Feast is highly pluggable and configurable:
One can use existing plugins (offline store, online store, batch materialization engine, providers) and configure those using the built in options. See reference documentation for details.
The other way to customize Feast is to build your own custom components, and then point Feast to delegate to them.
Below are some guides on how to add new custom components:
Feast batch materialization operations (materialize
and materialize-incremental
) execute through a BatchMaterializationEngine
.
Custom batch materialization engines allow Feast users to extend Feast to customize the materialization process. Examples include:
Setting up custom materialization-specific infrastructure during feast apply
(e.g. setting up Spark clusters or Lambda Functions)
Launching custom batch ingestion (materialization) jobs (Spark, Beam, AWS Lambda)
Tearing down custom materialization-specific infrastructure during feast teardown
(e.g. tearing down Spark clusters, or deleting Lambda Functions)
Feast comes with built-in materialization engines, e.g, LocalMaterializationEngine
, and an experimental LambdaMaterializationEngine
. However, users can develop their own materialization engines by creating a class that implements the contract in the BatchMaterializationEngine class.
The fastest way to add custom logic to Feast is to extend an existing materialization engine. The most generic engine is the LocalMaterializationEngine
which contains no cloud-specific logic. The guide that follows will extend the LocalProvider
with operations that print text to the console. It is up to you as a developer to add your custom code to the engine methods, but the guide below will provide the necessary scaffolding to get you started.
The first step is to define a custom materialization engine class. We've created the MyCustomEngine
below.
Notice how in the above engine we have only overwritten two of the methods on the LocalMaterializatinEngine
, namely update
and materialize
. These two methods are convenient to replace if you are planning to launch custom batch jobs.
Configure your feature_store.yaml file to point to your new engine class:
Notice how the batch_engine
field above points to the module and class where your engine can be found.
Now you should be able to use your engine by running a Feast command:
It may also be necessary to add the module root path to your PYTHONPATH
as follows:
That's it. You should now have a fully functional custom engine!
Feast makes adding support for a new offline store easy. Developers can simply implement the OfflineStore interface to add support for a new store (other than the existing stores like Parquet files, Redshift, and Bigquery).
In this guide, we will show you how to extend the existing File offline store and use in a feature repo. While we will be implementing a specific store, this guide should be representative for adding support for any new offline store.
The full working code for this guide can be found at feast-dev/feast-custom-offline-store-demo.
The process for using a custom offline store consists of 8 steps:
Defining an OfflineStore
class.
Defining an OfflineStoreConfig
class.
Defining a RetrievalJob
class for this offline store.
Defining a DataSource
class for the offline store
Referencing the OfflineStore
in a feature repo's feature_store.yaml
file.
Testing the OfflineStore
class.
Updating dependencies.
Adding documentation.
OfflineStore class names must end with the OfflineStore suffix!
New offline stores go in sdk/python/feast/infra/offline_stores/contrib/
.
Not guaranteed to implement all interface methods
Not guaranteed to be stable.
Should have warnings for users to indicate this is a contrib plugin that is not maintained by the maintainers.
To move an offline store plugin out of contrib, you need:
GitHub actions (i.e make test-python-integration
) is setup to run all tests against the offline store and pass.
At least two contributors own the plugin (ideally tracked in our OWNERS
/ CODEOWNERS
file).
The OfflineStore class contains a couple of methods to read features from the offline store. Unlike the OnlineStore class, Feast does not manage any infrastructure for the offline store.
To fully implement the interface for the offline store, you will need to implement these methods:
pull_latest_from_table_or_query
is invoked when running materialization (using the feast materialize
or feast materialize-incremental
commands, or the corresponding FeatureStore.materialize()
method. This method pull data from the offline store, and the FeatureStore
class takes care of writing this data into the online store.
get_historical_features
is invoked when reading values from the offline store using the FeatureStore.get_historical_features()
method. Typically, this method is used to retrieve features when training ML models.
(optional) offline_write_batch
is a method that supports directly pushing a pyarrow table to a feature view. Given a feature view with a specific schema, this function should write the pyarrow table to the batch source defined. More details about the push api can be found here. This method only needs implementation if you want to support the push api in your offline store.
(optional) pull_all_from_table_or_query
is a method that pulls all the data from an offline store from a specified start date to a specified end date. This method is only used for SavedDatasets as part of data quality monitoring validation.
(optional) write_logged_features
is a method that takes a pyarrow table or a path that points to a parquet file and writes the data to a defined source defined by LoggingSource
and LoggingConfig
. This method is only used internally for SavedDatasets.
Most offline stores will have to perform some custom mapping of offline store datatypes to feast value types.
The function to implement here are source_datatype_to_feast_value_type
and get_column_names_and_types
in your DataSource
class.
source_datatype_to_feast_value_type
is used to convert your DataSource's datatypes to feast value types.
get_column_names_and_types
retrieves the column names and corresponding datasource types.
Add any helper functions for type conversion to sdk/python/feast/type_map.py
.
Be sure to implement correct type mapping so that Feast can process your feature columns without casting incorrectly that can potentially cause loss of information or incorrect data.
Additional configuration may be needed to allow the OfflineStore to talk to the backing store. For example, Redshift needs configuration information like the connection information for the Redshift instance, credentials for connecting to the database, etc.
To facilitate configuration, all OfflineStore implementations are required to also define a corresponding OfflineStoreConfig class in the same file. This OfflineStoreConfig class should inherit from the FeastConfigBaseModel
class, which is defined here.
The FeastConfigBaseModel
is a pydantic class, which parses yaml configuration into python objects. Pydantic also allows the model classes to define validators for the config classes, to make sure that the config classes are correctly defined.
This config class must container a type
field, which contains the fully qualified class name of its corresponding OfflineStore class.
Additionally, the name of the config class must be the same as the OfflineStore class, with the Config
suffix.
An example of the config class for the custom file offline store :
This configuration can be specified in the feature_store.yaml
as follows:
This configuration information is available to the methods of the OfflineStore, via the config: RepoConfig
parameter which is passed into the methods of the OfflineStore interface, specifically at the config.offline_store
field of the config
parameter. This fields in the feature_store.yaml
should map directly to your OfflineStoreConfig
class that is detailed above in Section 2.
The offline store methods aren't expected to perform their read operations eagerly. Instead, they are expected to execute lazily, and they do so by returning a RetrievalJob
instance, which represents the execution of the actual query against the underlying store.
Custom offline stores may need to implement their own instances of the RetrievalJob
interface.
The RetrievalJob
interface exposes two methods - to_df
and to_arrow
. The expectation is for the retrieval job to be able to return the rows read from the offline store as a parquet DataFrame, or as an Arrow table respectively.
Users who want to have their offline store support scalable batch materialization for online use cases (detailed in this RFC) will also need to implement to_remote_storage
to distribute the reading and writing of offline store records to blob storage (such as S3). This may be used by a custom Materialization Engine to parallelize the materialization of data by processing it in chunks. If this is not implemented, Feast will default to local materialization (pulling all records into memory to materialize).
Before this offline store can be used as the batch source for a feature view in a feature repo, a subclass of the DataSource
base class needs to be defined. This class is responsible for holding information needed by specific feature views to support reading historical values from the offline store. For example, a feature view using Redshift as the offline store may need to know which table contains historical feature values.
The data source class should implement two methods - from_proto
, and to_proto
.
For custom offline stores that are not being implemented in the main feature repo, the custom_options
field should be used to store any configuration needed by the data source. In this case, the implementer is responsible for serializing this configuration into bytes in the to_proto
method and reading the value back from bytes in the from_proto
method.
After implementing these classes, the custom offline store can be used by referencing it in a feature repo's feature_store.yaml
file, specifically in the offline_store
field. The value specified should be the fully qualified class name of the OfflineStore.
As long as your OfflineStore class is available in your Python environment, it will be imported by Feast dynamically at runtime.
To use our custom file offline store, we can use the following feature_store.yaml
:
If additional configuration for the offline store is not required, then we can omit the other fields and only specify the type
of the offline store class as the value for the offline_store
.
Finally, the custom data source class can be use in the feature repo to define a data source, and refer to in a feature view definition.
Even if you have created the OfflineStore
class in a separate repo, you can still test your implementation against the Feast test suite, as long as you have Feast as a submodule in your repo.
In order to test against the test suite, you need to create a custom DataSourceCreator
that implement our testing infrastructure methods, create_data_source
and optionally, created_saved_dataset_destination
.
create_data_source
should create a datasource based on the dataframe passed in. It may be implemented by uploading the contents of the dataframe into the offline store and returning a datasource object pointing to that location. See BigQueryDataSourceCreator
for an implementation of a data source creator.
created_saved_dataset_destination
is invoked when users need to save the dataset for use in data validation. This functionality is still in alpha and is optional.
Make sure that your offline store doesn't break any unit tests first by running:
Next, set up your offline store to run the universal integration tests. These are integration tests specifically intended to test offline and online stores against Feast API functionality, to ensure that the Feast APIs works with your offline store.
Feast parametrizes integration tests using the FULL_REPO_CONFIGS
variable defined in sdk/python/tests/integration/feature_repos/repo_configuration.py
which stores different offline store classes for testing.
To overwrite the default configurations to use your own offline store, you can simply create your own file that contains a FULL_REPO_CONFIGS
dictionary, and point Feast to that file by setting the environment variable FULL_REPO_CONFIGS_MODULE
to point to that file. The module should add new IntegrationTestRepoConfig
classes to the AVAILABLE_OFFLINE_STORES
by defining an offline store that you would like Feast to test with.
A sample FULL_REPO_CONFIGS_MODULE
looks something like this:
You should swap out the FULL_REPO_CONFIGS
environment variable and run the integration tests against your offline store. In the example repo, the file that overwrites FULL_REPO_CONFIGS
is feast_custom_offline_store/feast_tests.py
, so you would run:
If the integration tests fail, this indicates that there is a mistake in the implementation of this offline store!
Remember to add your datasource to repo_config.py
similar to how we added spark
, trino
, etc, to the dictionary OFFLINE_STORE_CLASS_FOR_TYPE
. This will allow Feast to load your class from the feature_store.yaml
.
Finally, add a Makefile target to the Makefile to run your datastore specific tests by setting the FULL_REPO_CONFIGS_MODULE
and PYTEST_PLUGINS
environment variable. The PYTEST_PLUGINS
environment variable allows pytest to load in the DataSourceCreator
for your datasource. You can remove certain tests that are not relevant or still do not work for your datastore using the -k
option.
Add any dependencies for your offline store to our sdk/python/setup.py
under a new <OFFLINE_STORE>__REQUIRED
list with the packages and add it to the setup script so that if your offline store is needed, users can install the necessary python packages. These packages should be defined as extras so that they are not installed by users by default. You will need to regenerate our requirements files. To do this, create separate pyenv environments for python 3.8, 3.9, and 3.10. In each environment, run the following commands:
Remember to add documentation for your offline store.
Add a new markdown file to docs/reference/offline-stores/
and docs/reference/data-sources/
. Use these files to document your offline store functionality similar to how the other offline stores are documented.
You should also add a reference in docs/reference/data-sources/README.md
and docs/SUMMARY.md
to these markdown files.
NOTE: Be sure to document the following things about your offline store:
How to create the datasource and most what configuration is needed in the feature_store.yaml
file in order to create the datasource.
Make sure to flag that the datasource is in alpha development.
Add some documentation on what the data model is for the specific offline store for more clarity.
Finally, generate the python code docs by running:
All Feast operations execute through a provider
. Operations like materializing data from the offline to the online store, updating infrastructure like databases, launching streaming ingestion jobs, building training datasets, and reading features from the online store.
Custom providers allow Feast users to extend Feast to execute any custom logic. Examples include:
Launching custom streaming ingestion jobs (Spark, Beam)
Launching custom batch ingestion (materialization) jobs (Spark, Beam)
Adding custom validation to feature repositories during feast apply
Adding custom infrastructure setup logic which runs during feast apply
Extending Feast commands with in-house metrics, logging, or tracing
Feast comes with built-in providers, e.g, LocalProvider
, GcpProvider
, and AwsProvider
. However, users can develop their own providers by creating a class that implements the contract in the Provider class.
This guide also comes with a fully functional custom provider demo repository. Please have a look at the repository for a representative example of what a custom provider looks like, or fork the repository when creating your own provider.
The fastest way to add custom logic to Feast is to extend an existing provider. The most generic provider is the LocalProvider
which contains no cloud-specific logic. The guide that follows will extend the LocalProvider
with operations that print text to the console. It is up to you as a developer to add your custom code to the provider methods, but the guide below will provide the necessary scaffolding to get you started.
The first step is to define a custom provider class. We've created the MyCustomProvider
below.
Notice how in the above provider we have only overwritten two of the methods on the LocalProvider
, namely update_infra
and materialize_single_feature_view
. These two methods are convenient to replace if you are planning to launch custom batch or streaming jobs. update_infra
can be used for launching idempotent streaming jobs, and materialize_single_feature_view
can be used for launching batch ingestion jobs.
It is possible to overwrite all the methods on the provider class. In fact, it isn't even necessary to subclass an existing provider like LocalProvider
. The only requirement for the provider class is that it follows the Provider contract.
Configure your feature_store.yaml file to point to your new provider class:
Notice how the provider
field above points to the module and class where your provider can be found.
Now you should be able to use your provider by running a Feast command:
It may also be necessary to add the module root path to your PYTHONPATH
as follows:
That's it. You should now have a fully functional custom provider!
Have a look at the custom provider demo repository for a fully functional example of a custom provider. Feel free to fork it when creating your own custom provider!
Feast makes adding support for a new online store (database) easy. Developers can simply implement the interface to add support for a new store (other than the existing stores like Redis, DynamoDB, SQLite, and Datastore).
In this guide, we will show you how to integrate with MySQL as an online store. While we will be implementing a specific store, this guide should be representative for adding support for any new online store.
The full working code for this guide can be found at .
The process of using a custom online store consists of 6 steps:
Defining the OnlineStore
class.
Defining the OnlineStoreConfig
class.
Referencing the OnlineStore
in a feature repo's feature_store.yaml
file.
Testing the OnlineStore
class.
Update dependencies.
Add documentation.
OnlineStore class names must end with the OnlineStore suffix!
New online stores go in sdk/python/feast/infra/online_stores/contrib/
.
Not guaranteed to implement all interface methods
Not guaranteed to be stable.
Should have warnings for users to indicate this is a contrib plugin that is not maintained by the maintainers.
To move an online store plugin out of contrib, you need:
GitHub actions (i.e make test-python-integration
) is setup to run all tests against the online store and pass.
At least two contributors own the plugin (ideally tracked in our OWNERS
/ CODEOWNERS
file).
The OnlineStore class broadly contains two sets of methods
One set deals with managing infrastructure that the online store needed for operations
One set deals with writing data into the store, and reading data from the store.
There are two methods that deal with managing infrastructure for online stores, update
and teardown
update
is invoked when users run feast apply
as a CLI command, or the FeatureStore.apply()
sdk method.
The update
method should be used to perform any operations necessary before data can be written to or read from the store. The update
method can be used to create MySQL tables in preparation for reads and writes to new feature views.
teardown
is invoked when users run feast teardown
or FeatureStore.teardown()
.
The teardown
method should be used to perform any clean-up operations. teardown
can be used to drop MySQL indices and tables corresponding to the feature views being deleted.
There are two methods that deal with writing data to and from the online stores.online_write_batch
and online_read
.
online_write_batch
is invoked when running materialization (using the feast materialize
or feast materialize-incremental
commands, or the corresponding FeatureStore.materialize()
method.
online_read
is invoked when reading values from the online store using the FeatureStore.get_online_features()
method.
Additional configuration may be needed to allow the OnlineStore to talk to the backing store. For example, MySQL may need configuration information like the host at which the MySQL instance is running, credentials for connecting to the database, etc.
This config class must container a type
field, which contains the fully qualified class name of its corresponding OnlineStore class.
Additionally, the name of the config class must be the same as the OnlineStore class, with the Config
suffix.
An example of the config class for MySQL :
This configuration can be specified in the feature_store.yaml
as follows:
This configuration information is available to the methods of the OnlineStore, via theconfig: RepoConfig
parameter which is passed into all the methods of the OnlineStore interface, specifically at the config.online_store
field of the config
parameter.
After implementing both these classes, the custom online store can be used by referencing it in a feature repo's feature_store.yaml
file, specifically in the online_store
field. The value specified should be the fully qualified class name of the OnlineStore.
As long as your OnlineStore class is available in your Python environment, it will be imported by Feast dynamically at runtime.
To use our MySQL online store, we can use the following feature_store.yaml
:
If additional configuration for the online store is **not **required, then we can omit the other fields and only specify the type
of the online store class as the value for the online_store
.
Even if you have created the OnlineStore
class in a separate repo, you can still test your implementation against the Feast test suite, as long as you have Feast as a submodule in your repo.
In the Feast submodule, we can run all the unit tests and make sure they pass:
The universal tests, which are integration tests specifically intended to test offline and online stores, should be run against Feast to ensure that the Feast APIs works with your online store.
Feast parametrizes integration tests using the FULL_REPO_CONFIGS
variable defined in sdk/python/tests/integration/feature_repos/repo_configuration.py
which stores different online store classes for testing.
To overwrite these configurations, you can simply create your own file that contains a FULL_REPO_CONFIGS
variable, and point Feast to that file by setting the environment variable FULL_REPO_CONFIGS_MODULE
to point to that file.
A sample FULL_REPO_CONFIGS_MODULE
looks something like this:
If you are planning to start the online store up locally(e.g spin up a local Redis Instance) for testing, then the dictionary entry should be something like:
If you are planning instead to use a Dockerized container to run your tests against your online store, you can define a OnlineStoreCreator
and replace the None
object above with your OnlineStoreCreator
class. You should make this class available to pytest through the PYTEST_PLUGINS
environment variable.
If you create a containerized docker image for testing, developers who are trying to test with your online store will not have to spin up their own instance of the online store for testing. An example of an OnlineStoreCreator
is shown below:
3. Add a Makefile target to the Makefile to run your datastore specific tests by setting the FULL_REPO_CONFIGS_MODULE
environment variable. Add PYTEST_PLUGINS
if pytest is having trouble loading your DataSourceCreator
. You can remove certain tests that are not relevant or still do not work for your datastore using the -k
option.
If there are some tests that fail, this indicates that there is a mistake in the implementation of this online store!
Add any dependencies for your online store to our sdk/python/setup.py
under a new <ONLINE_STORE>_REQUIRED
list with the packages and add it to the setup script so that if your online store is needed, users can install the necessary python packages. These packages should be defined as extras so that they are not installed by users by default.
You will need to regenerate our requirements files. To do this, create separate pyenv environments for python 3.8, 3.9, and 3.10. In each environment, run the following commands:
Remember to add the documentation for your online store.
Add a new markdown file to docs/reference/online-stores/
.
You should also add a reference in docs/reference/online-stores/README.md
and docs/SUMMARY.md
. Add a new markdown document to document your online store functionality similar to how the other online stores are documented.
NOTE:Be sure to document the following things about your online store:
Be sure to cover how to create the datasource and what configuration is needed in the feature_store.yaml
file in order to create the datasource.
Make sure to flag that the online store is in alpha development.
Add some documentation on what the data model is for the specific online store for more clarity.
Finally, generate the python code docs by running:
To facilitate configuration, all OnlineStore implementations are required to also define a corresponding OnlineStoreConfig class in the same file. This OnlineStoreConfig class should inherit from the FeastConfigBaseModel
class, which is defined .
The FeastConfigBaseModel
is a class, which parses yaml configuration into python objects. Pydantic also allows the model classes to define validators for the config classes, to make sure that the config classes are correctly defined.