Crates.io | arrow-udf |
lib.rs | arrow-udf |
version | 0.5.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2024-01-13 07:25:03.172546 |
updated_at | 2024-10-10 06:01:45.847873 |
description | User-defined function framework for arrow-rs. |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/risingwavelabs/arrow-udf |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1098355 |
size | 87,237 |
Generate RecordBatch
functions from scalar functions painlessly with the #[function] macro.
Add the following lines to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
arrow-udf = "0.3"
Define your functions with the #[function]
macro:
use arrow_udf::function;
#[function("gcd(int32, int32) -> int32", output = "eval_gcd")]
fn gcd(mut a: i32, mut b: i32) -> i32 {
while b != 0 {
(a, b) = (b, a % b);
}
a
}
The generated function can be named with the optional output
parameter.
If not specified, it will be named arbitrarily like gcd_int32_int32_int32_eval
.
You can then call the generated function on a RecordBatch
:
let input: RecordBatch = ...;
let output: RecordBatch = eval_gcd(&input).unwrap();
If you print the input and output batch, it will be like this:
input output
+----+----+-----+
| a | b | gcd |
+----+----+-----+
| 15 | 25 | 5 |
| | 1 | |
+----+----+-----+
If your function returns a Result
:
use arrow_udf::function;
#[function("div(int32, int32) -> int32", output = "eval_div")]
fn div(x: i32, y: i32) -> Result<i32, &'static str> {
x.checked_div(y).ok_or("division by zero")
}
The output batch will contain a column of errors. Error rows will be filled with NULL in the output column, and the error message will be stored in the error column.
input output
+----+----+-----+------------------+
| a | b | div | error |
+----+----+-----+------------------+
| 15 | 25 | 0 | |
| 5 | 0 | | division by zero |
+----+----+-----+------------------+
You can define a struct type with the StructType
trait:
use arrow_udf::types::StructType;
#[derive(StructType)]
struct Point {
x: f64,
y: f64,
}
Then you can use the struct type in function signatures:
use arrow_udf::function;
#[function("point(float64, float64) -> struct Point", output = "eval_point")]
fn point(x: f64, y: f64) -> Point {
Point { x, y }
}
Currently struct types are only supported as return types.
If you want to lookup functions by signature, you can enable the global_registry
feature:
[dependencies]
arrow-udf = { version = "0.3", features = ["global_registry"] }
Each function will be registered in a global registry when it is defined.
Then you can lookup functions from the REGISTRY
:
use arrow_schema::{DataType, Field};
use arrow_udf::sig::REGISTRY;
let int32 = Field::new("int32", DataType::Int32, true);
let sig = REGISTRY.get("gcd", &[int32.clone(), int32.clone()], &int32).expect("gcd function");
let output = sig.function.as_scalar().unwrap()(&input).unwrap();
See the example and the documentation for the #[function] macro for more details.
See also the blog post: Simplifying SQL Function Implementation with Rust Procedural Macro.