Starburst Stargate#
Starburst Stargate is a connector that lets you link a local catalog on your Starburst Enterprise cluster to a catalog on a remote Starburst Enterprise cluster with the same version.
Starburst Stargate can access a single catalog on the remote cluster for each catalog. Thus, if you have multiple remote catalogs, or you want to connect to multiple remote clusters, you must configure multiple catalogs using Starburst Stargate.
Starburst Stargate uses a JDBC connection to the remote cluster. This means you can connect to any data source and catalog supported by the remote cluster, but features of the connection are restricted to those supported by JDBC.
In addition, note that the connector only allows read access.
Requirements#
Starburst Enterprise clusters using the same version.
The workers and coordinators of the source cluster must be able to connect to the target coordinator using the configured HTTP or HTTPS protocol.
A valid Starburst Enterprise license.
Configuration#
There is no special preparation required on the remote cluster. Make sure both local and remote clusters run the exact same SEP version.
On the local cluster’s nodes, create a catalog properties file in
etc/catalog
named example.properties
(replace example
with your
database name or some other descriptive name of the catalog).
Configure the catalog to use Starburst Stargate by setting the connector.name
property to stargate
.
For the connection-url
property, specify a JDBC string as follows:
The JDBC protocol is
trino
.Specify the URL and port of the remote cluster’s coordinator.
Follow the URL with
*/example*
to specify the catalog on the remote cluster to access.
For the connection-user
and connection-password
properties, specify a
credentials valid on the remote SEP cluster. This connector supports usernames
and passwords specified as plain text.
Alternatively you can configure password credential pass-through to use the credentials of the user on the local SEP cluster to connect to the remote cluster, or OAuth 2.0 token pass-through to use a locally-issued access token to connect.
The remote catalog is available for access using the local catalog name, such as
example
.
If the name of the catalog file on the local cluster is identical to the name of
the catalog file in the remote cluster, you can use the same
catalog.schema.table
access in your queries. As a result, any query on that
catalog you run in the remote cluster also works in the local cluster without
modifications.
We strongly advise that any connection to a remote cluster uses TLS/SSL and an
authenticated connection. Set the ssl.enabled
property to true
to enable
TLS/SSL, and provide the username and password to use for the connection.
The remote cluster must be configured to use TLS/HTTPS
and a supported PASSWORD
authentication type, such as
LDAP authentication or
Password file authentication.
If you are not using globally trusted certificates for TLS/HTTP, you have to
configure ssl.truststore.path
, ssl.truststore.password
, and
ssl.truststore.type
to set the truststore to use for the JDBC connection.
Example 1: A catalog remotehive_example.properties
file to access a
remote Hive catalog called remotehive_example
. TLS running on port 8443.
connector.name=stargate
connection-url=jdbc:trino://remote-cluster.example.net:8443/hive
connection-user=some_sep_user
connection-password=some_password
ssl.enabled=true
You can access the remote catalog with the remotehive_example
catalog in the
local cluster.
Example 2: A catalog remotedb_example.properties
file to access a remote
PostgreSQL catalog called remotedb_example
. TLS behind a load balancer so
that default port 443 is used:
connector.name=stargate
connection-url=jdbc:trino://remote-cluster.example.net:443/postgresdb
connection-user=some_sep_user
connection-password=some_password
ssl.enabled=true
You can access the remote catalog with the remotedb_example
catalog in the
local cluster.
Example 3: A catalog website_example.properties
file to access a remote
PostgreSQL catalog, which is called website_example
there as well. The
remote cluster requires a TLS connection:
connector.name=stargate
connection-url=jdbc:trino://remote-cluster.example.net:8443/website
connection-user=remotepost
connection-password=some_password
ssl.enabled=true
General configuration properties#
The following table describes general catalog configuration properties for the connector:
Property name |
Description |
---|---|
|
Support case insensitive schema and table names. Defaults to |
|
Duration for which case insensitive schema and table
names are cached. Defaults to |
|
Path to a name mapping configuration file in JSON format that allows
Trino to disambiguate between schemas and tables with similar names in
different cases. Defaults to |
|
Frequency with which Trino checks the name matching configuration file
for changes. The duration value defaults to |
|
Duration for which metadata, including table and
column statistics, is cached. Defaults to |
|
Cache the fact that metadata, including table and column statistics, is
not available. Defaults to |
|
Duration for which schema metadata is cached.
Defaults to the value of |
|
Duration for which table metadata is cached.
Defaults to the value of |
|
Duration for which tables statistics are cached.
Defaults to the value of |
|
Maximum number of objects stored in the metadata cache. Defaults to |
|
Maximum number of statements in a batched execution. Do not change
this setting from the default. Non-default values may negatively
impact performance. Defaults to |
|
Push down dynamic filters into JDBC queries. Defaults to |
|
Maximum duration for which Trino waits for dynamic
filters to be collected from the build side of joins before starting a
JDBC query. Using a large timeout can potentially result in more detailed
dynamic filters. However, it can also increase latency for some queries.
Defaults to |
Type mapping#
Starburst Stargate to Trino type mapping#
The following read type mapping applies when data is read from existing tables on the remote data source.
Remote data source type |
Local SEP type |
Notes |
---|---|---|
BOOLEAN |
BOOLEAN |
|
TINYINT |
TINYINT |
|
SMALLINT |
SMALLINT |
|
INTEGER |
INTEGER |
|
BIGINT |
BIGINT |
|
REAL |
REAL |
|
DOUBLE |
DOUBLE |
|
DECIMAL |
DECIMAL |
all precisions |
CHAR |
CHAR |
all precisions |
VARCHAR |
VARCHAR |
all precisions |
VARBINARY |
VARBINARY |
|
DATE |
DATE |
|
TIME |
TIME |
all precisions |
TIME WITH TIME ZONE |
TIME WITH TIME ZONE |
all precisions |
TIMESTAMP |
TIMESTAMP |
all precisions |
TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE |
TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE |
all precisions |
JSON |
JSON |
No other type is supported.
Type mapping configuration properties#
The following properties can be used to configure how data types from the connected data source are mapped to Trino data types and how the metadata is cached in Trino.
Property name |
Description |
Default value |
---|---|---|
|
Configure how unsupported column data types are handled:
The respective catalog session property is |
|
|
Allow forced mapping of comma separated lists of data types to convert to
unbounded |
SQL support#
The connector supports globally available and read operation statements to access data and metadata in JDBC.
ALTER TABLE EXECUTE#
The connector supports the following commands for use with ALTER TABLE EXECUTE:
collect_statistics#
The collect_statistics
command is used with
Managed statistics to collect statistics for a table
and its columns.
The following statement collects statistics for the example_table
table
and all of its columns:
ALTER TABLE example_table EXECUTE collect_statistics;
Collecting statistics for all columns in a table may be unnecessarily
performance-intensive, especially for wide tables. To only collect statistics
for a subset of columns, you can include the columns
parameter with an
array of column names. For example:
ALTER TABLE example_table
EXECUTE collect_statistics(columns => ARRAY['customer','line_item']);
Table functions#
The connector provides specific table functions to access Starburst Stargate.
query(VARCHAR) -> table
#
The query
function allows you to query the underlying database directly. It
requires syntax native to the data source, because the full query is pushed down
and processed in the data source. This can be useful for accessing native
features or for improving query performance in situations where running a query
natively may be faster.
The query
table function is available in the system
schema of any
catalog that uses the Starburst Stargate connector, such as example
. The following
example passes myQuery
to the data source. myQuery
has to be a valid
query for the data source, and is required to return a table as a result:
SELECT
*
FROM
TABLE(
example.system.query(
query => 'myQuery'
)
);
Performance#
The connector includes a number of performance features, detailed in the following sections.
Table statistics#
Starburst Stargate supports table and column statistics for cost based optimizations if the remote catalog’s connector supports it, such as the Hive connector. In this case, this feature improves query processing performance based on the actual data in the data source.
For remote connectors that support this feature:
The statistics are collected by the remote data source and are retrieved by Starburst Stargate.
To collect statistics for a table, use the command required by the connector there. For example, for Hive catalogs you can use the following statement on the remote data source:
ANALYZE table_schema.table_name;
Retrieving statistics for Hive views defined in the remote data source is supported. Statistics for other views, such as on PostgreSQL catalogs, are not supported.
Managed statistics#
The connector supports Managed statistics allowing SEP to collect and store its own table and column statistics that can then be used for performance optimizations in query planning. When you enable managed statistics on a Stargate catalog, statistics are stored on the local cluster, eliminating the need for the optimizer to reference statistics on a remote cluster.
Statistics must be collected manually using the built-in collect_statistics
command, see collect_statistics for details and
examples.
Pushdown#
The connector supports pushdown for a number of operations:
Aggregate pushdown for the following functions:
count()
, alsocount(distinct x)
variance()
andvar_samp()
Cost-based join pushdown#
The connector supports cost-based Join pushdown to make intelligent decisions about whether to push down a join operation to the data source.
When cost-based join pushdown is enabled, the connector only pushes down join operations if the available Table statistics suggest that doing so improves performance. Note that if no table statistics are available, join operation pushdown does not occur to avoid a potential decrease in query performance.
The following table describes catalog configuration properties for join pushdown:
Property name |
Description |
Default value |
---|---|---|
|
Enable join pushdown. Equivalent catalog
session property is
|
|
|
Strategy used to evaluate whether join operations are pushed down. Set to
|
|
Note
If the remote system does not expose table statistics, then join pushdown does
not occur regardless of how join-pushdown.strategy
is configured.
Dynamic filtering#
Dynamic filtering is enabled by default. It causes the connector to wait for dynamic filtering to complete before starting a JDBC query.
You can disable dynamic filtering by setting the dynamic-filtering.enabled
property in your catalog configuration file to false
.
Wait timeout#
By default, table scans on the connector are delayed up to 20 seconds until dynamic filters are collected from the build side of joins. Using a large timeout can potentially result in more detailed dynamic filters. However, it can also increase latency for some queries.
You can configure the dynamic-filtering.wait-timeout
property in your
catalog properties file:
dynamic-filtering.wait-timeout=1m
You can use the dynamic_filtering_wait_timeout
catalog session property in a specific session:
SET SESSION example.dynamic_filtering_wait_timeout = 1s;
Compaction#
The maximum size of dynamic filter predicate, that is pushed down to the
connector during table scan for a column, is configured using the
domain-compaction-threshold
property in the catalog
properties file:
domain-compaction-threshold=100
You can use the domain_compaction_threshold
catalog
session property:
SET SESSION domain_compaction_threshold = 10;
By default, domain-compaction-threshold
is set to 32
.
When the dynamic predicate for a column exceeds this threshold, it is compacted
into a single range predicate.
For example, if the dynamic filter collected for a date column dt
on the
fact table selects more than 32 days, the filtering condition is simplified from
dt IN ('2020-01-10', '2020-01-12',..., '2020-05-30')
to dt BETWEEN '2020-01-10' AND '2020-05-30'
. Using a large threshold can result in increased
table scan overhead due to a large IN
list getting pushed down to the data
source.
Metrics#
Metrics about dynamic filtering are reported in a JMX table for each catalog:
jmx.current."io.trino.plugin.jdbc:name=example,type=dynamicfilteringstats"
Metrics include information about the total number of dynamic filters, the number of completed dynamic filters, the number of available dynamic filters and the time spent waiting for dynamic filters.
Security#
The connector includes a number of security-related features, detailed in the following sections.
User impersonation#
The connector supports user impersonation.
You can enable it in the catalog file with the following configuration:
stargate.impersonation.enabled=true
Kerberos authentication#
The connector supports Kerberos authentication. Use the following properties in the catalog properties file to configure it.
stargate.authentication.type=KERBEROS
kerberos.client.principal=example@example.com
kerberos.client.keytab=/etc/kerberos/example.keytab
kerberos.config=/etc/krb5.conf
kerberos.remote.service-name=server-service-name
kerberos.service-principal-pattern=${SERVICE}@${HOST}
kerberos.service-use-canonical-hostname=true
With this configuration the user example@example.com
, defined in the
principal property, is used to connect to the database, and the related Kerberos
service ticket is located in the example.keytab
file.
kerberos.service-principal-pattern
is optional and defaults to
${SERVICE}@${HOST}
. kerberos.service-use-canonical-hostname
is also
optional, and defaults to true
.
Password credential pass-through#
The connector supports password credential pass-through. It uses the user credentials on the local cluster to connect to the remote cluster.
To enable it, edit the catalog properties file to include the authentication
type, and remove the connection-user
and connection-password
properties:
stargate.authentication.type=PASSWORD_PASS_THROUGH
For more information about configurations and limitations, see Password credential pass-through.
OAuth 2.0 token pass-through#
The connector supports OAuth 2.0 token pass-through to use a locally-issued access token to authenticate with the remote cluster.
To enable this feature, the remote cluster must be configured to use
OAuth 2.0 authentication. Set the stargate.authentication.type
catalog configuration property to OAUTH2_PASSTHROUGH
:
stargate.authentication.type=OAUTH2_PASSTHROUGH
Starburst Cached Views#
The connector supports table scan redirection to improve performance and reduce load on the remote catalog.