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

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