J.M. Hellerstein, M. Stonebraker, J. Hamilton)http://db.cs.berkeley.edu/papers/fntdb07-architecture.pdf •  ORCA: A Modular Query Optimizer Architecture for Big Data: http://15721.courses.cs.cmu.edu/spring2016/papers/p337-soliman.pdf •  Apache Geode Project (2016) : http://geode.apache.org •  Geode Object Query Language (OQL) : http://bit.ly/2eKywgp •  Apache Calcite Project (2016) : https://calcite.apache.org •  Apache Geode Adapter for Apache Calcite: https://github.com/tzolov/calcite •  Relational Algebra Operations: https://www.coursera.org/learn/data-manipulation/lecture/ 4JKs1/relational-algebra-operators-union-difference-selection
  26. Apache Geode? “… in-memory, distributed database with strong consistency built

    to support low latency transactional applications at extreme scale”
  27. Why Apache Geode? 31 5,700 train stations 4.5 million tickets

    per day 20 million daily users 1.4 billion page views per day 40,000 visits per second 7,000 stations 72,000 miles of track 23 million passengers daily 120,000 concurrent users 10,000 transactions per minute https://pivotal.io/big-data/case-study/distributed-in-memory-data-management-solution https://pivotal.io/big-data/case-study/scaling-online-sales-for-the-largest-railway-in-the-world-china-railway-corporation China Railway
  28. Geode Features 32 •  In-Memory Data Storage –  Over 100TB

    Memory –  JVM Heap + Off Heap •  Any Data Format –  Key-Value/Object Store •  ACID and JTA Compliant Transactions •  HA and Linear Scalability •  Strong Consistency •  Streaming and Event Processing –  Listeners –  Distributed Functions –  Continuous OQL Queries •  Multi-site / Inter-cluster •  Full Text Search (Lucene indexes) •  Embedded and Standalone •  Top Level Apache Project
  29. Apache Geode Concepts Cache Server (member) Cache Region 1 Region

    N Val Ke y v1 k1 v2 k2 … Cache - In-memory collection of Regions Region - consistent, distributed Map (key-value), Partitioned or Replicated CacheServer – process connected to the distributed system with created Cache Client Locator (member) Client –read and modify the content of the distributed system Locator – tracks system members and provides membership information … Listeners Functions Functions – distributed, concurrent data processing Listener – event handler. Registers for one or more events and notified when they occur
  30. Geode Topology Cache Server Cache Server Cache Server Cache Data

    Cache Data Cache Data Peer-to-Peer Cache Server Cache Server Cache Server Cache Data Cache Data Cache Data Client Local Cache pool Client-Server Cache Server Cache Server Gateway Sender … Cache Server Gateway Receiver Cache Server Cache Server Cache Data Cache Data Cache Data Cache Data Gateway Receiver Cache Server … Gateway Sender Cache Server Cache Server Cache Data Cache Data Cache Data Cache Data WAN Multi-site Boundary Multi-Site