SQL Backend

The SQL backend is using the SQLAlchemy which supports following SQL database dialects:

  • Drizzle
  • Firebird
  • Informix
  • Microsoft SQL Server
  • MySQL
  • Oracle
  • PostgreSQL
  • SQLite
  • Sybase

Store Configuration

Data store:

  • url (required) – database URL in form: adapter://user:password@host:port/database
  • schema (optional) – schema containing denormalized views for relational DB cubes
  • dimension_prefix (optional) – used by snowflake mapper to find dimension tables when no explicit mapping is specified
  • dimension_suffix (optional) – used by snowflake mapper to find dimension tables when no explicit mapping is specified
  • dimension_schema – use this option when dimension tables are stored in different schema than the fact tables
  • fact_prefix (optional) – used by the snowflake mapper to find fact table for a cube, when no explicit fact table name is specified
  • fact_suffix (optional) – used by the snowflake mapper to find fact table for a cube, when no explicit fact table name is specified
  • use_denormalization (optional) – browser will use dernormalized view instead of snowflake
  • denormalized_view_prefix (optional, advanced) – if denormalization is used, then this prefix is added for cube name to find corresponding cube view
  • denormalized_view_schema (optional, advanced) – schema wehere denormalized views are located (use this if the views are in different schema than fact tables, otherwise default schema is going to be used)

Database Connection

(advanced topic)

To fine-tune the SQLAlchemy database connection some of the create_engine() parameters can be specified as sqlalchemy_PARAMETER:

  • sqlalchemy_case_sensitive
  • sqlalchemy_convert_unicode
  • sqlalchemy_pool_size
  • sqlalchemy_pool_recycle
  • sqlalchemy_pool_timeout
  • sqlalchemy_... ...

Please refer to the create_engine documentation for more information.

Mappings

One of the important parts of proper OLAP on top of the relational database is the mapping of logical attributes to their physical counterparts. In SQL database the physical attribute is stored in a column, which belongs to a table, which might be part of a database schema.

../_images/mapping_logical_to_physical.png

For example, take a reference to an attribute name in a dimension product. What is the column of what table in which schema that contains the value of this dimension attribute?

../_images/mapping-example1.png

For data browsing, the Cubes framework has to know where those logical (reported) attributes are physically stored. It needs to know which tables are related to the cube and how they are joined together so we get whole view of a fact.

The process is done in two steps:

  1. joining relevant star/snowflake tables
  2. mapping logical attribute to table + column

There are two ways how the mapping is being done: implicit and explicit. The simplest, straightforward and most customizable is the explicit way, where the actual column reference is provided in a mapping dictionary of the cube description.

Implicit Mapping

With implicit mapping one can match a database schema with logical model and does not have to specify additional mapping metadata. Expected structure is star schema with one table per (denormalized) dimension.

Facts

Cubes looks for fact table with the same name as cube name. You might specify prefix for every fact table with fact_table_prefix. Example:

  • Cube is named contracts, framework looks for a table named contracts.
  • Cubes are named contracts, invoices and fact table prefix is fact_ then framework looks for tables named fact_contracts and fact_invoices respectively.

Dimensions

By default, dimension tables are expected to have same name as dimensions and dimension table columns are expected to have same name as dimension attributes:

../_images/dimension_attribute_implicit_map.png

It is quite common practice that dimension tables have a prefix such as dim_ or dm_. Such prefix can be specified with dimension_prefix option.

../_images/dimension_attribute_prefix_map.png

The rules are:

  • fact table should have same name as represented cube: fact table name = fact table prefix + fact table name
  • dimension table should have same name as the represented dimension, for example: product (singular): dimension table name = dimension prefix + dimension name
  • column name should have same name as dimension attribute: name, code, description
  • references without dimension name in them are expected to be in the fact table, for example: amount, discount (see note below for simple flat dimensions)
  • if attribute is localized, then there should be one column per localization and should have locale suffix: description_en, description_sk, description_fr (see below for more information)

Flat dimension without details

What about dimensions that have only one attribute, like one would not have a full date but just a year? In this case it is kept in the fact table without need of separate dimension table. The attribute is treated in by the same rule as measure and is referenced by simple year. This is applied to all dimensions that have only one attribute (representing key as well). This dimension is referred to as flat and without details.

Note

The simplification of the flat references can be disabled by setting simplify_dimension_references to False in the mapper. In that case you will have to have separate table for the dimension attribute and you will have to reference the attribute by full name. This might be useful when you know that your dimension will be more detailed.

Database Schemas

For databases that support schemas, such as PostgreSQL, option schema can be used to specify default database schema where all tables are going to be looked for.

In case you have dimensions stored in separate schema than fact table, you can specify that in dimension_schema. All dimension tables are going to be searched in that schema.

Explicit Mapping

If the schema does not match expectations of cubes, it is possible to explicitly specify how logical attributes are going to be mapped to their physical tables and columns. Mapping dictionary is a dictionary of logical attributes as keys and physical attributes (columns, fields) as values. The logical attributes references look like:

  • dimensions_name.attribute_name, for example: geography.country_name or category.code
  • fact_attribute_name, for example: amount or discount

Following mapping maps attribute name of dimension product to the column product_name of table dm_products.

"mappings": {
    "product.name": "dm_products.product_name"
}

Note

Note that in the mappings the table names should be spelled as they are in the database even the table prefix is specified.

If it is in different schema or any part of the reference contains a dot:

"mappings": {
    "product.name": {
            "schema": "sales",
            "table": "dm_products",
            "column": "product_name"
        }
}

Both, explicit and implicit mappings have ability to specify default database schema (if you are using Oracle, PostgreSQL or any other DB which supports schemas).

The mapping process process is like this:

../_images/mapping-overview.png

Date Data Type

Date datatype column can be turned into a date dimension by extracting date parts in the mapping. To do so, for each date attribute specify a column name and part to be extracted with value for extract key.

"mappings": {
  "date.year": {"column":"date", "extract":"year"},
  "date.month": {"column":"date", "extract":"month"},
  "date.day": {"column":"date", "extract":"day"}
}

According to SQLAlchemy, you can extract in most of the databases: month, day, year, second, hour, doy (day of the year), minute, quarter, dow (day of the week), week, epoch, milliseconds, microseconds, timezone_hour, timezone_minute. Please refer to your database engine documentation for more information.

Note

It is still recommended to have a date dimension table.

Localization

From physical point of view, the data localization is very trivial and requires language denormalization - that means that each language has to have its own column for each attribute.

Localizable attributes are those attributes that have locales specified in their definition. To map logical attributes which are localizable, use locale suffix for each locale. For example attribute name in dimension category has two locales: Slovak (sk) and English (en). Or for example product category can be in English, Slovak or German. It is specified in the model like this:

attributes = [
    {
        "name" = "category",
        "locales" = ["en", "sk", "de"]
    }
]

During the mapping process, localized logical reference is created first:

../_images/mapping-to_localized.png

In short: if attribute is localizable and locale is requested, then locale suffix is added. If no such localization exists then default locale is used. Nothing happens to non-localizable attributes.

For such attribute, three columns should exist in the physical model. There are two ways how the columns should be named. They should have attribute name with locale suffix such as category_sk and category_en (_underscore_ because it is more common in table column names), if implicit mapping is used. You can name the columns as you like, but you have to provide explicit mapping in the mapping dictionary. The key for the localized logical attribute should have .locale suffix, such as product.category.sk for Slovak version of category attribute of dimension product. Here the _dot_ is used because dots separate logical reference parts.

Note

Current implementation of Cubes framework requires a star or snowflake schema that can be joined into fully denormalized normalized form just by simple one-key based joins. Therefore all localized attributes have to be stored in their own columns. In other words, you have to denormalize the localized data before using them in Cubes.

Read more about Localization.

Mapping Process Summary

Following diagram describes how the mapping of logical to physical attributes is done in the star SQL browser (see cubes.backends.sql.StarBrowser):

../_images/mapping-logical_to_physical.png

logical to physical attribute mapping

The “red path” shows the most common scenario where defaults are used.

Joins

The SQL backend supports a star:

../_images/schema_star.png

and a snowflake database schema:

../_images/schema_snowflake.png

If you are using either of the two schemas (star or snowflake) in relational database, Cubes requires information on how to join the tables. Tables are joined by matching single-column – surrogate keys. The framework needs the join information to be able to transform following snowflake:

../_images/snowflake_schema.png

to appear as a denormalized table with all cube attributes:

../_images/denormalized_schema.png

Note

The SQL backend performs only joins that are relevant to the given query. If no attributes from a table are used, then the table is not joined.

Join Description

Joins are defined as an ordered list (order is important) for every cube separately. The join description consists of reference to the master table and a table with details. Fact table is example of master table, dimension is example of a detail table (in a star schema).

Note

Only single column – surrogate keys are supported for joins.

The join specification is very simple, you define column reference for both: master and detail. The table reference is in the form table.`column`:

"joins" = [
    {
        "master": "fact_sales.product_key",
        "detail": "dim_product.key"
    }
]

As in mappings, if you have specific needs for explicitly mentioning database schema or any other reason where table.column reference is not enough, you might write:

"joins" = [
    {
        "master": "fact_sales.product_id",
        "detail": {
            "schema": "sales",
            "table": "dim_products",
            "column": "id"
        }
]

Aliases

What if you need to join same table twice or more times? For example, you have list of organizations and you want to use it as both: supplier and service consumer.

../_images/joins-in_physical.png

It can be done by specifying alias in the joins:

"joins" = [
    {
        "master": "contracts.supplier_id",
        "detail": "organisations.id",
        "alias": "suppliers"
    },
    {
        "master": "contracts.consumer_id",
        "detail": "organisations.id",
        "alias": "consumers"
    }
]

Note that with aliases, in the mappings you refer to the table by alias specified in the joins, not by real table name. So after aliasing tables with previous join specification, the mapping should look like:

"mappings": {
    "supplier.name": "suppliers.org_name",
    "consumer.name": "consumers.org_name"
}

For example, we have a fact table named fact_contracts and dimension table with categories named dm_categories. To join them we define following join specification:

"joins" = [
    {
        "master": "fact_contracts.category_id",
        "detail": "dm_categories.id"
     }
]

Join Methods and Outer Joins

(advanced topic)

Cubes supports three join methods:

  • match (default) – the keys from both master and detail tables have to match – INNER JOIN
  • master – the master might contain more keys than the detail, for example the fact table (as a master) might contain unknown or new dimension entries not in the dimension table yet. This is also known as LEFT OUTER JOIN.
  • detail – every member of the detail table will be always present. For example every date from a date dimension table. Alskoknown as RIGHT OUTER JOIN.

To join a date dimension table so that every date will be present in the output reports, regardless whether there are any facts or not for given date dimension member:

"joins" = [
    {
        "master": "fact_contracts.contract_date_id",
        "detail": "dim_date.id",
        "method": "detail"
     }
]

The detail Method and its Limitations

(advanced topic)

When at least one table is joined using the outer detail method during aggregation, the statement is composed from two nested statements or two join zones: master fact and outer detail.

../_images/cubes-outer_join_aggregate_statement.png

Aggregate statement composition

The query builder analyses the schema and assigns a relationship of a table towards the fact. If a table is joined as detail or is behind a detail join it is considered to have a detail relationship towards the fact. Otherwise it has master/match relationship.

When this composed setting is used, then:

  • aggregate functions are wrapped using COALESCE() to always return non-NULL values
  • count aggregates are changed to count non-empty facts instead of all rows

Note

There should be no cut (path) that has some attributes in tables joined as master and others in a table joined as detail. Every cut (all the cut’s attributes) should fall into one of the two table zones: either the master or the outer detail. There might be cuts from different join zones, though.

Take this into account when designing the dimension hierarchies.

Named Join Templates

If multiple cubes share the same kinds of joins, for example with a dimension table, it is possible to define such joins at the model level. They will be considered as templates:

"joins": [
    { "name": "date", "detail": "dim_date.id" },
    { "name": "company", "detail": "dim_company.id" }
]

Then use the join in a cube:

"cubes": [
    {
        "name": "events",
        "joins": [
            { "name": "date", "master": "event_date_id" },
            { "name": "company", "detail": "company_id" }
        ]
    }
]

Any property defined in the cube join will replace the model join template. You can also use the same named join multiple times in a cube, just give it different alias:

"cubes": [
    {
        "name": "contracts",
        "joins": [
            {
                "name": "date",
                "master": "contract_start_date_id",
                "alias": "dim_contract_start"
            },
            {
                "name": "date",
                "master": "contract_end_date_id",
                "alias": "dim_contract_end"
            }
        ]
    }
]