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Transformalize

Transformalize is a configuration based ETL tool that automates incremental denormalization of relational data. It may be used for other types of ETL as well.

The supported inputs and outputs are below.

Relational Non-Relational
Provider Support
SQL Server In/Out
MySql In/Out
PostgreSql In/Out
SQLite In/Out
Provider Support
Elasticsearch In/Out
Excel In
Files In/Out
Mail Out
Provider Support
Console In/Out
Razor Out
Forms In
Bogus In

Getting Started

This readme demonstrates how to denormalize a relational database and load it into Elasticsearch.

To follow along, see the prerequisites.

When you start denormalizing a database, it's good to have a diagram.

Northwind Schema

This shows eight normalized tables related to Order Details.

This section introduces <connections/>, <entities/>, and the page and size attributes.

Transformalize arrangements are written in XML or JSON. They are validated before execution.

To get started, open VS Code and paste this in:

<cfg name="NorthWind" read-only="true">
  <connections>
    <add name="input" provider="sqlserver" user="sa" password="Secret1!" database="Northwind" />
  </connections>
  <entities>
    <add name="Order Details" page="1" size="5" />
  </entities>
</cfg>

This defines an input as the Order Details table inside the Northwind database. Save it as NorthWind.xml and press CTRL-P to find and execute the tfl:run command.

Step01

Transformalize returned the first page of rows from the Order Details table. To transform and save this data, the <fields/> must be defined.

Introducing <fields/>.

To see the schema, press CTRL-P to find and execute the tfl:schema command:

> tfl -a NorthWind.xml -m schema
...
<fields>
  <add name="OrderID" type="int" primary-key="true" />
  <add name="ProductID" type="int" primary-key="true" />
  <add name="UnitPrice" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="4" />
  <add name="Quantity" type="short" />
  <add name="Discount" type="single" />
</fields>
...

Copy the <fields/> from the output into your arrangement like this:

<cfg name="NorthWind">
  <connections>
    <add name="input" provider="sqlserver" user="sa" password="Secret1!" database="Northwind" />
  </connections>
  <entities>
    <add name="Order Details" page="1" size="5">
      <!-- copy/paste the fields here -->
      <fields>
        <add name="OrderID" type="int" primary-key="true" />
        <add name="ProductID" type="int" primary-key="true" />
        <add name="UnitPrice" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="4" />
        <add name="Quantity" type="short" />
        <add name="Discount" type="single" />
      </fields>
    </add>
  </entities>
</cfg>

Introducing <calculated-fields/>, the t attribute, and the js and round transformations

Add <calculated-fields/> right after <fields/> like this:

<calculated-fields>
  <add name="Revenue" 
       type="decimal" 
       t="js(Quantity * ((1-Discount) * UnitPrice)).round(2)" />
</calculated-fields>

Execute tfl:run and it should produce this output:

> tfl -a NorthWind.xml
OrderID,ProductID,UnitPrice,Quantity,Discount,Revenue
10248,11,14.0000,12,0,168
10248,42,9.8000,10,0,98
10248,72,34.8000,5,0,174
10249,14,18.6000,9,0,167.4
10249,51,42.4000,40,0,1696
...

Revenue is created by the js (JavaScript) and round transformations. You may chain transformations as long as the output of one is compatible with the input of another.

Step02

Output

Introducing init mode

Let's save all the Order Details into an output. To do this:

  1. Remove the read-only attribute.
  2. Remove the page and size attributes.
  3. Define the output as a PostgreSql database named TflNorthwind in <connections/>.
<connections>
    <add name="input" provider="sqlserver" user="sa" password="Secret1!" database="Northwind" />
    <!-- define output here -->
    <add name="output" provider="postgres" user="postgres" password="Secret1!" database="TflNorthwind" />
</connections>

Press CTRL-P to find and run the tfl:init command.

> tfl -a NorthWind.xml -m init
warn  | NorthWind | Order Details | Initializing
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 from input
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | Ending 00:00:03.89

Initialization

Initialization is required initially and any time the structure of the output is changed.

It does three things:

  1. destroys pre-existing output structures
  2. creates output structures
  3. bulk inserts data.

Step03

Note that writing Order Details into PostgreSQL frees up the standard output for logging.

Mapping

Transformalize doesn't map input to pre-existing output. Instead, it creates a control table and a consistent output structure for handling incremental updates.

You decide:

  • what new fields to calculate
  • the order of fields
  • the name of fields (using alias)
  • the transformation and/or validation of fields
  • and the output of field (using output="true|false")

Incrementals (by Default)

Introducing the version attribute for an entity

An initialization is a full rebuild and may be time-consuming. So, by default, Transformalize performs incrementals. To determine if an update or insert is necessary, it compares input with output.

While keys and hashes are used, comparison is unnecessary when an input's provider is queryable and has a row version. A row version increments when the row changes. Many tables have these by design, but if not, you can add them like this:

/* SQL Server and SQL CE */
ALTER TABLE [Order Details] ADD [RowVersion] ROWVERSION;

/* MySQL */
ALTER TABLE `Order Details` ADD COLUMN RowVersion TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP;

/* PostgreSql, use the system field xmin */

To demonstrate incrementals, add a row version to each of the eight tables in the SQL Server Northwind database. I have provided a script for convenience.

Once added, we have add the RowVersion to our arrangement like this:

<entities>
                            <!-- Mark it here -->
  <add name="Order Details" version="RowVersion" >
    <fields>
      <add name="OrderID" type="int" primary-key="true" />
      <add name="ProductID" type="int" primary-key="true" />
      <add name="Discount" type="single" />
      <add name="Quantity" type="short" />
      <add name="UnitPrice" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="4"/>

      <!-- It's a field, so define it here -->
      <add name="RowVersion" type="byte[]" length="8" />
    </fields>
  </add>
</entities>

Adding a field changes output structure, so re-initialize like so:

tfl -a NorthWind.xml -m init
warn  | NorthWind | Order Details | Initializing
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 from input
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:03.09

tfl -a NorthWind.xml
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:00.71

With a version in place, the second run doesn't read and compare un-changed data.

Step04

Denormalization

Relational data is normalized and stored in many tables. It's optimized for efficient storage and integrity. It may be queried, but not without an overhead of joining busy tables. This makes retrieval slower.

De-normalization is the process of joining related data back together. The data is pre-joined (and duplicated) to avoid joining tables at run-time. Retrieval of de-normalized data is faster.

The output of Order Details (above) is numeric. Some numbers are foreign keys (e.g. ProductID, OrderID). These refer to more descriptive information in related entities. Others are measures (i.e. Quantity, UnitPrice).

To denormalize Order Details, we need to use the foreign keys OrderID and ProductID to retrieve the related information from Orders and Products (see diagram). This means we have to add the Orders and Products entities to our arrangement.

Adding an Entity

It's time to add another entity to our arrangement. Here is what the Orders entity should look like:

<add name="Orders" version="RowVersion">
  <fields>
    <add name="OrderID" type="int" primary-key="true" />
    <add name="CustomerID" length="5" />
    <add name="EmployeeID" type="int" />
    <add name="OrderDate" type="datetime" />
    <add name="RequiredDate" type="datetime" />
    <add name="ShippedDate" type="datetime" />
    <add name="ShipVia" type="int" />
    <add name="Freight" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="4" />
    <add name="ShipName" length="40" />
    <add name="ShipAddress" length="60" />
    <add name="ShipCity" length="15" />
    <add name="ShipRegion" length="15" />
    <add name="ShipPostalCode" length="10" />
    <add name="ShipCountry" length="15" />
    <!-- note: RowVersion must be aliased to co-exist with Order Details RowVersion -->
    <add name="RowVersion" alias="OrdersRowVersion" type="byte[]" length="8" />
  </fields>
</add>

Because we're denormalizing entities, the field names in the output must ultimately be unique. Since RowVersion is already used in Order Details, I need to alias it in Orders.

Moreover, if I add another entity to my arrangement, I must relate it to the first entity.

Relationships

Introducing the <relationships/> section

All entities must be related to the first entity in the <relationships/> section which follows <entities/>. To relate Orders to Order Details, add this to your arrangement:

<relationships>
    <add left-entity="Order Details" left-field="OrderID" right-entity="Orders" right-field="OrderID" />
</relationships>

This tells Transformalize to use OrderID to relate the two entities. Now re-initialize and run Transformalize:

tfl -a NorthWind.xml -m init
warn  | NorthWind | Order Details | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Orders        | Initializing
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 from input
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Orders        | 830 from input
info  | NorthWind | Orders        | 830 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:01.02

tfl -a NorthWind.xml
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Orders        | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:00.25

Step05

Logging indicates records were processed from Order Details and Orders. In addition, a view called NorthWindStar is created in the output. NorthWindStar joins Transformalize's star-schema output so that it appears to be a single entity.

Query NorthWindStar to make sure Transformalize is working:

SELECT
    ProductID,
    Discount,
    Quantity,
    UnitPrice,
    CustomerID,
    EmployeeID,
    Freight,
    OrderDate,
    RequiredDate,
    ShipAddress,
    ShipCity,
    ShippedDate,
    ShipPostalCode,
    ShipRegion,
    ShipVia
FROM NorthWindStar
LIMIT 10;
ProductId   Discount    Quantity    UnitPrice   CustomerID  EmployeeID  Freight OrderDate   RequiredDate    ShipAddress ...
---------   --------    --------    ---------   ----------  ----------  ------- ---------   ------------    -----------
11	    0.0	        12	    14	        VINET       5           32.38   1996-07-04  1996-08-01      59 rue de l'Abbaye
42	    0.0	        10	    9.8	        VINET       5           32.38   1996-07-04  1996-08-01      59 rue de l'Abbaye
72	    0.0	        5	    34.8        VINET       5           32.38   1996-07-04  1996-08-01      59 rue de l'Abbaye
14	    0.0	        9	    18.6        TOMSP       6           11.61	1996-07-05  1996-08-16      Luisenstr. 48
51	    0.0	        40	    42.4        TOMSP       6           11.61	1996-07-05  1996-08-16      Luisenstr. 48
41	    0.0	        10	    7.7         HANAR       4           65.83	1996-07-08  1996-08-05      Rua do Paço, 67
51	    0.15        35	    42.4        HANAR       4           65.83	1996-07-08  1996-08-05      Rua do Paço, 67
65	    0.15        15	    16.8        HANAR       4           65.83	1996-07-08  1996-08-05      Rua do Paço, 67
22	    0.05        6	    16.8        VICTE       3           41.34	1996-07-08  1996-08-05      2, rue du Commerce
57	    0.05        15	    15.6        VICTE       3           41.34	1996-07-08  1996-08-05      2, rue du Commerce

Star Schema & Single "Flat" Entity

Introducing the flatten attribute

Transformalize de-normalizes in two phases. First, it moves data from a relational model into a star-schema. Secondly, it moves data into a completely de-normalized (flat) output.

Relational to Star

To create a star-schema, it moves the foreign keys to the center. Data retrieval is faster because everything is directly related.

To create a flat output, it moves everything to the center. Data retrieval is even faster because there aren't any relations.

To completely de-normalize, set flatten to true in the main <cfg/> like this:

<cfg name="NorthWind" flatten="true">
    <!-- commented out for brevity -->
</cfg>

When you re-initialize, a single output structure named NorthWindFlat is created and populated. You may query it just as you queried NorthWindStar.

More Relationships

To add all the entities from NorthWind database (diagrammed above), follow the Add an Entity process (above) for Products, Customers, Employees, Shippers, Suppliers, and Categories.

In the end, the relationships should look like this:

<relationships>
  <!-- following Orders to Customers, Employees, and Shippers -->
  <add left-entity="Order Details" left-field="OrderID" right-entity="Orders" right-field="OrderID" />
  <add left-entity="Orders" left-field="CustomerID" right-entity="Customers" right-field="CustomerID" />
  <add left-entity="Orders" left-field="EmployeeID" right-entity="Employees" right-field="EmployeeID" />
  <add left-entity="Orders" left-field="ShipVia" right-entity="Shippers" right-field="ShipperID" />

  <!-- following Products to Suppliers and Categories -->
  <add left-entity="Order Details" left-field="ProductID" right-entity="Products" right-field="ProductID" />
  <add left-entity="Products" left-field="SupplierID" right-entity="Suppliers" right-field="SupplierID" />
  <add left-entity="Products" left-field="CategoryID" right-entity="Categories" right-field="CategoryID" />
</relationships>

If you'd rather not do all that work, you can use this pre-created arrangement.

Now when you initialize and run Transformalize, there's a lot going on:

>tfl -a "NorthWind.xml" -m init
warn  | NorthWind | Order Details | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Orders        | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Products      | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Customers     | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Employees     | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Shippers      | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Suppliers     | Initializing
warn  | NorthWind | Categories    | Initializing
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 from input
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | 2155 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Orders        | 830 from input
info  | NorthWind | Orders        | 830 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Products      | 77 from input
info  | NorthWind | Products      | 77 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Customers     | 91 from input
info  | NorthWind | Customers     | 91 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Employees     | 9 from input
info  | NorthWind | Employees     | 9 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Shippers      | 3 from input
info  | NorthWind | Shippers      | 3 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Suppliers     | 29 from input
info  | NorthWind | Suppliers     | 29 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind | Categories    | 8 from input
info  | NorthWind | Categories    | 8 inserts into output
info  | NorthWind |               | 2155 records inserted into flat
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:06.58

>tfl -a "NorthWind.xml"
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Orders        | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Products      | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Customers     | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Employees     | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Shippers      | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Suppliers     | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Categories    | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:01.40

AllEntities

Incrementals (Part 2)

Let's simulate a data change.

UPDATE Customers
SET CompanyName = 'Bottom Dollar Markets'
WHERE CustomerID = 'BOTTM';

Now run Transformalize again:

>tfl -a "NorthWind.xml"
info  | NorthWind | Order Details | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Orders        | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Products      | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Customers     | Change Detected: Input: 0x75ad2 > Output: 0x73bb5
info  | NorthWind | Customers     | 1 from input
info  | NorthWind | Customers     | 1 to output
info  | NorthWind | Customers     | 1 updates to output
info  | NorthWind | Employees     | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Shippers      | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Suppliers     | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind | Categories    | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind |               | 35 records updated in flat
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:01.79

Using the version, Transformalize picked up the one change in Customers. Since this customer has purchased 35 items (in Order Details), the flat table is updated as well.

Incrementals

Transformations to Make Life Easier

  • Introducing the copy transform
  • the datePart transform
  • the format transform
  • the toUpper transform

Most often, in addition to de-normalization, you'll need to transform records too. Transformalize de-normalizes and transforms at the same time (thus, the name).

Let's add some time dimension fields. Modify the Orders entity to include a <calculated-fields/> section like this:

<calculated-fields>
  <add name="OrderYear" type="int" t="copy(OrderDate).datePart(year)" />
  <add name="OrderMonthSortable" t="format({OrderDate:MM-MMM}).toUpper()" />
  <add name="OrderDaySortable" t="format({OrderDate:yyyy-MM-dd})" />
  <add name="OrderDayOfWeek" t="copy(OrderDate).datePart(dayOfWeek)" />
</calculated-fields>		

Note: The copy method is mainly used to copy other fields into your transformation. Generally speaking, when a transform uses field names in it's expression (e.g. js, cs, and format), you don't need to preceed it with a copy method.

After re-initializing, NorthWindFlat has some helpful time related fields that allow you to run queries like:

SELECT OrderDayOfWeek AS "Day", SUM(Revenue) AS "Sales"
FROM NorthWindFlat
GROUP BY OrderDayOfWeek
Day         Sales
Friday      284393.64
Monday      275256.90
Thursday    256143.26
Tuesday     272113.27
Wednesday   266546.72

Note that the query isn't dealing with joins or parsing dates. This is because we de-normalized it and pre-calculated useful fields.

Time Dimension

Post De-Normalization

  • Introducing system fields in output
  • the read-only attribute

Transformalize must use a relational output to de-normalize (i.e. PostgreSQL). However, now that it's flat, we can leverage the non-relational providers as well.

Transformalize records four system fields that may be used by additional tfl arrangements and/or other systems:

  • TflKey - a surrogate key (an auto-incrementing value)
  • TflBatchId - a version number corresponding to tfl runs
  • TflHashCode - a numerical value calculated from every field (used for comparisons)
  • TflDeleted - a boolean field tracking deletes (an optional setting)

Note: You can disable system fields by setting read-only to true in the top-most <cfg/> element.

Leveraging Elasticsearch & Kibana

Introducing the elasticsearch provider

This section demonstrates how to load the flattened Northwind data into Elasticsearch and view it with Kibana.

Elasticsearch

Start a new arrangement with this in your XML editor:

<cfg name="NorthWind">
  <connections>
    <add name="input" provider="postgresql" user="postgres" password="Secret1!" database="TflNorthwind" />
    <add name="output" 
         provider="elasticsearch" 
         server="localhost" 
         port="9200" 
         index="northwind" 
         version="7.9.3" />
  </connections>
  <entities>
    <add name="NorthWindFlat" version="TflBatchId" >
      <fields>
        <add name="TflKey" alias="Key" type="int" primary-key="true" />
        <add name="TflBatchId" alias="Version" type="int" />
        <add name="Revenue" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="2" />
        <add name="Freight" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="4" />
        <add name="OrderDate" type="datetime" />
        <add name="OrderYear" type="int" />
        <add name="OrderMonthSortable" />
        <add name="Country" length="15" />
        <add name="CategoryName" length="15" />
      </fields>
    </add>
  </entities>
</cfg>

This arrangement uses an elasticsearch output. Save as NorthWindToES.xml and run in it:

>tfl -a c:\temp\NorthWindToES.xml -m init
warn  | NorthWind | NorthWindFlat | Initializing
info  | NorthWind | NorthWindFlat | 2155 from input
info  | NorthWind | NorthWindFlat | 2155 to output
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:02.40

>tfl -a c:\temp\NorthWindToES.xml
info  | NorthWind | NorthWindFlat | Starting
info  | NorthWind | NorthWindFlat | Change Detected: No.
info  | NorthWind |               | Time elapsed: 00:00:00.30

A quick query in your browser can confirm records loaded:

http://localhost:9200/northwind/northwindflat/_search?q=:&size=0

{
    "took": 2,
    "timed_out": false,
    "_shards": {
        "total": 5,
        "successful": 5,
        "failed": 0
    },
    "hits": {
        "total": 2155,
        "max_score": 0.0,
        "hits": []
    }
}

NorthWind in Kibana

Leveraging the Orchard Core CMS Module

The OrchardCore.Transformalize module allows you to:

  • edit, store, and secure your arrangements
  • run your arrangements as tasks (like the CLI does)
  • view and page through your arrangements as reports
  • export search results
  • compose bulk actions; select records from your report and run tasks on them.

Here's a quick video of a Northwind report using the Elasticsearch provider we loaded earlier:

NorthWind in Orchard Core CMS The arrangement for this is:

<cfg name="NorthWind">
  <connections>
    <add name="input" 
         provider="elasticsearch" 
         server="host.docker.internal" 
         index="northwind" 
         version="7.9.3" />
  </connections>
  <entities>
    <add name="northwindflat" alias="NorthWind" page="1" size="10" sortable="true" >
      <fields>
        <add name="tflkey" alias="Key" type="long" primary-key="true" output="false" />
        <add name="orderyear" type="long" label="Year" parameter="facet" />
        <add name="ordermonthsortable" label="Month" parameter="facet" />
        <add name="orderdate" type="datetime" label="Date" format="yyyy-MM-dd" />
        <add name="country" label="Country" length="15" />
        <add name="categoryname" length="15" label="Category" parameter="facet" />
        <add name="freight" label="Freight" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="4" format="$#,###,###.00" />
        <add name="revenue" label="Revenue" type="decimal" precision="19" scale="2" format="$#,###,###.00" />
      </fields>
    </add>
  </entities>
</cfg>
  • Introducing the parameter attribute in fields.

The report arrangement above is using the field's parameter attribute. This is only for the Orchard Core module. It is a short-cut that sets up parameters and filters. It has three settings:

  • facet : a drop-down for selecting a single value
  • facets : a drop-down for selecting multiple values
  • search : a text box for searching

The OrchardCore module has many specific "web" features. More information can be found here.

To Be Continued

This is the end for now. This article provides a brief overview of how you'd denormalize a relational database and make use of the flattened output in various ways. I will try to get more documentation created as time permits.

Note: This readme is for the updated cross-platform version of Transformalize, the old version is here.