Metadata Table

Database indices contain auxiliary data structures to quickly locate records needed, without reading unnecessary data from storage. Given that Hudi’s design has been heavily optimized for handling mutable change streams, with different write patterns, Hudi considers indexing as an integral part of its design and has uniquely supported indexing capabilities from its inception, to speed up upserts on the Data Lakehouse. While Hudi’s indices has benefited writers for fast upserts and deletes, Hudi’s metadata table aims to tap these benefits more generally for both the readers and writers. The metadata table implemented as a single internal Hudi Merge-On-Read table hosts different types of indices containing table metadata and is designed to be serverless and independent of compute and query engines. This is similar to common practices in databases where metadata is stored as internal views.

The metadata table aims to significantly improve read/write performance of the queries by addressing the following key challenges:

  • Eliminate the requirement of list files operation:
    When reading and writing data, file listing operations are performed to get the current view of the file system. When data sets are large, listing all the files may be a performance bottleneck, but more importantly in the case of cloud storage systems like AWS S3, the large number of file listing requests sometimes causes throttling due to certain request limits. The metadata table will instead proactively maintain the list of files and remove the need for recursive file listing operations
  • Expose columns stats through indices for better query planning and faster lookups by readers:
    Query engines rely on techniques such as partitioning and file pruning to cut down on the amount of irrelevant data scanned for query planning and execution. During query planning phase all data files are read for metadata on range information of columns for further pruning data files based on query predicates and available range information. This approach is expensive and does not scale if there are large number of partitions and data files to be scanned. In addition to storage optimizations such as automatic file sizing, clustering, etc that helps data organization in a query optimized way, Hudi’s metadata table improves query planning further by supporting multiple types of indices that aid in efficiently looking up data files based on relevant query predicates instead of reading the column stats from every individual data file and then pruning.

Supporting Multi-Modal Index in Hudi

Multi-modal indexing, introduced in 0.11.0 Hudi release, is a re-imagination of what a general purpose indexing subsystem should look like for the lake. Multi-modal indexing is implemented by enhancing Hudi’s metadata table with the flexibility to extend to new index types as new partitions, along with an asynchronous index building mechanism and is built on the following core principles:

  • Scalable metadata: The table metadata, i.e., the auxiliary data about the table, must be scalable to extremely large size, e.g., Terabytes (TB). Different types of indices should be easily integrated to support various use cases without having to worry about managing the same. To realize this, all indices in Hudi’s metadata table are stored as partitions in a single internal MOR table. The MOR table layout enables lightning-fast writes by avoiding synchronous merge of data with reduced write amplification. This is extremely important for large datasets as the size of updates to the metadata table can grow to be unmanageable otherwise. This helps Hudi to scale metadata to TBs of sizes. The foundational framework for multi-modal indexing is built to enable and disable new indices as needed. The async indexing supports index building alongside regular writers without impacting the write latency.
  • ACID transactional updates: The index and table metadata must be always up-to-date and in sync with the data table. This is designed via multi-table transaction within Hudi and ensures atomicity of writes and resiliency to failures so that partial writes to either the data or metadata table are never exposed to other read or write transactions. The metadata table is built to be self-managed so users don’t need to spend operational cycles on any table services including compaction and cleaning
  • Fast lookup: The needle-in-a-haystack type of lookups must be fast and efficient without having to scan the entire index, as index size can be TBs for large datasets. Since most access to the metadata table are point and range lookups, the HFile format is chosen as the base file format for the internal metadata table. Since the metadata table stores the auxiliary data at the partition level (files index) or the file level (column_stats index), the lookup based on a single partition path and a file group is going to be very efficient with the HFile format. Both the base and log files in Hudi’s metadata table uses the HFile format and are meticulously designed to reduce remote GET calls on cloud storages. Further, these metadata table indices are served via a centralized timeline server which caches the metadata, further reducing the latency of the lookup from executors.

Metadata table indices

Following are the different indices currently available under the metadata table.

  • files index: Stored as files partition in the metadata table. Contains file information such as file name, size, and active state for each partition in the data table. Improves the files listing performance by avoiding direct file system calls such as exists, listStatus and listFiles on the data table.

  • column_stats index: Stored as column_stats partition in the metadata table. Contains the statistics of interested columns, such as min and max values, total values, null counts, size, etc., for all data files and are used while serving queries with predicates matching interested columns. This index is used along with the data skipping to speed up queries by orders of magnitude.

  • bloom_filter index: Stored as bloom_filter partition in the metadata table. This index employs range-based pruning on the minimum and maximum values of the record keys and bloom-filter-based lookups to tag incoming records. For large tables, this involves reading the footers of all matching data files for bloom filters, which can be expensive in the case of random updates across the entire dataset. This index stores bloom filters of all data files centrally to avoid scanning the footers directly from all data files.

  • record_index: Stored as record_index partition in the metadata table. Contains the mapping of the record key to location. Record index is a global index, enforcing key uniqueness across all partitions in the table. Most recently added in 0.14.0 Hudi release, this index aids in locating records faster than other existing indices and can provide a speedup orders of magnitude faster in large deployments where index lookup dominates write latencies.

Enable Hudi Metadata Table and Multi-Modal Index in write side

Following are the Spark based basic configs that are needed to enable metadata and multi-modal indices. For advanced configs please refer here.

Config Name Default Description
hoodie.metadata.enable true (Optional) Enabled on the write side Enable the internal metadata table which serves table metadata like level file listings. For 0.10.1 and prior releases, metadata table is disabled by default and needs to be explicitly enabled.

Config Param: ENABLE
Since Version: 0.7.0
hoodie.metadata.index.bloom.filter.enable false (Optional) Enable indexing bloom filters of user data files under metadata table. When enabled, metadata table will have a partition to store the bloom filter index and will be used during the index lookups.

Config Param: ENABLE_METADATA_INDEX_BLOOM_FILTER
Since Version: 0.11.0
hoodie.metadata.index.column.stats.enable false (Optional) Enable indexing column ranges of user data files under metadata table key lookups. When enabled, metadata table will have a partition to store the column ranges and will be used for pruning files during the index lookups.

Config Param: ENABLE_METADATA_INDEX_COLUMN_STATS
Since Version: 0.11.0
hoodie.metadata.record.index.enable false (Optional) Create the HUDI Record Index within the Metadata Table

Config Param: RECORD_INDEX_ENABLE_PROP
Since Version: 0.14.0

The metadata table with synchronous updates and metadata-table-based file listing are enabled by default. There are prerequisite configurations and steps in Deployment considerations to safely use this feature. The metadata table and related file listing functionality can still be turned off by setting hoodie.metadata.enable to false. The multi-modal index are disabled by default and can be enabled in write side explicitly using the above configs.

For flink, following are the basic configs of interest to enable metadata based indices. Please refer here for advanced configs

Config Name Default Description
metadata.enabled false (Optional) Enable the internal metadata table which serves table metadata like level file listings, default disabled

Config Param: METADATA_ENABLED
hoodie.metadata.index.column.stats.enable false (Optional) Enable indexing column ranges of user data files under metadata table key lookups. When enabled, metadata table will have a partition to store the column ranges and will be used for pruning files during the index lookups.

If you turn off the metadata table after enabling, be sure to wait for a few commits so that the metadata table is fully cleaned up, before re-enabling the metadata table again.

Use metadata indices for query side improvements

files index

Metadata based listing using files_index can be leveraged on the read side by setting appropriate configs/session properties from different engines as shown below:

Readers Config Description
  • Spark DataSource
  • Spark SQL
  • Strucured Streaming
hoodie.metadata.enable When set to true enables use of the spark file index implementation for Hudi, that speeds up listing of large tables.
Presto hudi.metadata-table-enabled When set to true fetches the list of file names and sizes from Hudi’s metadata table rather than storage.
Trino N/A Support for reading from the metadata table has been dropped in Trino 419.
Athena hudi.metadata-listing-enabled When this table property is set to TRUE enables the Hudi metadata table and the related file listing functionality
  • Flink DataStream
  • Flink SQL
metadata.enabled When set to true from DDL uses the internal metadata table to serves table metadata like level file listings

column_stats index and data skipping

Enabling metadata table and column stats index is a prerequisite to enabling data skipping capabilities. Following are the corresponding configs across Spark adn Flink readers.

Readers Config Description
  • Spark DataSource
  • Spark SQL
  • Strucured Streaming
  • hoodie.metadata.enable
  • hoodie.enable.data.skipping
  • When set to true enables use of the spark file index implementation for Hudi, that speeds up listing of large tables.
  • When set to true enables data-skipping allowing queries to leverage indices to reduce the search space by skipping over files
    Config Param: ENABLE_DATA_SKIPPING
    Since Version: 0.10.0
  • Flink DataStream
  • Flink SQL
  • metadata.enabled
  • read.data.skipping.enabled
  • When set to true from DDL uses the internal metadata table to serves table metadata like level file listings
  • When set to true enables data-skipping allowing queries to leverage indices to reduce the search space byskipping over files

Deployment considerations for metadata Table

To ensure that metadata table stays up to date, all write operations on the same Hudi table need additional configurations besides the above in different deployment models. Before enabling metadata table, all writers on the same table must be stopped. Please refer to the different deployment models for more details on each model. This section only highlights how to safely enable metadata table in different deployment models.

Deployment Model A: Single writer with inline table services

In Model A, after setting hoodie.metadata.enable to true, restarting the single writer is sufficient to safely enable metadata table.

Deployment Model B: Single writer with async table services

If your current deployment model is Model B, enabling metadata table requires adding optimistic concurrency control along with suggested lock provider like below.

  1. hoodie.write.concurrency.mode=optimistic_concurrency_control
  2. hoodie.write.lock.provider=org.apache.hudi.client.transaction.lock.InProcessLockProvider

These configurations are required only if metadata table is enabled in this deployment model.

If multiple writers in different processes are present, including one writer with async table services, please refer to Deployment Model C: Multi-writer for configs, with the difference of using a distributed lock provider. Note that running a separate compaction (HoodieCompactor) or clustering (HoodieClusteringJob) job apart from the ingestion writer is considered as multi-writer deployment, as they are not running in the same process which cannot rely on the in-process lock provider.

Deployment Model C: Multi-writer

If your current deployment model is multi-writer along with a lock provider and other required configs set for every writer as follows, there is no additional configuration required. You can bring up the writers sequentially after stopping the writers for enabling metadata table. Applying the proper configurations to only partial writers leads to loss of data from the inconsistent writer. So, ensure you enable metadata table across all writers.

  1. hoodie.write.concurrency.mode=optimistic_concurrency_control
  2. hoodie.write.lock.provider=<distributed-lock-provider-classname>

Note that there are different external lock providers available to choose from.

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