BigQuery Connector¶
The BigQuery connector allows querying the data stored in BigQuery. This can be used to join data between different systems like BigQuery and Hive. The connector uses the BigQuery Storage API to read the data from the tables.
Beta Disclaimer¶
The BigQuery Storage API and this connector are in Beta and are subject to change.
Changes may include, but are not limited to:
Type conversion
Partitioning
Parameters
BigQuery Storage API¶
The Storage API streams data in parallel directly from BigQuery via gRPC without using Google Cloud Storage as an intermediary. It has a number of advantages over using the previous export-based read flow that should generally lead to better read performance:
Direct Streaming
It does not leave any temporary files in Google Cloud Storage. Rows are read directly from BigQuery servers using an Avro wire format.
Column Filtering
The new API allows column filtering to only read the data you are interested in. Backed by a columnar datastore, it can efficiently stream data without reading all columns.
Dynamic Sharding
The API rebalances records between readers until they all complete. This means that all Map phases will finish nearly concurrently. See this blog article on how dynamic sharding is similarly used in Google Cloud Dataflow.
Requirements¶
Enable the BigQuery Storage API¶
Follow these instructions.
Authentication¶
On GCE/Dataproc the authentication is taken from the machine’s role.
Outside GCE/Dataproc you have 3 options:
Use a service account JSON key and
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
as described here.Set
bigquery.credentials
in the catalog properties file. It should contain the contents of the JSON file, encoded using base64.Set
bigquery.credentials-file
in the catalog properties file. It should point to the location of the JSON file.
Configuration¶
To configure the BigQuery connector, create a catalog properties file in
etc/catalog
named, for example, bigquery.properties
, to mount the
BigQuery connector as the bigquery
catalog. Create the file with the
following contents, replacing the connection properties as appropriate for
your setup:
connector.name=bigquery
bigquery.project-id=<your Google Cloud Platform project id>
Multiple GCP Projects¶
The BigQuery connector can only access a single GCP project. Thus, if you have
data in multiple GCP projects, You need to create several catalogs, each
pointing to a different GCP project. For example, if you have two GCP projects,
one for the sales and one for analytics, you can create two properties files in
etc/catalog
named sales.properties
and analytics.properties
, both
having connector.name=bigquery
but with different project-id
. This will
create the two catalogs, sales
and analytics
respectively.
Configuring Partitioning¶
By default the connector creates one partition per 400MB in the table being
read (before filtering). This should roughly correspond to the maximum number
of readers supported by the BigQuery Storage API. This can be configured
explicitly with the bigquery.parallelism
property. BigQuery may limit the
number of partitions based on server constraints.
Reading From Views¶
The connector has a preliminary support for reading from BigQuery views. Please note there are a few caveats:
BigQuery views are not materialized by default, which means that the connector needs to materialize them before it can read them. This process affects the read performance.
The materialization process can also incur additional costs to your BigQuery bill.
By default, the materialized views are created in the same project and dataset. Those can be configured by the optional
bigquery.view-materialization-project
andbigquery.view-materialization-dataset
properties, respectively. The service account must have write permission to the project and the dataset in order to materialize the view.Reading from views is disabled by default. In order to enable it, set the
bigquery.views-enabled
configuration property totrue
.
Configuration Properties¶
All configuration properties are optional.
Property |
Description |
Default |
---|---|---|
|
Google Cloud project ID |
Taken from the service account |
|
Google Cloud parent project ID |
Taken from the service account |
|
The number of partitions to split the data |
The number of executors |
|
Enable BigQuery connector to read views. |
|
|
The project where the materialized view is going to be created |
The view’s project |
|
The dataset where the materialized view is going to be created |
The view’s dataset |
|
The number of retries in case of retryable server issues |
|
|
credentials key (base64 encoded) |
None. See authentication |
|
JSON credentials file path |
None. See authentication |
Data Types¶
With a few exceptions, all BigQuery types are mapped directly to their Presto counterparts. Here are all the mappings:
BigQuery |
Presto |
Notes |
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Time zone is UTC |
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Time zone is UTC |
FAQ¶
What is the Pricing for the Storage API?¶
See the BigQuery pricing documentation.