Stream::Aggregate - generate aggregate information from a stream of data
use Stream::Aggregate; my $af = generate_aggregation_func( $agg_config, $extra_parameters, $user_extra_parameters); while ($log = ???) { @stats = $af->($log); } @stats = $af->(undef);
Stream::Aggregate is a general-purpose aggregation module that will aggregate from a stream of perl objects. While it was written specifically for log processing, it can be used for other things too.
Aggregation has two key elements: how you group things and what you aggregate. This module understands two different ways to group things: nested and cross-product.
Nested groupings come from processing sorted input: if you have three fields you are considering your context, the order in which the data is sorted must match the order in which these fields make up your context. If you want to count things by URL, then you must sort your input by URL.
Cross-product groupings come from processing unsorted input. Each combination of values of the fields that make up your context is another context. This can lead to memory exhaustion so you must specify the maximum number of values for each of the fields.
Nested groups are most easily illustrated with a simple example: aggregating by year, month, and day. The input data must be sorted by year, month, and day. The current context is defined by the triplet: (year, month, day). That triplet must be returned by the context code. It is stored in the @current_context array. When a context is finished, it must be converted into a hash by context2columns.
context
@current_context
context2columns
Doing it this way, you can, for example, get the average of some data item per day, per month, and per year in one pass though your data.
Cross Product grouping does not depend on the sort order of the input and can have many contexts active at the same time.
For example, if you're aggregating sales figures for shoes and want statistics for the combinations of size, width, and color there isn't a sort or nesting order that will answer your questions.
Use crossproduct to limit yourself to a certain number of values for each variable (say 10 sizes, 3 widths, and 5 colors).
crossproduct
The configuration for Stream::Aggregate is compiled into a perl function which is then called once for each input object. Each time it is called, it may produce one or more aggregate objects as output. When there is no more input data, call the aggregation function with undef as its input.
undef
The generate-the-function routine, generate_aggregation_func takes three parameters. The first is the configuration object (defined below). The configuration object is expected (but not required) to come from a YAML file. All examples are in YAML format. The second and third arguments provide extra information. Currently they are only used to get a description of what this aggregation is trying to do using the name field. Eg:
generate_aggregation_func
name
generate_aggregation_func($agg_config, $extra, $user_extra); my $code = qq{#line 1 "FAKE-all-code-for-$extra->{name}"\n};
The configuration object for Stream::Aggregate is expected to be read from a YAML file but it does not have to be created that way.
For some of the code fields (below), marked as Closure/Config, you can provide a closure instead of code. To do that, have a BEGIN block assign a value (the closure) to the variable $coderef. If you do this, code outside the BEGIN block will only be compiled but will never be run. When evalutating the BEGIN block, the variable $agg_config will be set to the value of key_config (assuming the field was key).
BEGIN
$coderef
$agg_config
The behavior of generate_aggregation_func in array context may change in the future to provide additional return values.
As the aggregator runs over the input, it needs to know the boundries of the contexts so that it knows when to generate an aggregation result record.
For example, if you were aggretgating information about URL with nested groupings, you need to sort your input by URL and you need to define a context that returns the URL (in YAML format, with $log as your input variable):
$log
context: | return ($log->{url})
If you want to aggregate over both the URL and the web host, the context must return an array: host & URL (in YAML format):
context: | $log->{url} =~ m{(?:https?|ftp)://([^/:]+)} my $host = $1; return ($host, $log->{url})
When the context is has multiple levels like that, there will be a resultant aggregation record for each value at each level.
Code, Optional. Given a $log entry, return an array that describes the aggregation context. For example, for a URL, this array might be: domain name; host name (if different from domain name); each component of the path of the URL except the final filename. As Aggregate runs, it will generate an aggregation record for each element of the array.
This code will be invoked on every input record.
This is not required for cross-product aggregations but is required for nested aggregations.
Code, Optional. Given a context, in @current_context, return additional key/value pairs for the resulting aggregation record. This is how the context gets described in the aggregation results records.
This code will be invoked to generate resultant values just before a context is closed.
If this code sets the variable $suppress_result, then this aggregation result will be discarded.
$suppress_result
Code, Optional.
If the new context array returned by the context code (soon to become @current_context) is not an array of strings but rather an array of references, it will be turned into strings using YAML. These strings may not matter because you control how the context manifests in the result records with context2columns.
If this isn't what you want, use stringify_context to do something different. Unlike most of the other functions, stringify_context operates on @_.
stringify_context
@_
This will be invoked for every input record.
Hash, Name->Number, Optional.
For crossproduct groupings, this defines the dimensions. The keys are the variables. The values are the maximum number of values for each variable to track.
The keys must be ephemeral0, ephemeral, or ephemeral2 column names.
ephemeral0
ephemeral
ephemeral2
Hash, Name->Code, Optional.
If you have crossproduct groupings, do you also want to synthesize contexts that exclude some or all of the crossproduct dimensions?
For each dimension, provide code that that answers the question: if you remove this dimension from the crossproduct, should this new context be considered? This code can look at $row to see what other dimensions are active for this potential context. To keep this context, the code must evaluate to a true value.
$row
Combinations are evaluated in alphabetical order. If there is more than one path to a combination, only the first path will be considered. For example, if you have three crossproduct dimensions, a, b and c then the combinations are (in the order the'll be considered):
a
b
c
These have no dependency and will be produced if the combinations code returns a true value.
This possibility will only be explored coming from b and c. If the combination rule for a rejected the combination, then the c-only permuation will never be reached.
This possibility will only be explored coming from b and c. If the combination rule for a rejected the combination, then the b-only permuation will never be reached.
This possibility will only be explored coming from a and c. If the combination rule for b rejected the combination, then the a-only permuation will never be reached.
This possibility will only be explored coming from c. If the combination rule for a or c rejected the combination, then the empty permuation will never be reached.
Using combinations can greatly expand your memory requirements. More than four dimensions of combinations is probably a bad idea.
If you want skip a dimension entirely, leave it out of the combinations key rather than adding key that evaluates to false. A key the evaluates to false will still have to be tested many times whereas a missing key won't have any code generated for it.
When a cross-product key is exceeding its quota of values, the default replacement value is *. This hash allows you to override the code that chooses the new value.
*
Code, Optional, Closure/Config.
This code will be called after the resultant values for a context have been calculated. It is a last-chance to modify them or to suppress the results. The values can be found as a reference to a hash: $row. To suppress the results, set $suppress_results.
$suppress_results
This code will be called each time there is a new context. At the time it is called, $ps is a reference to the new context, but @current_context will not yet have been updated to the new value.
$ps
When using multiple levels of contexts, data is counted for the top-most context layer only. When that top-most layer finishes, the counts are merged into the next more-general layer.
During the merge there is both $ps and $oldps available to for code to reference. The default merge handles all of the pre-defined column types. If you are using $ps->{heap} storage for context data, you need to merge that data from $oldps to $ps yourself.
$oldps
$ps->{heap}
Code, Optional. Before any of the columns are calculated or any of the values saved, run this filter code. If it returns a true value then proceed as normal. If it returns a false value, then do not count any of the values. The filter code can remember things in $ps-{heap}> that might effect how other things are counted.
$ps-
In some situations, you many want to throw away most data and count things in the filter. When doing that, it may be that all of the columns come from output.
output
This may be redesigned in a future release in a way that is not backwards compatible.
Boolean, Optional, default false. Check the filter early before figuring out contexts? If so, and the result is filtered, don't check to see if the context changed.
false
Code, Optional. Add results to the output of the aggregation. A value of $log (assuming that's your input record variable) adds the input data stream to the output stream. The passthrough code is run before the input line is counted.
Number, Optional, default: 4000.
When aggregating large amounts of data, limit memory use by throwing away some of the data. When data is thrown away, keep this number of samples for statistics functions that need bulk data like standard_deviation.
When max_stats_to_keep is exceeded, data will be thrown away. This function will be called when that has happened.
max_stats_to_keep
Code, Optional. Code to preprocess the input $log objects.
String, Optional, default: $log. The default name for the input values to aggregate over is $log. If this name is not appropriate, you can use item_name to change the variable name of the input values to something else. Include the dollar sign ($) in the name.
item_name
$
Boolean, Optional. Print out some debugging information, including the code that is generated for building the columns.
Boolean, Optional, default: false. Enforce strict and warnings for user code.
Each of these (except ephemeral & keep) defines additional columns of output that will be included in each aggregation record. These are all optional and all are defined as key/value pairs where the keys are column names and the values are perl code. You can refer to other columns using the variable $column_column_name where column_name is the name of one of the other columns. When refering to other columns, the order in which columns are processed matters: ephemeral and keep are processed first and second respecively. Idential code fragments will be evaluated only once. Within a group, columns are evaluated alphabetically.
keep
$column_column_name
Some of the columns will have their code evaluated per-item and some are evaluated per-aggregation.
The input data is in $log unless overriden by item_name.
These columns will not be included in the aggregation data. Refer to them as $column_column_name. If you are using ephemeral to declare the column but do not want to assign it a value, set the value for the ephemeral code to be undef. In YAML, thats ~:
~
ephemeral: var1: ~ var2: ~
Same as ephemeral, will be evaluated before ephemeral.
Same as ephemeral, will be evaluated after ephemeral.
Keep a counter. Add one if the code returns true.
Keep a counter. Include the percentage of items for which the code returned true as an output column as opposed to the number of items where the code returned 0. A return value of undef does not get counted at all.
0
Keep an accumulator. Add the return values.
Keep an accumulator. Add the return values. Divide by the number of items before inserting into the results. Items whose value is undef do not count towards the number of items or the sum.
Remeber the return values. Compute the standard deviation of the accumulated return values and insert that into the results. Items whose value is undef are removed before calculating the standard_deviation.
Remeber the return values. Compute the median of the accumulated return values and insert that into the results. Items whose value is undef are removed before calculating the median.
Remeber the return values. Compute the mode (most frequent) of the accumulated return values and insert that into the results. Items whose value is undef are removed before calculating the mode.
Keep a minimum numeric value. Replace it with the return value if the return value is less than the current value. Items whose value is undef are removed before calculating the min.
Keep a maximum numeric value. Replace it with the return value if the return value is greater than the current value. Items whose value is undef are removed before calculating the max.
Keep a minimum string value. Replace it with the return value if the return value is less than the current value. Items whose value is undef are removed before calculating the minstr.
Keep a maximum string value. Replace it with the return value if the return value is greater than the current value. Items whose value is undef are removed before calculating the maxstr.
Remember the return values. The return values are available at aggregation time as @{$ps->{keep}{column_name}}. Items whose value is undef are kept but they're ignored by Stream::Aggregate::Stats functions.
@{$ps->{keep}{column_name}}
For code that is per-aggregation, the saved aggregation state can be found in $ps. One item that is probably needed is $ps->{item_count}.
$ps->{item_count}
Extra columns to include in the output. This is where to save $ps->{item_count}.
Use arbitrary perl code to compute statistics on remembered return values kept with keep. Write your own function or use any of the functions in Stream::Aggregate::Stats (the global variable is pre-loaded). No, there isn't any difference between this and output.
The following variables are available for the code that generates per-item and per-aggregation statistics:
The current input item (unless overridden by item_name)
An array of return values kept by keep.
If Stream::Aggregate::Stats functions are called, they will grab the numeric values from $ps->{keep}{column_name} and store them in $ps->{numeric}{column_name}.
$ps->{keep}{column_name}
$ps->{numeric}{column_name}
For each kept item in $ps->{keep}{column_name}, there is a corrosponding item in $ps->{random} that is a random number. These random numbers are used to determine which values to keep and which values to toss if there are too many values to keep them all.
For each type of column (output, counter, percentage, sum, min, standard_deviation, median, stat) the values that will be part of the final aggregation record.
Some columns need temporary storage for their values: percentage_counter (the counter used by percentage); percentage_total (the number of total items); mean_sum (the sum used to compute the mean); mean_count (the number of items for the mean).
A hash that can be used by the configured perl code for whatever it wants.
The count of items.
The configuration object for Stream::Aggregate
A reference to $log. It's always $itemref even if $log is something else.
$itemref
The current context as returned by context.
The string-ified version @current_context as returned by stringify_context or YAML.
The array of context objects. $ps is always $context[-1].
$context[-1]
An array that counts the number of rows of output from this aggregation. When the context is multi-level, the counter is multi-level. For example, if the context is domain, host, and URL; then $items_seen[0] is the number of domains (so far), and $items_seen[1] is the number of hosts for this domain (so far), and $items_seen[2] is the number of URLs for this host (so far).
$items_seen[0]
$items_seen[1]
$items_seen[2]
Passthrough rows do not count.
XXX what about cross-product aggregations?
When gathering results, the variable that holds them is a reference to a hash: $row.
After gathering results, the $suppress_result variable is examined. If it's set the results (in $row) are discards.
To skip results that aren't crossproduct results, in finalize_result, set $suppress_result if $cross_count isn't true.
finalize_result
$cross_count
The number of currently active crossproduct accumulator contexts.
The additional paramerts (beyond $agg_config) that were passed to generate_aggregation_func().
generate_aggregation_func()
This hash is not used by Stream::Aggregate. It's available for any supplied code to use however it wants.
A refernece to the previous $log object. This is valid during finalize_result and context2columns.
There are more. Read the code.
The following helper functions are available: everything in Stream::Aggregate::Stats and:
Returns $value if $value is defined and not the empty string. Returns undef otherwise.
This example will look at a set of records regarding health risks. Each record represents a person:
name<TAB>birthday<TAB>sex<TAB>number of hospital visits in the last year
We will generate the following aggregation records:
Average age of entire sample
Median number of hospital visits in the last year for the entire sample.
Median number of hospital visits in the last year by sex.
Median number of hospital visits in the last year by age, with a minimum sample size of five.
Median number of hospital vists in the last year by age and sex with a minimum sample size of five.
The code:
#!/usr/bin/perl # # Our input data is the raw strings from the input file. Most of the # work is parsing them and reformatting the data. # use strict; use warnings; use Stream::Aggregate; use YAML; my $aconfig = Load(<<'END_ACONFIG'); strict: 1 debug: 0 item_name: $record max_stats_to_keep: 500 filter_early: 1 filter: | # ignore black lines and comments return 0 if $record =~ /^#/; return 0 if $record =~ /^$/; return 1; crossproduct: sex: 3 age: 150 combinations: sex: 1 age: 1 ephemeral0: # # We are using ephemeral0 to declare the column variables # name: ~ birthday: ~ gender: ~ number_of_visits: ~ ephemeral: # # We are using a fake column ($column_step1) in ephemeral to initialize # the raw column variables we declared in ephemeral0 # step1: | chomp($record); ($column_name, $column_birthday, $column_gender, $column_number_of_visits) = split(/\t/, $record); ephemeral2: # # We are using ephemeral2 to generate the computed input data # age: | use Time::ParseDate qw(parsedate); my $t = parsedate($column_birthday, NO_RELATIVE => 1, DATE_REQUIRED => 1, WHOLE => 1, GMT => 1); return undef unless $t; return int ((parsedate('2011-05-01', GMT => 1) - $t) / (365.24 * 86400)) sex: | return 'M' if $column_gender =~ /^m/i; return 'F' if $column_gender =~ /^f/i; return undef; hospital_visits: | $column_number_of_visits =~ /^(\d+)$/; $1 output: sample_size: $ps->{item_counter} median: avg_hospital_visits: $column_hospital_visits mean: avg_age: $column_age finalize_result: | # # Don't generate result records unless there are at # least five items being aggregated. # $suppress_result = 1 if $ps->{item_counter} < 5; END_ACONFIG my $ag = generate_aggregation_func($aconfig, { name => 'Aggregate Hospital Visits', }); my @results; while (<>) { for my $result ($ag->($_)) { # do something with the result records } } for my $result ($ag->(undef)) { # do something with the result records }
Our example will count the following things: number of unique URLs per domain, average length of the URL.
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use Stream::Aggregate; use YAML; my $aconfig = Load(<<'END_ACONFIG'); strict: 1 debug: 0 item_name: $item context: $item->{domain} context2columns: return (domain => $current_context[0]) ephemeral: # # The only persistent unstructured place to store data from # one row to the next is $ps->{heap}. $ps->{heap} # is per-context, but that's okay for our usage. # is_different: | my $old = $ps->{heap}{last_item}; $ps->{heap}{last_item} = $item; return 1 unless $old; return 0 if $old->{url} eq $item->{url}; return 1; sum: unique_urls: $column_is_different mean: avg_url_length: length($item->{url}) finalize_result: | # we don't want the roll-up context of all domains $suppress_result = 1 unless $row->{domain}; END_ACONFIG my $ag = generate_aggregation_func($aconfig, { name => 'Aggregate URL data' }); while(<>) { # we'll parse the input here my $item; chomp; next if /^$/; next if /^#/; die "'$_'" unless m{^\w+:\/\/([^/]+)(?:/.*)?}; $item = { domain => $1, url => $_, }; for my $result ($ag->($item)) { # do something with the result records } } for my $result ($ag->(undef)) { # do something with the results records }
Copyright (C) 2008-2010 David Sharnoff; Copyright (C) 2011 Google, Inc.
This package may be used and redistributed under the terms of either the Artistic 2.0 or LGPL 2.1 license.
To install Stream::Aggregate, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Stream::Aggregate
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Stream::Aggregate
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.