Provides a django wrapper for postgresql-hll library by CitusData
- Python 3.5+
- django >= 1.9 (tested 2.2+)
- PostgreSQL 9.4+ (tested 9.6+)
Install via pip:
pip install django-pg-hll
or via setup.py:
python setup.py install
Install postgresql-hll extension
If your user has super-admin privileges you can create Hll extension using migrations.
If you use django 1.10+ you can use django_pg_hll.migrations.HllExtension
in your migration file.
If you have older version you can use the following:
migrations.RunSQL('CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS hll;', reverse_sql='DROP EXTENSION hll;')
- Add HllField to your model:
from django.db import models from django_pg_hll import HllField class MyModel(models.Model): hll = HllField()
- Call makemigrations to create a migration
- Call migrate to apply migration.
In order to create and update Hll this library introduces a set of functions (corresponding to postgres-hll hash functions), to hash values:
from django_pg_hll import HllField
# Empty hll
HllEmpty()
# Empty hll with custom configuration parameters
# hll_empty([log2m[, regwidth[, expthresh[, sparseon]]]])
HllEmpty(13, 2, 1, 0)
# Hash from boolean
HllBoolean(True)
# Hash from integer with different ranges
HllSmallInt(1)
HllInteger(65540)
HllBigint(2147483650)
# Hash from bytes sequence
HllByteA(b'test')
# Hash from text
HllText('test')
# Auto detection of type by postgres-hll
HllAny('some data')
To save a value to HllField, you can pass any of these functions as a value:
from django_pg_hll import HllInteger
instance = MyModel.objects.create(hll=HllInteger(123))
instance.hll |= HllInteger(456)
instance.save()
Hll values can be chained with each other and functions like django.db.models.F
using |
operator.
The chaining result will be django_pg_hll.values.HllSet
instance, which can be also saved to database.
You can also chain simple values and iterables.
In this case, library will try to detect appropriate hashing function, based on value.
Important: Native django functions can't be used as chain start, as |
operator is redeclared for HllValue instances.
Example:
from django_pg_hll import HllInteger
from django.db.models import F
instance = MyModel.objects.create(hll=HllInteger(123))
# This works
instance.hll |= HllInteger(456)
instance.hll = HllInteger(456) | F('hll')
instance.hll |= 789 # HllSmallInt will be used
instance.hll |= 100500 # HllInteger will be used
instance.hll |= True # HllBoolean will be used
instance.hll |= {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} # set. HllSmallInt will be used.
# This throws exception, as F function doesn't support bitor operator
instance.hll = F('hll') | HllInteger(456)
You can pass hash_seed
optional argument to any HllValue, expecting data.
Look here for more details about hashing.
HllField realizes several lookups (returning float value) in order to make filtering easier:
# Equality
MyModel.objects.filter(hll=HllInteger(1)).count()
MyModel.objects.exclude(hll=HllInteger(2)).count()
# Cardinality
MyModel.objects.filter(hll__cardinality=3).count()
# Configuration lookups
MyModel.objects.filter(hll__schema_version=1).count()
MyModel.objects.filter(hll__type=1).count()
MyModel.objects.filter(hll__log2m=11).count()
MyModel.objects.filter(hll__regwidth=2).count()
MyModel.objects.filter(hll__sparseon=1).count()
In order to count aggregations and annotations, library provides aggregate functions:
django_pg_hll.aggregate.Cardinality
Counts cardinality of hll fielddjango_pg_hll.aggregate.UnionAgg
Aggregates multiple hll fields to one hll.django_pg_hll.aggregate.UnionAggCardinality
Counts cardinality of hll, combined by UnionAgg function. In fact, it doesCardinality(UnionAgg(hll))
.
P. s. django doesn't give ability to use function inside function.django_pg_hll.aggregate.CardinalitySum
Counts sum of multiple rows hll cardinalities. In fact, it doesSum(Cardinality(hll))
.
P. s. django doesn't give ability to use function inside function.
from django.db import models
from django_pg_hll.aggregate import Cardinality, UnionAggCardinality, CardinalitySum
from django_pg_hll.fields import HllField
from django_pg_hll.values import HllInteger
class ForeignModel(models.Model):
pass
class MyModel(models.Model):
hll = HllField()
fk = models.ForeignKey(ForeignModel)
MyModel.objects.bulk_create([
MyModel(fk=1, hll=HllInteger(1)),
MyModel(fk=2, hll=HllInteger(2) | HllInteger(3) | HllInteger(4)),
MyModel(fk=3, hll=HllInteger(4))
])
MyModel.objects.annotate(card=Cardinality('hll_field')).values_list('id', 'card')
# outputs (1, 1), (2, 3), (3, 1)
# Count cardinality for hll, build by union of all rows
# 4 element exists in rows with fk=2 and fk=3. After union it gives single result
ForeignModel.objects.annotate(card=UnionAggCardinality('testmodel__hll_field')).values_list('card', flat=True)
# outputs [4]
# Count sum of cardinalities for each row
ForeignModel.objects.annotate(card=CardinalitySum('testmodel__hll_field')).values_list('card', flat=True)
# outputs [5]
In order to get hll field creation parameters, library provides aggregate functions:
-
django_pg_hll.aggregate.HllSchemaVersion
Returns the schema version value (integer) of the hll -
django_pg_hll.aggregate.HllType
Returns the schema version-specific type value (integer) of the hll. See the storage specification (v1.0.0) for more details. -
django_pg_hll.aggregate.HllRegWidth
Returns the register bit-width (integer) of the hll -
django_pg_hll.aggregate.HllLog2M
Returns the log-base-2 of the number of registers of the hll. If the hll is not of type FULL or SPARSE it returns the log2m value which would be used if the hll were promoted. -
django_pg_hll.aggregate.HllExpThreshold
Returns an array with 2 elements of the specified and effective EXPLICIT promotion cutoffs for the hll. The specified cutoff and the effective cutoff will be the same unless expthresh has been set to 'auto' (-1). In that case the specified value will be -1 and the effective value will be the implementation-dependent number of explicit values that will be stored before an EXPLICIT hll is promoted. -
django_pg_hll.aggregate.HllSParseOn
Returns 1 if the SPARSE representation is enabled for the hll, and 0 otherwise
from django.db import models
from django_pg_hll.aggregate import HllLog2M
from django_pg_hll.fields import HllField
from django_pg_hll.values import HllEmpty, HllInteger
class MyModel(models.Model):
default_hll = HllField()
configured_hll = HllField(log2m=13, regwidth=2, expthresh=1, sparseon=0)
MyModel.objects.create(fk=1, hll=HllInteger(1), configured_hll=HllEmpty(13, 2, 1, 0))
MyModel.objects.annotate(log2m=HllLog2M('default_hll'), log2m_conf=HllLog2M('configured_hll')). \
values_list('log2m', 'log2m_conf')
# outputs (11, 13)
django-pg-bulk-update integration
This library provides a hll_concat
set function,
allowing to use hll in bulk_update
and bulk_update_or_create
queries.
MyModel.objects.bulk_update_or_create([
{'id': 100501, 'hll_field': HllInteger(1)},
{'id': 100502, 'hll_field': HllInteger(2) | HllInteger(3)}
], set_functions={'hll_field': 'hll_concat'}
)
- Install docker and docker-compose
- Run
docker build . --tag django-pg-hll
in project directory - Run
docker-compose run run_tests
in project directory
- Install all requirements listed above
- Create virtual environment
- Create a superuser named 'test' on your local Postgres instance:
CREATE ROLE test;
ALTER ROLE test WITH SUPERUSER;
ALTER ROLE test WITH LOGIN;
ALTER ROLE test PASSWORD 'test';
CREATE DATABASE test OWNER test;
- Install requirements
pip3 install -U -r requirements-test.txt
- Start tests
python3 runtests.py