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  • Introduction
  • Community
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog
  • Getting started
    • Quickstart
    • Concepts
      • Overview
      • Data source
      • Entity
      • Feature view
      • Feature service
      • Feature retrieval
      • Point-in-time joins
    • Architecture
      • Overview
      • Feature repository
      • Registry
      • Offline store
      • Online store
      • Provider
    • Third party integrations
    • FAQ
  • Tutorials
    • Overview
    • Driver ranking
    • Fraud detection on GCP
    • Real-time credit scoring on AWS
  • How-to Guides
    • Running Feast with GCP/AWS
      • Install Feast
      • Create a feature repository
      • Deploy a feature store
      • Build a training dataset
      • Load data into the online store
      • Read features from the online store
    • Running Feast in production
    • Upgrading from Feast 0.9
    • Adding a custom provider
    • Adding a new online store
    • Adding a new offline store
    • Adding or reusing tests
  • Reference
    • Data sources
      • File
      • BigQuery
      • Redshift
    • Offline stores
      • File
      • BigQuery
      • Redshift
    • Online stores
      • SQLite
      • Redis
      • Datastore
      • DynamoDB
    • Providers
      • Local
      • Google Cloud Platform
      • Amazon Web Services
    • Feature repository
      • feature_store.yaml
      • .feastignore
    • [Alpha] On demand feature view
    • [Alpha] Stream ingestion
    • [Alpha] Local feature server
    • [Alpha] AWS Lambda feature server
    • Feast CLI reference
    • Python API reference
    • Usage
  • Project
    • Contribution process
    • Development guide
    • Versioning policy
    • Release process
    • Feast 0.9 vs Feast 0.10+
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  • Integrations
  • Data Sources
  • Offline Stores
  • Online Stores
  • Deployments
  • Standards

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  1. Getting started

Third party integrations

We integrate with a wide set of tools and technologies so you can make Feast work in your existing stack. Many of these integrations are maintained as plugins to the main Feast repo.

Don't see your offline store or online store of choice here? Check out our guides to make a custom one!

  • Adding a new offline store

  • Adding a new online store

Integrations

Data Sources

Offline Stores

Online Stores

Deployments

Standards

In order for a plugin integration to be highlighted on this page, it must meet the following requirements:

  1. The plugin must have tests. Ideally it would use the Feast universal tests (see this guide for an example), but custom tests are fine.

  2. The plugin must have some basic documentation on how it should be used.

  3. The author must work with a maintainer to pass a basic code review (e.g. to ensure that the implementation roughly matches the core Feast implementations).

In order for a plugin integration to be merged into the main Feast repo, it must meet the following requirements:

  1. The PR must pass all integration tests. The universal tests (tests specifically designed for custom integrations) must be updated to test the integration.

  2. There is documentation and a tutorial on how to use the integration.

  3. The author (or someone else) agrees to take ownership of all the files, and maintain those files going forward.

  4. If the plugin is being contributed by an organization, and not an individual, the organization should provide the infrastructure (or credits) for integration tests.

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Last updated 3 years ago

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