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Ingestion spec reference

All ingestion methods use ingestion tasks to load data into Druid. Streaming ingestion uses ongoing supervisors that run and supervise a set of tasks over time. Native batch and Hadoop-based ingestion use a one-time task. Other than with SQL-based ingestion, use an ingestion spec to configure your ingestion.

Ingestion specs consists of three main components:

Example ingestion spec for task type index_parallel (native batch):

{
"type": "index_parallel",
"spec": {
"dataSchema": {
"dataSource": "wikipedia",
"timestampSpec": {
"column": "timestamp",
"format": "auto"
},
"dimensionsSpec": {
"dimensions": [
"page",
"language",
{ "type": "long", "name": "userId" }
]
},
"metricsSpec": [
{ "type": "count", "name": "count" },
{ "type": "doubleSum", "name": "bytes_added_sum", "fieldName": "bytes_added" },
{ "type": "doubleSum", "name": "bytes_deleted_sum", "fieldName": "bytes_deleted" }
],
"granularitySpec": {
"segmentGranularity": "day",
"queryGranularity": "none",
"intervals": [
"2013-08-31/2013-09-01"
]
}
},
"ioConfig": {
"type": "index_parallel",
"inputSource": {
"type": "local",
"baseDir": "examples/indexing/",
"filter": "wikipedia_data.json"
},
"inputFormat": {
"type": "json",
"flattenSpec": {
"useFieldDiscovery": true,
"fields": [
{ "type": "path", "name": "userId", "expr": "$.user.id" }
]
}
}
},
"tuningConfig": {
"type": "index_parallel"
}
}
}

The specific options supported by these sections will depend on the ingestion method you have chosen. For more examples, refer to the documentation for each ingestion method.

You can also load data visually, without the need to write an ingestion spec, using the "Load data" functionality available in Druid's web console. Druid's visual data loader supports Kafka, Kinesis, and native batch mode.

dataSchema

info

The dataSchema spec has been changed in 0.17.0. The new spec is supported by all ingestion methods except for Hadoop ingestion. See the Legacy dataSchema spec for the old spec.

The dataSchema is a holder for the following components:

An example dataSchema is:

"dataSchema": {
"dataSource": "wikipedia",
"timestampSpec": {
"column": "timestamp",
"format": "auto"
},
"dimensionsSpec": {
"dimensions": [
"page",
"language",
{ "type": "long", "name": "userId" }
]
},
"metricsSpec": [
{ "type": "count", "name": "count" },
{ "type": "doubleSum", "name": "bytes_added_sum", "fieldName": "bytes_added" },
{ "type": "doubleSum", "name": "bytes_deleted_sum", "fieldName": "bytes_deleted" }
],
"granularitySpec": {
"segmentGranularity": "day",
"queryGranularity": "none",
"intervals": [
"2013-08-31/2013-09-01"
]
}
}

dataSource

The dataSource is located in dataSchemadataSource and is simply the name of the datasource that data will be written to. An example dataSource is:

"dataSource": "my-first-datasource"

timestampSpec

The timestampSpec is located in dataSchematimestampSpec and is responsible for configuring the primary timestamp. An example timestampSpec is:

"timestampSpec": {
"column": "timestamp",
"format": "auto"
}
info

Conceptually, after input data records are read, Druid applies ingestion spec components in a particular order: first flattenSpec (if any), then timestampSpec, then transformSpec, and finally dimensionsSpec and metricsSpec. Keep this in mind when writing your ingestion spec.

A timestampSpec can have the following components:

FieldDescriptionDefault
columnInput row field to read the primary timestamp from.

Regardless of the name of this input field, the primary timestamp will always be stored as a column named __time in your Druid datasource.
timestamp
formatTimestamp format. Options are:
  • iso: ISO8601 with 'T' separator, like "2000-01-01T01:02:03.456"
  • posix: seconds since epoch
  • millis: milliseconds since epoch
  • micro: microseconds since epoch
  • nano: nanoseconds since epoch
  • auto: automatically detects ISO (either 'T' or space separator) or millis format
  • any Joda DateTimeFormat string
auto
missingValueTimestamp to use for input records that have a null or missing timestamp column. Should be in ISO8601 format, like "2000-01-01T01:02:03.456", even if you have specified something else for format. Since Druid requires a primary timestamp, this setting can be useful for ingesting datasets that do not have any per-record timestamps at all.none

You can use the timestamp in a expression as __time because Druid parses the timestampSpec before applying transforms. You can also set the expression name to __time to replace the value of the timestamp.

Treat __time as a millisecond timestamp: the number of milliseconds since Jan 1, 1970 at midnight UTC.

dimensionsSpec

The dimensionsSpec is located in dataSchemadimensionsSpec and is responsible for configuring dimensions.

You can either manually specify the dimensions or take advantage of schema auto-discovery where you allow Druid to infer all or some of the schema for your data. This means that you don't have to explicitly specify your dimensions and their type.

To use schema auto-discovery, set useSchemaDiscovery to true.

Alternatively, you can use the string-based schemaless ingestion where any discovered dimensions are treated as strings. To do so, leave useSchemaDiscovery set to false (default). Then, set the dimensions list to empty or set the includeAllDimensions property to true.

The following dimensionsSpec example uses schema auto-discovery ("useSchemaDiscovery": true) in conjunction with explicitly defined dimensions to have Druid infer some of the schema for the data:

"dimensionsSpec" : {
"dimensions": [
"page",
"language",
{ "type": "long", "name": "userId" }
],
"dimensionExclusions" : [],
"spatialDimensions" : [],
"useSchemaDiscovery": true
}
info

Conceptually, after input data records are read, Druid applies ingestion spec components in a particular order: first flattenSpec (if any), then timestampSpec, then transformSpec, and finally dimensionsSpec and metricsSpec. Keep this in mind when writing your ingestion spec.

A dimensionsSpec can have the following components:

FieldDescriptionDefault
dimensionsA list of dimension names or objects. You cannot include the same column in both dimensions and dimensionExclusions.

If dimensions and spatialDimensions are both null or empty arrays, Druid treats all columns other than timestamp or metrics that do not appear in dimensionExclusions as String-typed dimension columns. See inclusions and exclusions for details.

As a best practice, put the most frequently filtered dimensions at the beginning of the dimensions list. In this case, it would also be good to consider partitioning by those same dimensions.
[]
dimensionExclusionsThe names of dimensions to exclude from ingestion. Only names are supported here, not objects.

This list is only used if the dimensions and spatialDimensions lists are both null or empty arrays; otherwise it is ignored. See inclusions and exclusions below for details.
[]
spatialDimensionsAn array of spatial dimensions.[]
includeAllDimensionsNote that this field only applies to string-based schema discovery where Druid ingests dimensions it discovers as strings. This is different from schema auto-discovery where Druid infers the type for data. You can set includeAllDimensions to true to ingest both explicit dimensions in the dimensions field and other dimensions that the ingestion task discovers from input data. In this case, the explicit dimensions will appear first in the order that you specify them, and the dimensions dynamically discovered will come after. This flag can be useful especially with auto schema discovery using flattenSpec. If this is not set and the dimensions field is not empty, Druid will ingest only explicit dimensions. If this is not set and the dimensions field is empty, all discovered dimensions will be ingested.false
useSchemaDiscoveryConfigure Druid to use schema auto-discovery to discover some or all of the dimensions and types for your data. For any dimensions that aren't a uniform type, Druid ingests them as JSON. You can use this for native batch or streaming ingestion.false

Dimension objects

Each dimension in the dimensions list can either be a name or an object. Providing a name is equivalent to providing a string type dimension object with the given name, e.g. "page" is equivalent to {"name": "page", "type": "string"}.

Dimension objects can have the following components:

FieldDescriptionDefault
typeEither auto, string, long, float, double, or json. For the auto type, Druid determines the most appropriate type for the dimension and assigns one of the following: STRING, ARRAY<STRING>, LONG, ARRAY<LONG>, DOUBLE, ARRAY<DOUBLE>, or COMPLEX<json> columns, all sharing a common 'nested' format. When Druid infers the schema with schema auto-discovery, the type is auto.string
nameThe name of the dimension. This will be used as the field name to read from input records, as well as the column name stored in generated segments.

Note that you can use a transformSpec if you want to rename columns during ingestion time.
none (required)
createBitmapIndexFor string typed dimensions, whether or not bitmap indexes should be created for the column in generated segments. Creating a bitmap index requires more storage, but speeds up certain kinds of filtering (especially equality and prefix filtering). Only supported for string typed dimensions.true
multiValueHandlingFor string typed dimensions, specifies the type of handling for multi-value fields. Possible values are array (ingest string arrays as-is), sorted_array (sort string arrays during ingestion), and sorted_set (sort and de-duplicate string arrays during ingestion). This parameter is ignored for types other than string.sorted_array

Inclusions and exclusions

Druid will interpret a dimensionsSpec in two possible ways: normal or schemaless.

Normal interpretation occurs when either dimensions or spatialDimensions is non-empty. In this case, the combination of the two lists will be taken as the set of dimensions to be ingested, and the list of dimensionExclusions will be ignored.

info

The following description of schemaless refers to string-based schemaless where Druid treats dimensions it discovers as strings. We recommend you use schema auto-discovery instead where Druid infers the type for the dimension. For more information, see dimensionsSpec.

Schemaless interpretation occurs when both dimensions and spatialDimensions are empty or null. In this case, the set of dimensions is determined in the following way:

  1. First, start from the set of all root-level fields from the input record, as determined by the inputFormat. "Root-level" includes all fields at the top level of a data structure, but does not included fields nested within maps or lists. To extract these, you must use a flattenSpec. All fields of non-nested data formats, such as CSV and delimited text, are considered root-level.
  2. If a flattenSpec is being used, the set of root-level fields includes any fields generated by the flattenSpec. The useFieldDiscovery parameter determines whether the original root-level fields will be retained or discarded.
  3. Any field listed in dimensionExclusions is excluded.
  4. The field listed as column in the timestampSpec is excluded.
  5. Any field used as an input to an aggregator from the metricsSpec is excluded.
  6. Any field with the same name as an aggregator from the metricsSpec is excluded.
  7. All other fields are ingested as string typed dimensions with the default settings.

Additionally, if you have empty columns that you want to include in the string-based schemaless ingestion, you'll need to include the context parameter storeEmptyColumns and set it to true.

info

Note: Fields generated by a transformSpec are not currently considered candidates for schemaless dimension interpretation.

metricsSpec

The metricsSpec is located in dataSchemametricsSpec and is a list of aggregators to apply at ingestion time. This is most useful when rollup is enabled, since it's how you configure ingestion-time aggregation.

An example metricsSpec is:

"metricsSpec": [
{ "type": "count", "name": "count" },
{ "type": "doubleSum", "name": "bytes_added_sum", "fieldName": "bytes_added" },
{ "type": "doubleSum", "name": "bytes_deleted_sum", "fieldName": "bytes_deleted" }
]
info

Generally, when rollup is disabled, you should have an empty metricsSpec (because without rollup, Druid does not do any ingestion-time aggregation, so there is little reason to include an ingestion-time aggregator). However, in some cases, it can still make sense to define metrics: for example, if you want to create a complex column as a way of pre-computing part of an approximate aggregation, this can only be done by defining a metric in a metricsSpec.

granularitySpec

The granularitySpec is located in dataSchemagranularitySpec and is responsible for configuring the following operations:

  1. Partitioning a datasource into time chunks (via segmentGranularity).
  2. Truncating the timestamp, if desired (via queryGranularity).
  3. Specifying which time chunks of segments should be created, for batch ingestion (via intervals).
  4. Specifying whether ingestion-time rollup should be used or not (via rollup).

Other than rollup, these operations are all based on the primary timestamp.

An example granularitySpec is:

"granularitySpec": {
"segmentGranularity": "day",
"queryGranularity": "none",
"intervals": [
"2013-08-31/2013-09-01"
],
"rollup": true
}

A granularitySpec can have the following components:

FieldDescriptionDefault
typeuniformuniform
segmentGranularityTime chunking granularity for this datasource. Multiple segments can be created per time chunk. For example, when set to day, the events of the same day fall into the same time chunk which can be optionally further partitioned into multiple segments based on other configurations and input size. Any granularity can be provided here. Note that all segments in the same time chunk should have the same segment granularity.

Avoid WEEK granularity for data partitioning because weeks don't align neatly with months and years, making it difficult to change partitioning by coarser granularity. Instead, opt for other partitioning options such as DAY or MONTH, which offer more flexibility.
day
queryGranularityThe resolution of timestamp storage within each segment. This must be equal to, or finer, than segmentGranularity. This will be the finest granularity that you can query at and still receive sensible results, but note that you can still query at anything coarser than this granularity. E.g., a value of minute will mean that records will be stored at minutely granularity, and can be sensibly queried at any multiple of minutes (including minutely, 5-minutely, hourly, etc).

Any granularity can be provided here. Use none to store timestamps as-is, without any truncation. Note that rollup will be applied if it is set even when the queryGranularity is set to none.
none
rollupWhether to use ingestion-time rollup or not. Note that rollup is still effective even when queryGranularity is set to none. Your data will be rolled up if they have the exactly same timestamp.true
intervalsA list of intervals defining time chunks for segments. Specify interval values using ISO8601 format. For example, ["2021-12-06T21:27:10+00:00/2021-12-07T00:00:00+00:00"]. If you omit the time, the time defaults to "00:00:00".

Druid breaks the list up and rounds off the list values based on the segmentGranularity.

If null or not provided, batch ingestion tasks generally determine which time chunks to output based on the timestamps found in the input data.

If specified, batch ingestion tasks may be able to skip a determining-partitions phase, which can result in faster ingestion. Batch ingestion tasks may also be able to request all their locks up-front instead of one by one. Batch ingestion tasks throw away any records with timestamps outside of the specified intervals.

Ignored for any form of streaming ingestion.
null

transformSpec

The transformSpec is located in dataSchematransformSpec and is responsible for transforming and filtering records during ingestion time. It is optional. An example transformSpec is:

"transformSpec": {
"transforms": [
{ "type": "expression", "name": "countryUpper", "expression": "upper(country)" }
],
"filter": {
"type": "selector",
"dimension": "country",
"value": "San Serriffe"
}
}
info

Conceptually, after input data records are read, Druid applies ingestion spec components in a particular order: first flattenSpec (if any), then timestampSpec, then transformSpec, and finally dimensionsSpec and metricsSpec. Keep this in mind when writing your ingestion spec.

Transforms

The transforms list allows you to specify a set of expressions to evaluate on top of input data. Each transform has a "name" which can be referred to by your dimensionsSpec, metricsSpec, etc.

If a transform has the same name as a field in an input row, then it will shadow the original field. Transforms that shadow fields may still refer to the fields they shadow. This can be used to transform a field "in-place".

Transforms do have some limitations. They can only refer to fields present in the actual input rows; in particular, they cannot refer to other transforms. And they cannot remove fields, only add them. However, they can shadow a field with another field containing all nulls, which will act similarly to removing the field.

Druid currently includes one kind of built-in transform, the expression transform. It has the following syntax:

{
"type": "expression",
"name": "<output name>",
"expression": "<expr>"
}

The expression is a Druid query expression.

info

Conceptually, after input data records are read, Druid applies ingestion spec components in a particular order: first flattenSpec (if any), then timestampSpec, then transformSpec, and finally dimensionsSpec and metricsSpec. Keep this in mind when writing your ingestion spec.

Filter

The filter conditionally filters input rows during ingestion. Only rows that pass the filter will be ingested. Any of Druid's standard query filters can be used. Note that within a transformSpec, the transforms are applied before the filter, so the filter can refer to a transform.

Legacy dataSchema spec

info

The dataSchema spec has been changed in 0.17.0. The new spec is supported by all ingestion methods except for Hadoop ingestion. See dataSchema for the new spec.

The legacy dataSchema spec has below two more components in addition to the ones listed in the dataSchema section above.

parser (Deprecated)

In legacy dataSchema, the parser is located in the dataSchemaparser and is responsible for configuring a wide variety of items related to parsing input records. The parser is deprecated and it is highly recommended to use inputFormat instead. For details about inputFormat and supported parser types, see the "Data formats" page.

For details about major components of the parseSpec, refer to their subsections:

An example parser is:

"parser": {
"type": "string",
"parseSpec": {
"format": "json",
"flattenSpec": {
"useFieldDiscovery": true,
"fields": [
{ "type": "path", "name": "userId", "expr": "$.user.id" }
]
},
"timestampSpec": {
"column": "timestamp",
"format": "auto"
},
"dimensionsSpec": {
"dimensions": [
"page",
"language",
{ "type": "long", "name": "userId" }
]
}
}
}

flattenSpec

In the legacy dataSchema, the flattenSpec is located in dataSchemaparserparseSpecflattenSpec and is responsible for bridging the gap between potentially nested input data (such as JSON, Avro, etc) and Druid's flat data model. See Flatten spec for more details.

ioConfig

The ioConfig influences how data is read from a source system, such as Apache Kafka, Amazon S3, a mounted filesystem, or any other supported source system. The inputFormat property applies to all ingestion method except for Hadoop ingestion. The Hadoop ingestion still uses the parser in the legacy dataSchema. The rest of ioConfig is specific to each individual ingestion method. An example ioConfig to read JSON data is:

"ioConfig": {
"type": "<ingestion-method-specific type code>",
"inputFormat": {
"type": "json"
},
...
}

For more details, see the documentation provided by each ingestion method.

tuningConfig

Tuning properties are specified in a tuningConfig, which goes at the top level of an ingestion spec. Some properties apply to all ingestion methods, but most are specific to each individual ingestion method. An example tuningConfig that sets all of the shared, common properties to their defaults is:

"tuningConfig": {
"type": "<ingestion-method-specific type code>",
"maxRowsInMemory": 1000000,
"maxBytesInMemory": <one-sixth of JVM memory>,
"indexSpec": {
"bitmap": { "type": "roaring" },
"dimensionCompression": "lz4",
"metricCompression": "lz4",
"longEncoding": "longs"
},
<other ingestion-method-specific properties>
}
FieldDescriptionDefault
typeEach ingestion method has its own tuning type code. You must specify the type code that matches your ingestion method. Common options are index, hadoop, kafka, and kinesis.
maxRowsInMemoryThe maximum number of records to store in memory before persisting to disk. Note that this is the number of rows post-rollup, and so it may not be equal to the number of input records. Ingested records will be persisted to disk when either maxRowsInMemory or maxBytesInMemory are reached (whichever happens first).1000000
maxBytesInMemoryThe maximum aggregate size of records, in bytes, to store in the JVM heap before persisting. This is based on a rough estimate of memory usage. Ingested records will be persisted to disk when either maxRowsInMemory or maxBytesInMemory are reached (whichever happens first). maxBytesInMemory also includes heap usage of artifacts created from intermediary persists. This means that after every persist, the amount of maxBytesInMemory until the next persist will decrease. If the sum of bytes of all intermediary persisted artifacts exceeds maxBytesInMemory the task fails.

Setting maxBytesInMemory to -1 disables this check, meaning Druid will rely entirely on maxRowsInMemory to control memory usage. Setting it to zero means the default value will be used (one-sixth of JVM heap size).

Note that the estimate of memory usage is designed to be an overestimate, and can be especially high when using complex ingest-time aggregators, including sketches. If this causes your indexing workloads to persist to disk too often, you can set maxBytesInMemory to -1 and rely on maxRowsInMemory instead.
One-sixth of max JVM heap size
skipBytesInMemoryOverheadCheckThe calculation of maxBytesInMemory takes into account overhead objects created during ingestion and each intermediate persist. Setting this to true can exclude the bytes of these overhead objects from maxBytesInMemory check.false
indexSpecDefines segment storage format options to use at indexing time.See indexSpec for more information.
indexSpecForIntermediatePersistsDefines segment storage format options to use at indexing time for intermediate persisted temporary segments.See indexSpec for more information.
Other propertiesEach ingestion method has its own list of additional tuning properties. See the documentation for each method for a full list: Kafka indexing service, Kinesis indexing service, Native batch, and Hadoop-based.

indexSpec

The indexSpec object can include the following properties:

FieldDescriptionDefault
bitmapCompression format for bitmap indexes. Should be a JSON object with type set to roaring or concise.{"type": "roaring"}
dimensionCompressionCompression format for dimension columns. Options are lz4, lzf, zstd, or uncompressed.lz4
stringDictionaryEncodingEncoding format for STRING value dictionaries used by STRING and COMPLEX<json> columns.

Example to enable front coding: {"type":"frontCoded", "bucketSize": 4}
bucketSize is the number of values to place in a bucket to perform delta encoding. Must be a power of 2, maximum is 128. Defaults to 4.
formatVersion can specify older versions for backwards compatibility during rolling upgrades, valid options are 0 and 1. Defaults to 0 for backwards compatibility.

See Front coding for more information.
{"type":"utf8"}
metricCompressionCompression format for primitive type metric columns. Options are lz4, lzf, zstd, uncompressed, or none (which is more efficient than uncompressed, but not supported by older versions of Druid).lz4
longEncodingEncoding format for long-typed columns. Applies regardless of whether they are dimensions or metrics. Options are auto or longs. auto encodes the values using offset or lookup table depending on column cardinality, and store them with variable size. longs stores the value as-is with 8 bytes each.longs
jsonCompressionCompression format to use for nested column raw data. Options are lz4, lzf, zstd, or uncompressed.lz4
Front coding

Front coding is an experimental feature starting in version 25.0. Front coding is an incremental encoding strategy that Druid can use to store STRING and COMPLEX<json> columns. It allows Druid to create smaller UTF-8 encoded segments with very little performance cost.

You can enable front coding with all types of ingestion. For information on defining an indexSpec in a query context, see SQL-based ingestion reference.

info

Front coding was originally introduced in Druid 25.0, and an improved 'version 1' was introduced in Druid 26.0, with typically faster read speed and smaller storage size. The current recommendation is to enable it in a staging environment and fully test your use case before using in production. By default, segments created with front coding enabled in Druid 26.0 are backwards compatible with Druid 25.0, but those created with Druid 26.0 or 25.0 are not compatible with Druid versions older than 25.0. If using front coding in Druid 25.0 and upgrading to Druid 26.0, the formatVersion defaults to 0 to keep writing out the older format to enable seamless downgrades to Druid 25.0, and then later is recommended to be changed to 1 once determined that rollback is not necessary.

Beyond these properties, each ingestion method has its own specific tuning properties. See the documentation for each ingestion method for details.