Bulk import
Depending on the data volume imported, various bulk import tools can be used to load data into YugabyteDB. This page documents bulk import for YugabyteDB’s Cassandra-compatible YCQL API.
We will first export data from existing Apache Cassandra and MySQL tables. Thereafter, we will import the data using the various bulk load options supported by YugabyteDB. We will use a generic IoT time series data use case as a running example to illustrate the import process.
Create Destination Table
Following is the schema of the destination YugabyteDB table.
CREATE KEYSPACE example;
USE EXAMPLE;
CREATE TABLE SensorData (
customer_name text,
device_id int,
ts timestamp,
sensor_data map<text, double>,
PRIMARY KEY((customer_name, device_id), ts)
);
Prepare Source Data
We will prepare a csv (comma-separated values) file where each row of entries must match with the column types declared in the table schema above. Concretely, each comma-separated value must be a valid Cassandra Query Language (CQL) literal for its corresponding type, except the top-level quotes are not needed (e.g. foo rather than 'foo' for strings).
Generate Sample Data
If you do not have the data already available in a database table, you can create sample data for the import using the instructions below.
#!/bin/bash
# Usage: ./generate_data.sh <number_of_rows> <output_filename>
# Example ./generate_data.sh 1000 sample.csv
if [ "$#" -ne 2 ]
then
echo "Usage: ./generate_data.sh <number_of_rows> <output_filename>"
Echo "Example ./generate_data.sh 1000 sample.csv"
exit 1
fi
> $2 # clearing file
for i in `seq 1 $1`
do
echo customer$((i%10)),$((i%3)),2017-11-11 12:30:$((i%60)).000000+0000,\"{temp:$i, humidity:$i}\" >> $2
done
customer1,1,2017-11-11 12:32:1.000000+0000,"{temp:1, humidity:1}"
customer2,2,2017-11-11 12:32:2.000000+0000,"{temp:2, humidity:2}"
customer3,0,2017-11-11 12:32:3.000000+0000,"{temp:3, humidity:3}"
customer4,1,2017-11-11 12:32:4.000000+0000,"{temp:4, humidity:4}"
customer5,2,2017-11-11 12:32:5.000000+0000,"{temp:5, humidity:5}"
customer6,0,2017-11-11 12:32:6.000000+0000,"{temp:6, humidity:6}"
Export from Apache Cassandra
If you already had the data in an Apache Cassandra table, then use the following command to create a csv file with the data.
ycqlsh> COPY example.SensorData TO '/path/to/sample.csv';
Export from MySQL
If you already had the data in a MySQL table named SensorData
, then use the following command to create a csv file with the data.
SELECT customer_name, device_id, ts, sensor_data
FROM SensorData
INTO OUTFILE '/path/to/sample.csv' FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',';
Import data
These instructions are organized by the size of the input datasets, ranging from small (MBs of data) to larger datasets (GBs of data).
Small datasets (MBs)
Cassandra’s CQL Shell provides the COPY FROM (see also COPY TO) command which allows importing data from csv files.
ycqlsh> COPY example.SensorData FROM '/path/to/sample.csv';
Note
By default,COPY
exports timestamps in yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSSZ
format.
Large datasets (GBs)
cassandra-loader
is a general purpose bulk loader for CQL that supports various types of delimited files (particularly CSV files). For more details, review the README of the YugabyteDB cassandra-loader fork. Note that cassandra-loader requires quotes for collection types (for example, “[1,2,3]” rather than [1,2,3] for lists).
Install cassandra-loader
You can do this as shown below.
$ wget https://github.com/yugabyte/cassandra-loader/releases/download/v0.0.27-yb-2/cassandra-loader
$ chmod a+x cassandra-loader
Run cassandra-loader
time ./cassandra-loader \
-dateFormat 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSSSSSX' \
-f sample.csv \
-host <clusterNodeIP> \
-schema "example.SensorData(customer_name, device_id, ts, sensor_data)"
For additional options, refer to the cassandra-loader options.