I'm just starting to experiment with AWS glue and I've successfully been able to pull data from my Aurora MySQL environment into my PostgreSQL DB. When the crawler creates the data catalog for the table I'm experimenting with, all the columns are out of order, and then when the job creates the destination table, the columns again are out of order, I'm assuming because it's created based off of what the crawler generated. How can I make the table structure in the catalog match what's in the source DB?
You can simply open the tabke that create by crawler then click on "edit schema", click on the number at the start of each row and change them, that are the order number of the rows.
Related
I am adding a new file in parquet format which is created by a Glue Databrew in my S3 folder. The new file has the same schema as the previous file. But when I am running the Crawler for the 2nd time it is neither updating the table nor creating a new one in the data catalog. Also when I am crawling both the files together, both of them are getting added.
Log File is giving the following information:
INFO : Created partitions with values [[New file name]] for table
BENCHMARK : Finished writing to Catalog
I have tried with and without "Create a single schema for each S3 path". But the crawler is not updating the table with the new file. Sooner I will add new files on a daily basis to do my analysis. Any solution?
The best way to approach this issue in my opinion is to use AWS DataBrew output to Data Catalog directly. Data Catalog can be updated either by the crawler or by DataBrew directly but the recommended practice is that you employ any one of those mechanisms not both.
Can you try running the job with output as your data catalog and let Databrew manage your catalog? It should update your catalog table with right data/files.
Got this error when setting up new scheduled query.
BigQuery scheduled query: Cannot create a transfer in >
JURISDICTION_US when destination dataset is located in >
REGION_EUROPE_NORTH_1
I try schedule query from Query editor > Schedule query.
Location in query setting and destination table location are both "europe-north-1".
Scheduled query not supports cross-region query.
Is table JURISDICTION_US's region is europe_north_1 too?
The table seems to be in US just by name..
You should check both table's region(queried table and destination table) before run scheduled query.
Refer here to get information about scheduled query support region.
If both table's regions are different, you need to migrate one to the other.
Refer how to moving bigquery data between locations to get guide for migration.
I'm working with AWS glue and many files on s3, with new files appended every day. I try to create and run a crawler to deduce a schema of those csv files. Instead of just one data catalog table with schema, crawler creates many tables (even with Create a single schema for each S3 path option selected), which means that crawler recognize different schemas and can't combine them into one. But I need just one table in data catalog for all those files!
So I created separate data catalog table manually, and when I use this table with glue job, none of the s3 csv files are processed. I guess that is because every time crawler runs, it checks for new files and partitions (and in good case of single schema table we can see those files and partitions by clicking on View partitions button in Tables).
So in here there is way to update manually created table with a crawler, I followed it with a hope that crawler will not change data types for columns that I selected, but update list of files and partitions for glue job to process later:
You might want to create AWS Glue Data Catalog tables manually and then keep them updated with AWS Glue crawlers. Crawlers running on a schedule can add new partitions and update the tables with any schema changes. This also applies to tables migrated from an Apache Hive metastore.
To do this, when you define a crawler, instead of specifying one or more data stores as the source of a crawl, you specify one or more existing Data Catalog tables. The crawler then crawls the data stores specified by the catalog tables. In this case, no new tables are created; instead, your manually created tables are updated.
It doesn't happen for some reason, in crawler log I see this:
INFO : Some files do not match the schema detected. Remove or exclude the following files from the crawler (truncated to first 200 files):
bucket1/customer/dt=2020-02-26/delta_20200226_080101.csv
INFO : Multiple tables are found under location bucket1/customer/. Table customer is skipped.
But there is no "Exclude patterns" option to exclude that file when crawler uses existing data catalog table, documentation says that in this case "The crawler then crawls the data stores specified by the catalog tables".
And crawler doesn't add any partitions or files to my table.
Is there a way to update my manually created table with new files from s3?
Considering your crawler is detecting different schemas, it will continue to do the same no matter what option I choose. You can get it to use the table definition from the table for all the partitions and then only log changes to avoid updating the table schema. But if there is a difference in schema for the files , I’m not sure if your queries will work.
Another option would be to add partitions using boto3 for your s3 path. I can get the table schema using the get table function and then create a partition in glue with that table schema
I don't know why, but the crawler I created can't update list of files and partitions for glue job to process later, it skips my manually created data catalog table, I see it in the cloudwatch log. To solve this problem, I needed to add repair table query into my glue script, so it does what crawler is supposed to do (and I disabled the crawler itself, so it doesn't changes my manually created table and doesn't create many tables for individual csv files and partitions), before actual ETL process:
import boto3
...
# Athena query part
client = boto3.client('athena', region_name='us-east-2')
data_catalog_table = "customer"
db = "inner_customer" # glue data_catalog db, not Postgres DB
# this supposed to update all partitions for data_catalog_table, so glue job can upload new file data into DB
q = "MSCK REPAIR TABLE "+data_catalog_table
# output of the query goes to s3 file normally
output = "s3://bucket_to_store_query_results/results/"
response = client.start_query_execution(
QueryString=q,
QueryExecutionContext={
'Database': db
},
ResultConfiguration={
'OutputLocation': output,
}
)`
After that query "MSCK REPAIR TABLE customer" executes, it writes to s3://bucket_to_store_query_results/results/ a xxx-xxx-xxx.txt file with content like this:
Partitions not in metastore: customer:dt=2020-03-28 customer:dt=2020-03-29 customer:dt=2020-03-30
Repair: Added partition to metastore customer:dt=2020-03-28
Repair: Added partition to metastore customer:dt=2020-03-29
Repair: Added partition to metastore customer:dt=2020-03-30
And if I open Glue->Tables-> select customer table, then click on "View partitions" button on the right top of the page, I see all my partitions from the s3 bucket. After that part the glue job continues as before. I understand that "repair table" query hack is not really optimal, and may be will change it to something more sophisticated, like described in here.
We have a very large number of folders and files in S3, all under one particular folder, and we want to crawl for all the CSV files, and then query them from one table in Athena. The CSV files all have the same schema. The problem is that the crawler is generating a table for every file, instead of one table. Crawler configurations have a checkbox option to "Create a single schema for each S3 path" but this doesn't seem to do anything.
Is what I need possible? Thanks.
Glue crawlers claims to solve many problems, but in fact solves few. If you're slightly outside the scope of what they designed for you're out of luck. There might be a way to configure it to do what you want, but in my experience trying to make Glue crawlers do things that aren't perfectly aligned with it is not worth the effort.
It sounds like you have a good idea of what the schema of your data is. When that is the case Glue crawlers also provide very little value. You probably have a better idea of what the schema should look than Glue will ever be able to figure out.
I suggest that you manually create the table, and write a one off script that lists all the partition locations on S3 that you want to include in the table and generate ALTER TABLE ADD PARTITION … SQL, or Glue API calls to add those partitions to the table.
To keep the table up to date when new partition locations are added, have a look at this answer for guidance: https://stackoverflow.com/a/56439429/1109
One way to do what you want is to use just one of the tables created by the crawler as an example, and create a similar table manually (in AWS Glue->Tables->Add tables, or in Athena itself, with
CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE `tablename`(
`column1` string,
`column2` string, ...
using existing table as an example, you can see the query used to create that table in Athena when you go to Database -> select your data base from Glue Data Catalog, then click on 3 dots in front of the one "automatically created by crawler table" that you choose as an example, and click on "Generate Create table DDL" option. It will generate a big query for you, modify it as necessary (I believe you need to look at LOCATION and TBLPROPERTIES parts, mostly).
When you run this modified query in Athena, a new table will appear in Glue data catalog. But it will not have any information about your s3 files and partitions, and crawler most likely will not update metastore info for you. So you can in Athena run "MSCK REPAIR TABLE tablename;" query (it's not very efficient, but works for me), and it will add missing file information, in the Result tab you will see something like (in case you use partitions on s3, of course):
Partitions not in metastore: tablename:dt=2020-02-03 tablename:dt=2020-02-04
Repair: Added partition to metastore tablename:dt=2020-02-03
Repair: Added partition to metastore tablename:dt=2020-02-04
After that you should be able to run your Athena queries.
What I understand from the AWS Glue docs is a craweler will help crawl and discover new data. However, I noticed that once I crawled once, if new data goes into S3, the data is actually already discovered when I query the data catalog from Athena for example. So, can I say I do not need a crawler to crawl everytime new data is added, unless there are new schemas?
In fact, if I know the schema of the files, I can just manually create the table and do without a crawler, am I correct?
If data is partitioned by some keys (placed in sub-folders, like /data/year=2018/month=11/day=2) then you need a crawler to register newly added partitions (ie. /day=3) in Data Catalog to be able to query it via Athena.
However, if data is not partitined or comes into already registered partitions then there is no need to run a crawler.
Alternatively to runnig a crawler you can discover and register new partitions by running Athena command MSCK REPAIR TABLE <table> or registering them manually.
The easiest way to create a table in Data Catalog is running a crawler. But if you know schema and have patience to compose CREATE TABLE Athena query or fill all fields via AWS Glue console then you can go that way as well.
If you have the schema then you don't need to use the crawler and you might get better results (the crawler assumes partition columns are strings for example).
As Yuriy says, remember to run MSCK REPAIR TABLE or register new partitions manually.
MSCK can time out if you've added a lot of partitions. If it does, keep running it until it completes normally.