[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PHOENIX-7170?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Kadir Ozdemir updated PHOENIX-7170: ----------------------------------- Description: Deleting rows using delete markers require running delete queries to insert them, one for each row to be deleted. Often applications need to run periodic jobs to issue delete queries to insert delete markers. Deleting rows using TTL is more performance optimized compared to adding delete markers in Phoenix since TTL works without inserting delete markers. Phoenix currently supports table and view (level) TTL. It is desirable to have a conditional TTL feature to extend the TTL future to expire a subset of rows of a table or updatable view using a different TTL value. A condition TTL can be set using a CASE statement in CREATE and ALTER statements by adding TTL=<the case statement>. For example, TTL = CASE WHEN ID IS BETWEEN 1 AND 100 THEN <10 days> WHEN ID IS BETWEEN 101 AND 200 <7 days> ELSE <5 days> END The compaction scanner (CompactionScanner) in Phoenix can evaluate the case statement on a row and decide if the row should be removed. Similarly, on the read path TTLRegionScanner can mask the rows using the case statement. The TTL case statement can be stored in SYSCAT in header rows. was: Deleting rows using delete markers require running delete queries to insert them, one for each row to be deleted. Often applications need to run periodic jobs to issue delete queries to insert delete markers. Deleting rows using TTL is more performance optimized compared to adding delete markers in Phoenix since TTL works without inserting delete markers. Phoenix currently supports table and view (level) TTL. It is desirable to have a conditional TTL feature to extend the TTL future to expire a subset of rows of a table or updatable view using a different TTL value than the rest of the rows. A condition TTL can be set using a CASE statement in CREATE and ALTER statements by adding TTL=<the case statement>. For example, TTL = CASE WHEN ID IS BETWEEN 1 AND 100 THEN <10 days> WHEN ID IS BETWEEN 101 AND 200 <7 days> ELSE <5 days> END The compaction scanner (CompactionScanner) in Phoenix can evaluate the case statement on a row and decide if the row should be removed. Similarly, on the read path TTLRegionScanner can mask the rows using the case statement. The TTL case statement can be stored in SYSCAT in header rows. > Conditional TTL > --------------- > > Key: PHOENIX-7170 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PHOENIX-7170 > Project: Phoenix > Issue Type: New Feature > Reporter: Kadir Ozdemir > Priority: Major > > Deleting rows using delete markers require running delete queries to insert > them, one for each row to be deleted. Often applications need to run periodic > jobs to issue delete queries to insert delete markers. Deleting rows using > TTL is more performance optimized compared to adding delete markers in > Phoenix since TTL works without inserting delete markers. Phoenix currently > supports table and view (level) TTL. It is desirable to have a conditional > TTL feature to extend the TTL future to expire a subset of rows of a table or > updatable view using a different TTL value. > A condition TTL can be set using a CASE statement in CREATE and ALTER > statements by adding TTL=<the case statement>. For example, > TTL = CASE WHEN ID IS BETWEEN 1 AND 100 THEN <10 days> WHEN ID IS BETWEEN 101 > AND 200 <7 days> ELSE <5 days> END > The compaction scanner (CompactionScanner) in Phoenix can evaluate the case > statement on a row and decide if the row should be removed. Similarly, on the > read path TTLRegionScanner can mask the rows using the case statement. The > TTL case statement can be stored in SYSCAT in header rows. -- This message was sent by Atlassian Jira (v8.20.10#820010)