Feature repository
Feast users use Feast to manage two important sets of configuration:
Configuration about how to run Feast on your infrastructure
Feature definitions
With Feast, the above configuration can be written declaratively and stored as code in a central location. This central location is called a feature repository. The feature repository is the declarative source of truth for what the desired state of a feature store should be.
The Feast CLI uses the feature repository to configure, deploy, and manage your feature store.
What is a feature repository?
A feature repository consists of:
A collection of Python files containing feature declarations.
A
feature_store.yaml
file containing infrastructural configuration.A
.feastignore
file containing paths in the feature repository to ignore.
Typically, users store their feature repositories in a Git repository, especially when working in teams. However, using Git is not a requirement.
Structure of a feature repository
The structure of a feature repository is as follows:
The root of the repository should contain a
feature_store.yaml
file and may contain a.feastignore
file.The repository should contain Python files that contain feature definitions.
The repository can contain other files as well, including documentation and potentially data files.
An example structure of a feature repository is shown below:
A couple of things to note about the feature repository:
Feast reads all Python files recursively when
feast apply
is ran, including subdirectories, even if they don't contain feature definitions.It's recommended to add
.feastignore
and add paths to all imperative scripts if you need to store them inside the feature registry.
The feature_store.yaml configuration file
The configuration for a feature store is stored in a file named feature_store.yaml
, which must be located at the root of a feature repository. An example feature_store.yaml
file is shown below:
The feature_store.yaml
file configures how the feature store should run. See feature_store.yaml for more details.
The .feastignore file
This file contains paths that should be ignored when running feast apply
. An example .feastignore
is shown below:
See .feastignore for more details.
Feature definitions
A feature repository can also contain one or more Python files that contain feature definitions. An example feature definition file is shown below:
To declare new feature definitions, just add code to the feature repository, either in existing files or in a new file. For more information on how to define features, see Feature Views.
Next steps
See Create a feature repository to get started with an example feature repository.
See feature_store.yaml, .feastignore, or Feature Views for more information on the configuration files that live in a feature registry.