Understood, I was looking for a way to define these metrics that is attainable for non-programmers to develop.
Thank you for the answer Seth Pedro > On 15 Sep 2021, at 18:38, Seth Wiesman <sjwies...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Honestly, I don't think you need CEP or MATCH_RECOGNIZE for that use case. It > can be solved with a simple process function that tracks the state for each > id. Output a 1 when a job completes and a -1 if canceled. Output the sum. You > can use a simple timer to clear the state for a job after 6 months have > passed. > > Seth > >> On Wed, Sep 15, 2021 at 12:34 PM Pedro Silva <pedro.cl...@gmail.com> wrote: >> Hello, >> >> As anyone used streaming sql pattern matching as shown in this email thread >> to count certain transitions on a stream? >> Is it feasible? >> >> Thank you, >> Pedro Silva >> >>>> On 13 Sep 2021, at 11:16, Pedro Silva <pedro.cl...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>> >>> Hello Seth, >>> >>> Thank you very much for your reply. I've taken a look at MATCH_RECOGNIZE >>> but I have the following doubt. Can I implement a state machine that detect >>> patterns with multiple end states? >>> To give you a concrete example: >>> >>> I'm trying to count the number of Jobs that have been cancelled and >>> completed. The state machine associated with this Job concept is as follows: >>> Started -> On-Going (Multiple Progress messages) -> Closed -> Completed >>> ----\ >>> >>> \--------------\--------------------------------------------------------\----------------\------------- >>> > Cancelled >>> >>> At any point the Job can be cancelled from the previous state. >>> This cancel message can take anywhere from 1-2 weeks to be received. >>> The duration of this state machine (Job lifecycle) is roughly 6 months. >>> >>> How can I keep a count of the number of Jobs that have been completed but >>> not cancelled such that when a cancel appears on a previously (completed | >>> closed) I decrease my counter but not when a cancel appears after a >>> started or progress state (no counter increment or decrement) ? >>> >>> I hope this example was clear. >>> >>> Thank you for your time! >>> Pedro Silva >>> >>> >>>> Em sex., 10 de set. de 2021 às 20:18, Seth Wiesman <sjwies...@gmail.com> >>>> escreveu: >>>> Hi Pedro, >>>> >>>> The DataStream CEP library is not available in Python but you can use >>>> `MATCH_RECOGNIZE` in the table API which is implemented on-top of the CEP >>>> library from Python. >>>> >>>> https://nightlies.apache.org/flink/flink-docs-release-1.13/docs/dev/table/sql/queries/match_recognize/ >>>> >>>> >>>> Seth >>>> >>>>> On Fri, Sep 10, 2021 at 11:34 AM Pedro Silva <pedro.cl...@gmail.com> >>>>> wrote: >>>>> Hello, >>>>> >>>>> Is Flink's CEP library available in python? From the documentation I see >>>>> no references so I'm guessing the answer is no but wanted some >>>>> confirmation from the community or developers. >>>>> >>>>> Are there plans to support this library in python or alternatively, >>>>> another library altogether that can be used in python? >>>>> >>>>> Thank you and have a nice weekend, >>>>> Pedro Silva