Overview
Last updated
Last updated
The top-level namespace within Feast is a project. Users define one or more feature views within a project. Each feature view contains one or more features. These features typically relate to one or more entities. A feature view must always have a data source, which in turn is used during the generation of training datasets and when materializing feature values into the online store.
Projects provide complete isolation of feature stores at the infrastructure level. This is accomplished through resource namespacing, e.g., prefixing table names with the associated project. Each project should be considered a completely separate universe of entities and features. It is not possible to retrieve features from multiple projects in a single request. We recommend having a single feature store and a single project per environment (dev
, staging
, prod
).
For offline use cases that only rely on batch data, Feast does not need to ingest data and can query your existing data (leveraging a compute engine, whether it be a data warehouse or (experimental) Spark / Trino). Feast can help manage pushing streaming features to a batch source to make features available for training.
For online use cases, Feast supports ingesting features from batch sources to make them available online (through a process called materialization), and pushing streaming features to make them available both offline / online. We explore this more in the next concept page (Data ingestion)
Features are registered as code in a version controlled repository, and tie to data sources + model versions via the concepts of entities, feature views, and feature services. We explore these concepts more in the upcoming concept pages. These features are then stored in a registry, which can be accessed across users and services. The features can then be retrieved via SDK API methods or via a deployed feature server which exposes endpoints to query for online features (to power real time models).
Feast supports several patterns of feature retrieval.
Use case | Example | API |
---|---|---|
Training data generation | Fetching user and item features for (user, item) pairs when training a production recommendation model |
|
Offline feature retrieval for batch predictions | Predicting user churn for all users on a daily basis |
|
Online feature retrieval for real-time model predictions | Fetching pre-computed features to predict whether a real-time credit card transaction is fraudulent |
|