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dbt_metrics

About

This dbt package generates queries based on metrics, introduced to dbt Core in v1.0. For more information on metrics, such as available calculation methods, properties, and other definition parameters, please reference the documentation linked above.

Tenets

The tenets of dbt_metrics, which should be considered during development, issues, and contributions, are:

  • A metric value should be consistent everywhere that it is referenced
  • We prefer generalized metrics with many dimensions over specific metrics with few dimensions
  • It should be easier to use dbt’s metrics than it is to avoid them
  • Organization and discoverability are as important as precision
  • One-off models built to power metrics are an anti-pattern

Installation Instructions

Check dbt Hub for the latest installation instructions, or read the docs for more information on installing packages.

Include in your package.yml

packages:
  - package: dbt-labs/metrics
    version: [">=0.3.0", "<0.4.0"]

Macros

Calculate

The calculate macro performs the metric aggregation and returns the dataset based on the specifications of the metric definition and the options selected in the macro. It can be accessed like any other macro:

select * 
from {{ metrics.calculate(
    metric('new_customers'),
    grain='week',
    dimensions=['plan', 'country'],
    secondary_calculations=[
        metrics.period_over_period(comparison_strategy="ratio", interval=1, alias="pop_1wk"),
        metrics.period_over_period(comparison_strategy="difference", interval=1),

        metrics.period_to_date(aggregate="average", period="month", alias="this_month_average"),
        metrics.period_to_date(aggregate="sum", period="year"),

        metrics.rolling(aggregate="average", interval=4, alias="avg_past_4wks"),
        metrics.rolling(aggregate="min", interval=4)
    ],
    start_date='2022-01-01',
    end_date='2022-12-31',
    where="some_column='filter_value'"
) }}

start_date and end_date are optional. When not provided, the spine will span all dates from oldest to newest in the metric's dataset. This default is likely to be correct in most cases, but you can use the arguments to either narrow the resulting table or expand it (e.g. if there was no new customers until 3 January but you want to include the first two days as well). Both values are inclusive.

Supported Inputs

Input Example Description Required
metric_list metric('some_metric)', [metric('some_metric)',metric('some_other_metric)'] The metric(s) to be queried by the macro. If multiple metrics required, provide in list format. Required
grain day, week, month The time grain that the metric will be aggregated to in the returned dataset Required
dimensions [plan, country, some_predefined_dimension_name The dimensions you want the metric to be aggregated by in the returned dataset Optional
start_date 2022-01-01 Limits the date range of data used in the metric calculation by not querying data before this date Optional
end_date 2022-12-31 Limits the date range of data used in the metric claculation by not querying data after this date Optional
where plan='paying_customer' A sql statment, or series of sql statements, that alter the final CTE in the generated sql. Most often used to limit the data to specific values of dimensions provided Optional

Migration from metric to calculate

In version 0.3.0 of the dbt_metrics package, the name of the main macro was changed from metric to calculate. This was done in order to better reflect the work being performed by the macro and match the semantic naming followed by the rest of the macros in the package (describing the action, not the output). Additionally, the metric_name input was changed to take a single metric function or multiple metric functions provided in a list.

To correctly change this syntax, you must:

  • change metrics.metric to metrics.calculate.
  • change metric_name to metric('name_here')
    • alternatively use [metric('name_here'),metric('another_name_here')] for multiple metrics

Develop

There are times when you want to test what a metric might look like before defining it in your project. In these cases you should use the develop metric, which allows you to provide a single metric in a contained yml in order to simulate what the metric might loook like if defined in your project.

{% set my_metric_yml -%}
{% raw %}

metrics:
  - name: develop_metric
    model: ref('fact_orders')
    label: Total Discount ($)
    timestamp: order_date
    time_grains: [day, week, month]
    calculation_method: average
    expression: discount_total
    dimensions:
      - had_discount
      - order_country

{% endraw %}
{%- endset %}

select * 
from {{ metrics.develop(
        develop_yml=my_metric_yml,
        metric_list=['develop_metric']
        grain='month'
        )
    }}

Supported Inputs

Input Example Description Required
metric_list ('some_metric)', [('some_metric)',('some_other_metric)'] The metric(s) to be queried by the macro. If multiple metrics required, provide in list format. Do not provide in metric('name) format as that triggers dbt parsing for metric that doesn't exist. Just provide the name of the metric. Required
grain day, week, month The time grain that the metric will be aggregated to in the returned dataset Required
dimensions [plan, country, some_predefined_dimension_name The dimensions you want the metric to be aggregated by in the returned dataset Optional
start_date 2022-01-01 Limits the date range of data used in the metric calculation by not querying data before this date Optional
end_date 2022-12-31 Limits the date range of data used in the metric claculation by not querying data after this date Optional
where plan='paying_customer' A sql statment, or series of sql statements, that alter the final CTE in the generated sql. Most often used to limit the data to specific values of dimensions provided Optional

Multiple Metrics Or Derived Metrics

If you have a more complicated use case that you are interested in testing, the develop macro also supports this behavior. The only caveat is that you must include the raw tags for any provided metric yml that contains a derived metric. Example below:

{% set my_metric_yml -%}
{% raw %}

metrics:
  - name: develop_metric
    model: ref('fact_orders')
    label: Total Discount ($)
    timestamp: order_date
    time_grains: [day, week, month]
    calculation_method: average
    expression: discount_total
    dimensions:
      - had_discount
      - order_country

  - name: derived_metric
    label: Total Discount ($)
    timestamp: order_date
    time_grains: [day, week, month]
    calculation_method: derived
    expression: "{{ metric('develop_metric') }} - 1 "
    dimensions:
      - had_discount
      - order_country

  - name: some_other_metric_not_using
    label: Total Discount ($)
    timestamp: order_date
    time_grains: [day, week, month]
    calculation_method: derived
    expression: "{{ metric('derived_metric') }} - 1 "
    dimensions:
      - had_discount
      - order_country

{% endraw %}
{%- endset %}

select * 
from {{ metrics.develop(
        develop_yml=my_metric_yml,
        metric_list=['derived_metric']
        grain='month'
        )
    }}

The above example will return a dataset that contains the metric provided in the metric list (derived_metric) and the parent metric (develop_metric). It will not contain some_other_metric_not_using as it is not designated in the metric list or a parent of the metrics included.

Use cases and examples

Jaffle Shop Metrics

For those curious about how to implement metrics in a dbt project, please reference the jaffle_shop_metrics.

Inside of dbt Models

You may want to materialize the results as a fixed table for querying. This is not the way we expect the dbt Metrics layer to add the most value, but is a way to experiment with the project without needing access to the interactive server.

Via the interactive dbt server (coming soon)

When dbt server is released in late 2022, you will be able to access these macros interactively, without needing to build each variant as a single dbt model. For more information, check out the keynote presentation from Coalesce 2021.

Secondary calculations

Secondary calculations are window functions which act on the primary metric or metrics. You can use them to compare values to an earlier period and calculate year-to-date sums or rolling averages.

Create secondary calculations using the convenience constructor macros. Alternatively, you can manually create a list of dictionary entries (not recommended).

Example of manual dictionary creation (not recommended)

Creating a calculation this way has no input validation.

[
    {"calculation": "period_over_period", "interval": 1, "comparison_strategy": "difference", "alias": "pop_1mth"},
    {"calculation": "rolling", "interval": 3, "aggregate": "sum"}
]

Column aliases are automatically generated, but you can override them by setting alias.

Period over Period (source)

The period over period secondary calculation performs a calculation against the metric(s) in question by either determining the difference or the ratio between two points of time. This other point in time is determined by the input variable which looks at the grain selected in the macro.

Constructor: metrics.period_over_period(comparison_strategy, interval [, alias, metric_list])

Input Example Description Required
comparison_strategy ratio or difference How to calculate the delta between the two periods Yes
interval 1 Integer - the number of time grains to look back Yes
alias week_over_week The column alias for the resulting calculation No
metric_list base_sum_metric List of metrics that the secondary calculation should be applied to. Default is all metrics selected No

Period to Date (source)

The period to date secondary calculation performs an aggregation on a defined period of time that is equal to or coarser (higher, more aggregated) than the grain selected. Great example of this is when you want to display a month_to_date value alongside your weekly grained metric.

Constructor: metrics.period_to_date(aggregate, period [, alias, metric_list])

Input Example Description Required
aggregate max, average The aggregation to use in the window function. Options vary based on the primary aggregation and are enforced in validate_aggregate_coherence(). Yes
period "day", "week" The time grain to aggregate to. One of ["day", "week", "month", "quarter", "year"]. Must be at equal or coarser (higher, more aggregated) granularity than the metric's grain (see Time Grains below). In example grain of month, the acceptable periods would be month, quarter, or year. Yes
alias month_to_date The column alias for the resulting calculation No
metric_list base_sum_metric List of metrics that the secondary calculation should be applied to. Default is all metrics selected No

Rolling (source)

The rolling secondary calculation performs an aggregation on a defined number of rows in metric dataset. For example, if the user selects the week grain and sets a rolling secondary calculation to 4 then the value returned will be a rolling 4 week calculation of whatever aggregation type was selected.

Constructor: metrics.rolling(aggregate, interval [, alias, metric_list])

Input Example Description Required
aggregate max, average The aggregation to use in the window function. Options vary based on the primary aggregation and are enforced in validate_aggregate_coherence(). Yes
interval 1 Integer - the number of time grains to look back Yes
alias month_to_date The column alias for the resulting calculation No
metric_list base_sum_metric List of metrics that the secondary calculation should be applied to. Default is all metrics selected No

Prior (source)

The prior secondary calculation returns the value from a specified number of intervals prior to the row.

Constructor: metrics.prior(interval [, alias, metric_list])

Input Example Description Required
interval 1 Integer - the number of time grains to look back Yes
alias 2_weeks_prior The column alias for the resulting calculation No
metric_list base_sum_metric List of metrics that the secondary calculation should be applied to. Default is all metrics selected No

Customisation

Most behaviour in the package can be overridden or customised.

Metric Configs

Metric nodes now accept config dictionaries like other dbt resources (beginning in dbt-core v1.3+). Metric configs can specified in the metric yml itself or for groups of metrics in the dbt_project.yml file.

# in metrics.yml
version: 2

metrics:
  - name: config_metric
    label: Example Metric with Config
    model: ref('my_model')
    calculation_method: count
    timestamp: date_field
    time_grains: [day, week, month]

    config:
      enabled: True

Or:

# in dbt_project.yml

metrics: 
  your_project_name: 
    +enabled: true

The metrics package contains validation on the configurations you're able to provide.

Accepted Metric Configurations

Below is the list of metric configs currently accepted by this package.

Config Type Accepted Values Default Value Description
enabled boolean True/False True Enables or disables a metric node. When disabled, dbt will not consider it as part of your project.
treat_null_values_as_zero boolean True/False True Controls the coalesce behavior for metrics. By default, when there are no observations for a metric, the output of the metric as well as period Over period secondary calculations will include a coalesce({{ field }}, 0) to return 0's rather than nulls. Setting this config to False instead returns NULL values.

All_Time Grain

Version 0.4.0 of this package added support for the all_time grain to be defined in the metric.

If you're interested in returning the metric value across all time (or ignoring time bounds all together), you can include the all_time grain in the metric definition and then use that in the calculate or develop macro. This will return a single value for the metric (more if dimensions included) and the start/end date range for that metric calculation.

Window Periods

Version 0.4.0 of this package, and beyond, offers support for the window attribute of the metric definition. This alters the underlying query to allow the metric definition to contain a window of time, such as the past 14 days or the past 3 months.

More information can be found in the metrics page of dbt docs/.

Derived Metrics

Note: In version 0.4.0, expression metrics were renamed to derived

Version 0.3.0 of this package, and beyond, offer support for derived metrics! More information around this calculation_method can be found in themetrics page of dbt docs/.

Multiple Metrics

There may be instances where you want to return multiple metrics within a single macro. This is possible by providing a list of metrics instead of a single metric. See example below:

  select *
  from 
  {{ metrics.calculate(
      [metric('base_sum_metric'), metric('base_average_metric')], 
      grain='day', 
      dimensions=['had_discount']
  }}

Note: The metrics must share the time_grain selected in the macro AND the dimensions selected in the macro. If these are not shared between the 2+ metrics, this behaviour will fail. Additionally, secondary calculations can be used for multiple metrics but each secondary calculation will be applied against each metric and returned in a field that matches the following pattern: metric_name_secondary_calculation_alias.

Where Clauses

Sometimes you'll want to see the metric in the context of a particular filter but this filter isn't neccesarily part of the metric definition. In this case, you can use the where input for the metrics package. It takes a list of sql statements and adds them in as filters to the final CTE in the produced SQL.

Additionally, this input can be used by BI Tools to as a way for filters in their UI to be passed through into the metric logic.

Calendar

The package comes with a basic calendar table, running between 2010-01-01 and 2029-12-31 inclusive. You can replace it with any custom calendar table which meets the following requirements:

  • Contains a date_day column.
  • Contains the following columns: date_week, date_month, date_quarter, date_year, or equivalents.
  • Additional date columns need to be prefixed with date_, e.g. date_4_5_4_month for a 4-5-4 retail calendar date set. Dimensions can have any name (see dimensions on calendar tables).

To do this, set the value of the dbt_metrics_calendar_model variable in your dbt_project.yml file:

#dbt_project.yml
config-version: 2
[...]
vars:
    dbt_metrics_calendar_model: my_custom_calendar

Dimensions from calendar tables

You may want to aggregate metrics by a dimension in your custom calendar table, for example is_weekend. You can include this within the list of dimensions in the macro call without it needing to be defined in the metric definition.

To do so, set a list variable at the project level called custom_calendar_dimension_list, as shown in the example below.

vars:
  custom_calendar_dimension_list: ["is_weekend"]

The is_weekend field can now be used by your metrics.

Time Grains

The package protects against nonsensical secondary calculations, such as a month-to-date aggregate of data which has been rolled up to the quarter. If you customise your calendar (for example by adding a 4-5-4 retail calendar month), you will need to override the get_grain_order() macro. In that case, you might remove month and replace it with month_4_5_4. All date columns must be prefixed with date_ in the table. Do not include the prefix when defining your metric, it will be added automatically.

Custom aggregations

To create a custom primary aggregation (as exposed through the calculation_method config of a metric), create a macro of the form metric_my_aggregate(expression), then override the gen_primary_metric_aggregate() macro to add it to the dispatch list. The package also protects against nonsensical secondary calculations such as an average of an average; you will need to override the get_metric_allowlist() macro to both add your new aggregate to to the existing aggregations' allowlists, and to make an allowlist for your new aggregation:

    {% do return ({
        "average": ['max', 'min'],
        "count": ['max', 'min', 'average', 'my_new_aggregate'],
        [...]
        "my_new_aggregate": ['max', 'min', 'sum', 'average', 'my_new_aggregate']
    }) %}

To create a custom secondary aggregation (as exposed through the secondary_calculations input in the metric macro), create a macro of the form secondary_calculation_my_calculation(metric_name, dimensions, calc_config), then override the perform_secondary_calculations() macro.

Secondary calculation column aliases

Aliases can be set for a secondary calculation. If no alias is provided, one will be automatically generated. To modify the existing alias logic, or add support for a custom secondary calculation, override generate_secondary_calculation_alias().