Quickstart

In this tutorial we will

  1. Deploy a local feature store with a Parquet file offline store and Sqlite online store.

  2. Build a training dataset using our time series features from our Parquet files.

  3. Ingest batch features ("materialization") and streaming features (via a Push API) into the online store.

  4. Read the latest features from the offline store for batch scoring

  5. Read the latest features from the online store for real-time inference.

  6. Explore the (experimental) Feast UI

Overview

In this tutorial, we'll use Feast to generate training data and power online model inference for a ride-sharing driver satisfaction prediction model. Feast solves several common issues in this flow:

  1. Training-serving skew and complex data joins: Feature values often exist across multiple tables. Joining these datasets can be complicated, slow, and error-prone.

    • Feast joins these tables with battle-tested logic that ensures point-in-time correctness so future feature values do not leak to models.

  2. Online feature availability: At inference time, models often need access to features that aren't readily available and need to be precomputed from other data sources.

    • Feast manages deployment to a variety of online stores (e.g. DynamoDB, Redis, Google Cloud Datastore) and ensures necessary features are consistently available and freshly computed at inference time.

  3. Feature and model versioning: Different teams within an organization are often unable to reuse features across projects, resulting in duplicate feature creation logic. Models have data dependencies that need to be versioned, for example when running A/B tests on model versions.

    • Feast enables discovery of and collaboration on previously used features and enables versioning of sets of features (via feature services).

    • (Experimental) Feast enables light-weight feature transformations so users can re-use transformation logic across online / offline use cases and across models.

Step 1: Install Feast

Install the Feast SDK and CLI using pip:

Step 2: Create a feature repository

Bootstrap a new feature repository using feast init from the command line.

Let's take a look at the resulting demo repo itself. It breaks down into

  • data/ contains raw demo parquet data

  • example_repo.py contains demo feature definitions

  • feature_store.yaml contains a demo setup configuring where data sources are

  • test_workflow.py showcases how to run all key Feast commands, including defining, retrieving, and pushing features. You can run this with python test_workflow.py.

The feature_store.yaml file configures the key overall architecture of the feature store.

The provider value sets default offline and online stores.

  • The offline store provides the compute layer to process historical data (for generating training data & feature values for serving).

  • The online store is a low latency store of the latest feature values (for powering real-time inference).

Valid values for provider in feature_store.yaml are:

  • local: use a SQL registry or local file registry. By default, use a file / Dask based offline store + SQLite online store

  • gcp: use a SQL registry or GCS file registry. By default, use BigQuery (offline store) + Google Cloud Datastore (online store)

  • aws: use a SQL registry or S3 file registry. By default, use Redshift (offline store) + DynamoDB (online store)

Note that there are many other offline / online stores Feast works with, including Spark, Azure, Hive, Trino, and PostgreSQL via community plugins. See Third party integrations for all supported data sources.

A custom setup can also be made by following Customizing Feast.

Inspecting the raw data

The raw feature data we have in this demo is stored in a local parquet file. The dataset captures hourly stats of a driver in a ride-sharing app.

Demo parquet data: data/driver_stats.parquet

Step 3: Run sample workflow

There's an included test_workflow.py file which runs through a full sample workflow:

  1. Register feature definitions through feast apply

  2. Generate a training dataset (using get_historical_features)

  3. Generate features for batch scoring (using get_historical_features)

  4. Ingest batch features into an online store (using materialize_incremental)

  5. Fetch online features to power real time inference (using get_online_features)

  6. Ingest streaming features into offline / online stores (using push)

  7. Verify online features are updated / fresher

We'll walk through some snippets of code below and explain

Step 3a: Register feature definitions and deploy your feature store

The apply command scans python files in the current directory for feature view/entity definitions, registers the objects, and deploys infrastructure. In this example, it reads example_repo.py and sets up SQLite online store tables. Note that we had specified SQLite as the default online store by configuring online_store in feature_store.yaml.

Step 3b: Generating training data or powering batch scoring models

To train a model, we need features and labels. Often, this label data is stored separately (e.g. you have one table storing user survey results and another set of tables with feature values). Feast can help generate the features that map to these labels.

Feast needs a list of entities (e.g. driver ids) and timestamps. Feast will intelligently join relevant tables to create the relevant feature vectors. There are two ways to generate this list:

  1. The user can query that table of labels with timestamps and pass that into Feast as an entity dataframe for training data generation.

  2. The user can also query that table with a SQL query which pulls entities. See the documentation on feature retrieval for details

  • Note that we include timestamps because we want the features for the same driver at various timestamps to be used in a model.

Generating training data

Run offline inference (batch scoring)

To power a batch model, we primarily need to generate features with the get_historical_features call, but using the current timestamp

Step 3c: Ingest batch features into your online store

We now serialize the latest values of features since the beginning of time to prepare for serving (note: materialize-incremental serializes all new features since the last materialize call).

Step 3d: Fetching feature vectors for inference

At inference time, we need to quickly read the latest feature values for different drivers (which otherwise might have existed only in batch sources) from the online feature store using get_online_features(). These feature vectors can then be fed to the model.

Step 3e: Using a feature service to fetch online features instead.

You can also use feature services to manage multiple features, and decouple feature view definitions and the features needed by end applications. The feature store can also be used to fetch either online or historical features using the same API below. More information can be found here.

The driver_activity_v1 feature service pulls all features from the driver_hourly_stats feature view:

Step 4: Browse your features with the Web UI (experimental)

View all registered features, data sources, entities, and feature services with the Web UI.

One of the ways to view this is with the feast ui command.

Step 5: Re-examine test_workflow.py

Take a look at test_workflow.py again. It showcases many sample flows on how to interact with Feast. You'll see these show up in the upcoming concepts + architecture + tutorial pages as well.

Next steps

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