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Bq-Lineage-tool

Bq-lineage tool is a column level lineage parser for BigQuery using ZetaSQL. This parser started as a fork of this project by google, but it has been heavily modified to cover the whole bigquery syntax offered by ZetaSQL. The output of this parser is a DAG of the columns used in a query from sources to outputs, including auxiliary fields that could be used as part of filters or other operations that don't result in the materialisation of a field.

From any arbitrary BigQuery query, you will get the following outputs:

  • output_columns: The columns that are part of the output of the query, with all the input columns references that were needed to produce them.
  • joins: List of joins used in the query, considering the columns used for the join
  • aggregations: List of columns used for aggregations
  • filters: List of columns used for filtering
  • other_used_columns: Any other columns used across the query, like order by
  • selected_tables: A list of all the tables that were selected in the query.
  • Type: The type of sql statement {SELECT, CREATE_VIEW, MERGE...}

image

What can this parser do?

  • It's schema aware. This means that a query like SELECT * FROM table will generate a DAG with all the output columns of table, and not just a single node with a * symbol.
  • It prunes unused columns. This means that for a query like WITH base AS (SELECT * FROM table) SELECT aColumn FROM base the output DAG will only contain the column aColumn and not the whole input table.
  • It covers pretty much all the BigQuery syntax, including:
    • WITH (CTE) clauses
    • Subqueries
    • UNNEST-based JOINS
    • STRUCTS and ARRAYS
    • JOINS
    • Analytical functions (QUALIFY, LAG/LEAD, WINDOWS etc.)
    • Map aliases to original columns
    • JSON functions
    • Access to the PATH used in JSON functions (JSON_EXTRACT(field,"$.path.to.field"))
    • Access to the literals used in the query, for example, in a WHERE clause
    • Access to fields that are not part of the output columns of the table (fields only used in a WHERE clause)
    • PIVOT and UNPIVOT transformations
    • GROUP BY GROUPING SETS, ROLLUP and CUBE
    • UDF and temporary functions
    • Usage of parameters @param
    • Recursive CTEs
    • It parses SELECTS, CREATE {VIEWS} and MERGE statements
    • It automatically infers internal BQ fields like _TABLE_SUFFIX

What can't it do?

  • This parser won't work with procedural SQL. For example, it will fail trying to parse a DECLARE or SET operations.
  • This parser won't read the logic within UDF functions. It only checks inputs and outputs.
  • ZetaSQL might not be up-to-date with the latest BigQuery features, so if there's something super new, it will involve either waiting for ZetaSQL to be updated, or going deep into ZetaSQL to build the feature.
  • It doesn't work while trying to parse queries accessing INFORMATION_SCHEMA-type of tables. I guess we could bypass this by using a different type of access, but never when through it deeply.
  • This parser won't build the DAG of multiple queries. It only parses a single query at a time. To build a full dag of your dbt project, for example, you can use libraries like networkx to connect the edges from the output of this parser.
  • Parse SQL syntax that is not supported by ZetaSQL (for example the + operator in Snowflake joins)
  • When doing a SELECT count(*) FROM table, the output of the parser would act as if no columns were selected. This could be subject to interpretation: should all the columns of the input table be marked as used? Or should the output be an empty list because this query doesn't care about any specific column or number of columns?
  • Unexpected bugs - even though this parser has been texted over more than 7000 SQL queries, there still might be some edge cases that suddenly are not covered. SQL is hard.
  • It doesn't work with TVF (Table Valued Functions) - although ZetaSQL parses it, the output won't show the columns of the TVF.
  • Automatically infer UDFs - they have to be defined as part of the script that is going to be parsed.

How to use

The folder /src/test/examples has multiple examples of how to use this parser. The main caveat relies on how to build the catalog that ZetaSQL needs. Depending on how much you want the parser to automate the whole process for you, there are three different methods to build a catalog, from the "let the parser to it for me" to "I'll build the catalog myself"

  • /src/test/examples/BigQuerySqlParserBQSchemaTest.java shows how to rely on the metadata of BiGQuery to build the catalog. To use this method the user has to be authenticated with gcloud. Note that there's zero data access/movement in this operation. The only access that is being done is directly to the metadata of the tables, and only to the tables that are being used in the parsed query, i.e., this parser won't scan the whole database. The access is done using the bigquery API. You can use gcloud auth application-default login to authenticate.
  • /src/test/examples/BigQuerySqlParserLocalSchemaTest.java shows how to use local json files to build the schema. /src/test/resources/schemas/ has examples of these files. They are exact copies of the metadata information you can get through the API. Note that this is basically what we automate with the previous method.
  • /src/test/examples/ASTExplorerTest.java Shows an example on how can manually create your own catalog using ZetaSQL methods/constructors and feed it into the parser.

Example

The following example uses the first method to build the catalog - it will use the bigquery API to request the metadata of the tables used in the query.

    BigQueryZetaSqlSchemaLoader schemaLoader =
        new BigQueryZetaSqlSchemaLoader(
            BigQueryTableLoadService.usingServiceFactory(
                BigQueryServiceFactory.defaultFactory()
          )
        );

    ZetaSQLResolver parser = new ZetaSQLResolver(schemaLoader);
    
    String sql = """
        SELECT
              word,
              SUM(word_count) AS count
            FROM
              `bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare`
            WHERE
              word LIKE "%raisin%"
            GROUP BY
              word;
        """;
    
    ResolvedNodeExtended table = parser.extractLineage(sql);
    OutputLineage printer = new OutputLineage();
    printer.toYaml(table, "test", true);

Output:

name: "test"
output_columns:
- name: "word"
  references:
  - project_name: "bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare"
    column_name: "word"
- name: "count"
  references:
  - project_name: "bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare"
    column_name: "word_count"
other_used_columns:
- name: "_word_"
  references:
  - project_name: "bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare"
    column_name: "word"
    literal_value:
    - "%raisin%"
type: "select"
selected_tables:
- "bigquery-public-data.samples.shakespeare"

Notes

  • This parser never accesses the data of the tables or any bigquery instance. The only connection needed is to the metadata of the tables.
  • The parser will use a default project+dataset if these are missing in the reference tables of a project. Please refer to src/main/java/com/borjav/data/options/Options.java in case you need to set a specific project.
  • When using UDFs, they also have to be defined within the code. The parser won't be able to resolve them if they are not defined in the code. Please refer to src/test/resources/sql/benchmark/udf.yaml.

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BigQuery Column Lineage parser

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