I don't remember deprecating it, but I've always recommended against using it because of the assumptions it requires.
Those assumptions are routinely violated by processing engines and users that expect to be able to drop files into directories and see the results in their table. Since this was a feature without guard rails or documentation to explain how to safely use it, I think it is a good idea to steer people away from it and deprecate it unless someone wants to address those concerns. Now, I think there are much better alternatives (thanks Jacques!) so I probably wouldn't recommend spending time on bringing this up to date and making it marginally safer. On Tue, Sep 29, 2020 at 11:38 AM Julien Le Dem <julien.le...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Jason, > Thank you for bringing this up. > A correctness issue would only come up when more parquet files are > added to the same folder or files are modified. Historically folders have > been considered immutables and the summary file reflects the metadata for > all the files in the folder. The summary file contains the names of the > files it is for, so extra files in the folder can also be detected and > dealt with at read time without correctness issues. > Like you mentioned the read path allows for those files to not be present. > I think a better solution than deprecating would be to have a switch > allowing turning off those summary files when one wants to be able to not > respect the immutable folder contact. > Projects like Iceberg can elect to not produce them and allow modifying > and adding more files to the same folder without creating correctness > problems. > I would be in favor of removing those Deprecated annotations and document > the use of a switch to optionally not produce the summary files when > electing to modify folders. > I'm curious to hear from Ryan about this who did the change in the first > place. > Best, > Julien > > On Fri, Sep 25, 2020 at 3:06 PM Jason Altekruse <altekruseja...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hy Jacques, >> >> It's good to hear from you, thanks for the pointer to Iceberg. I am aware >> of it as well as other similar projects, including Delta Lake, which my >> team is already using. Unfortunately even with Delta, there is only a >> placeholder in the project currently where they will be tracking file >> level >> statistics at some point in the future, we are also evaluating the >> possibility of implementing this in delta itself. While it and Iceberg >> aren't quite the same architecturally, I think there is enough overlap >> that >> it might be a bit awkward to use the two in conjunction with one another. >> >> From my testing so far, it appears that delta pretty easily can operate >> alongside these older metadata summary files without the two fighting with >> each other. Delta is responsible for maintaining a transactionally >> consistent list of files, and this file can coexist in the directory just >> to allow efficient pruning on the driver side on a best effort basis, as >> it >> can gracefully fall back to the FS if it is missing a newer file. >> >> We are somewhat nervous about depending on something that is marked >> deprecated, but as it is so close to a "just works" state for our needs, I >> was hoping to confirm with the community if there were other risks I was >> missing. >> >> Jason Altekruse >> >> On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 6:29 PM Jacques Nadeau <jacq...@apache.org> >> wrote: >> >> > Hey Jason, >> > >> > I'd suggest you look at Apache Iceberg. It is a much more mature way of >> > handling metadata efficiency issues and provides a substantial superset >> of >> > functionality over the old metadata cache files. >> > >> > On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 4:16 PM Jason Altekruse < >> altekruseja...@gmail.com> >> > wrote: >> > >> > > Hello again, >> > > >> > > I took a look through the mail archives and found a little more >> > information >> > > in this and a few other threads. >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > >> http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox//parquet-dev/201707.mbox/%3CCAO4re1k8-bZZZWBRuLCnm1V7AoJE1fdunSuBn%2BecRuFGPgcXnA%40mail.gmail.com%3E >> > > >> > > While I do understand the benefits for federating out the reading of >> > > footers for the sake of not worrying about synchronization between the >> > > cached metadata and any changes to the files on disk, it does appear >> > there >> > > is still a use case that isn't solved well with this design, needle >> in a >> > > haystack selective filter queries, where the data is sorted by the >> filter >> > > column. For example in the tests I ran with queries against lots of >> > parquet >> > > files where the vast majority are pruned by a bunch of small tasks, it >> > > takes 33 seconds vs just 1-2 seconds with driver side pruning using >> the >> > > summary file (requires a small spark changet). >> > > >> > > In our use case we are never going to be replacing contents of >> existing >> > > parquet files (with a delete and rewrite on HDFS) or appending new row >> > > groups onto existing files. In that case I don't believe we should >> > > experience any correctness problems, but I wanted to confirm if there >> is >> > > something I am missing. I am >> > > using readAllFootersInParallelUsingSummaryFiles which does fall back >> to >> > > read individual footers if they are missing from the summary file. >> > > >> > > I am also curious if a solution to the correctness problems could be >> to >> > > include a file length and/or last modified time into the summary file, >> > > which could confirm against FS metadata that the files on disk are >> still >> > in >> > > sync with the metadata summary relatively quickly. Would it be >> possible >> > to >> > > consider avoiding this deprecation if I was to work on an update to >> > > implement this? >> > > >> > > - Jason Altekruse >> > > >> > > >> > > On Tue, Sep 15, 2020 at 8:52 PM Jason Altekruse < >> > altekruseja...@gmail.com> >> > > wrote: >> > > >> > > > Hello all, >> > > > >> > > > I have been working on optimizing reads in spark to avoid spinning >> up >> > > lots >> > > > of short lived tasks that just perform row group pruning in >> selective >> > > > filter queries. >> > > > >> > > > My high level question is why metadata summary files were marked >> > > > deprecated in this Parquet changeset? There isn't much explanation >> > given >> > > > or a description of what should be used instead. >> > > > https://github.com/apache/parquet-mr/pull/429 >> > > > >> > > > There are other members of the broader parquet community that are >> also >> > > > confused by this deprecation, see this discussion in an arrow PR. >> > > > https://github.com/apache/arrow/pull/4166 >> > > > >> > > > In the course of making my small prototype I got an extra >> performance >> > > > boost by making spark write out metadata summary files, rather than >> > > having >> > > > to read all footers on the driver. This effect would be even more >> > > > pronounced on a completely remote storage system like S3. Writing >> these >> > > > summary files was disabled by default in SPARK-15719, because of the >> > > > performance impact of appending a small number of new files to an >> > > existing >> > > > dataset with many files. >> > > > >> > > > https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-15719 >> > > > >> > > > This spark JIRA does make decent points considering how spark >> operates >> > > > today, but I think that there is a performance optimization >> opportunity >> > > > that is missed because the row group pruning is deferred to a bunch >> of >> > > > separate short lived tasks rather than done upfront, currently spark >> > only >> > > > uses footers on the driver for schema merging. >> > > > >> > > > Thanks for the help! >> > > > Jason Altekruse >> > > > >> > > >> > >> > -- Ryan Blue Software Engineer Netflix