Crates.io | datafusion-table-providers |
lib.rs | datafusion-table-providers |
version | 0.2.3 |
source | src |
created_at | 2024-09-06 12:34:06.780331 |
updated_at | 2024-10-23 03:10:28.722276 |
description | Extend the capabilities of DataFusion to support additional data sources via implementations of the `TableProvider` trait. |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/datafusion-contrib/datafusion-table-providers |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1365870 |
size | 1,542,452 |
Note: This is not an official Apache Software Foundation project.
The goal of this repo is to extend the capabilities of DataFusion to support additional data sources via implementations of the TableProvider
trait.
Many of the table providers in this repo are for querying data from other database systems. Those providers also integrate with the datafusion-federation
crate to allow for more efficient query execution, such as pushing down joins between multiple tables from the same database system, or efficiently implementing TopK style queries (SELECT * FROM table ORDER BY foo LIMIT 10
).
To use these table providers with efficient federation push-down, add the datafusion-federation
crate and create a DataFusion SessionContext
using the Federation optimizer rule and query planner with:
use datafusion::prelude::SessionContext;
let state = datafusion_federation::default_session_state();
let ctx = SessionContext::with_state(state);
// Register the specific table providers into ctx
// queries will now automatically be federated
Run the included examples to see how to use the table providers:
# Read from a table in a DuckDB file
cargo run --example duckdb --features duckdb
# Create an external table backed by DuckDB directly in DataFusion
cargo run --example duckdb_external_table --features duckdb
# Use the result of a DuckDB function call as the source of a table
cargo run --example duckdb_function --features duckdb
cargo run --example sqlite --features sqlite
In order to run the Postgres example, you need to have a Postgres server running. You can use the following command to start a Postgres server in a Docker container the example can use:
docker run --name postgres -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password -e POSTGRES_DB=postgres_db -p 5432:5432 -d postgres:16-alpine
# Wait for the Postgres server to start
sleep 30
# Create a table in the Postgres server and insert some data
docker exec -i postgres psql -U postgres -d postgres_db <<EOF
CREATE TABLE companies (
id INT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(100)
);
INSERT INTO companies (id, name) VALUES (1, 'Acme Corporation');
EOF
cargo run --example postgres --features postgres
In order to run the MySQL example, you need to have a MySQL server running. You can use the following command to start a MySQL server in a Docker container the example can use:
docker run --name mysql -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=password -e MYSQL_DATABASE=mysql_db -p 3306:3306 -d mysql:9.0
# Wait for the MySQL server to start
sleep 30
# Create a table in the MySQL server and insert some data
docker exec -i mysql mysql -uroot -ppassword mysql_db <<EOF
CREATE TABLE companies (
id INT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(100)
);
INSERT INTO companies (id, name) VALUES (1, 'Acme Corporation');
EOF
cargo run --example mysql --features mysql
brew install roapi
# or
#cargo install --locked --git https://github.com/roapi/roapi --branch main --bins roapi
roapi -t taxi=https://d37ci6vzurychx.cloudfront.net/trip-data/yellow_tripdata_2024-01.parquet &
cargo run --example flight-sql --features flight