A resource normalizer for dataflows
Project description
Dataflows Resource write to db normalized
This library provides some dataflows processing for normalizing a resource.
It has special support for storing normalized data into DB tables.
What is normalization?
In short, it is the process of reducing duplication in a dataset.
More can be read about this concept here.
Example
Let's take, as an example, this world cities dataset (we shall call it the fact resource):
from dataflows import Flow, load, printer
Flow(
load('https://datahub.io/core/world-cities/r/world-cities.csv', name='cities'),
printer(num_rows=1)
).process()
cities:
# | name | country | subcountry | geonameid |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | les Escaldes | Andorra | Escaldes-Engordany | 3040051 |
2 | Andorra la Vella | Andorra | Andorra la Vella | 3041563 |
... | ||||
23018 | Chitungwiza | Zimbabwe | Harare | 1106542 |
It seems that the country
and subcountry
columns are quite repetitive - let's extract them into a separate, deduplicated resource (we will call that a dimension resource).
To do that we use the normalize
processor.
This processor receives a single resource name, and a list of NormGroup
instances. Each of these groups specifies one new dimension resource to be extracted and deduplicated.
Let's see it in action:
from dataflows_normalize import normalize, NormGroup
Flow(
load('https://datahub.io/core/world-cities/r/world-cities.csv', name='cities'),
normalize([
NormGroup(['country', 'subcountry'], 'country_id', 'id')
], resource='cities'),
printer()
).process()
cities:
# | name | geonameid | country_id |
---|---|---|---|
1 | les Escaldes | 3040051 | 0 |
2 | Andorra la Vella | 3041563 | 1 |
3 | Umm al Qaywayn | 290594 | 2 |
4 | Ras al-Khaimah | 291074 | 3 |
5 | Khawr Fakkān | 291696 | 4 |
... | |||
23014 | Bulawayo | 894701 | 2677 |
23015 | Bindura | 895061 | 2678 |
23016 | Beitbridge | 895269 | 2679 |
23017 | Epworth | 1085510 | 2676 |
23018 | Chitungwiza | 1106542 | 2676 |
cities_country_id:
# | id | country | subcountry |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 30 | Afghanistan | Badakhshan |
2 | 27 | Afghanistan | Badghis |
3 | 21 | Afghanistan | Balkh |
4 | 33 | Afghanistan | Bāmīān |
5 | 31 | Afghanistan | Farah |
6 | 19 | Afghanistan | Faryab |
7 | 28 | Afghanistan | Ghaznī |
8 | 13 | Afghanistan | Ghowr |
9 | 22 | Afghanistan | Helmand |
10 | 11 | Afghanistan | Herat |
... | |||
2671 | 2677 | Zimbabwe | Bulawayo |
2672 | 2676 | Zimbabwe | Harare |
2673 | 2673 | Zimbabwe | Manicaland |
2674 | 2678 | Zimbabwe | Mashonaland Central |
2675 | 2675 | Zimbabwe | Mashonaland East |
2676 | 2674 | Zimbabwe | Mashonaland West |
2677 | 2670 | Zimbabwe | Masvingo |
2678 | 2671 | Zimbabwe | Matabeleland North |
2679 | 2679 | Zimbabwe | Matabeleland South |
2680 | 2672 | Zimbabwe | Midlands |
If we follow the last line in the dataset (Chitungwiza
), we can see that an entry for its region (Zimbabwe/Harare
) was created with id 2676
, and that id was added to the original row instead of the original values.
How much did we gain?
The original CSV file has a size of 895,586 bytes.
If we save the two new resources as CSVs, we would get
542,299 bytes for the fact resource and 68,023 for the regions dimension resource - a total of 610,322 bytes (or a reduction of 31% in size).
Not only this helps with size, it also improves greatly DB performance to store data in normalized form.
DB Normalization
Running similar code to above, only using normalize_to_db
will do the following:
- Load existing values from database dimension tables (in case these tables exist)
- Normalize the input data, and split into fact and dimension resources
- Update the DB tables with new values, while reusing existing references
The main difference in usage from normalize
is that the names of DB tables are provided.
from dataflows_normalize import normalize_to_db, NormGroup
Flow(
load('https://datahub.io/core/world-cities/r/world-cities.csv', name='cities'),
normalize_to_db(
[
NormGroup(['country', 'subcountry'], 'country_id', 'id', db_table='countries_db_table')
],
'cities_db_table', 'cities',
db_connection_str='...'
),
).process()
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