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Expecting Great Quality with OpenLineage Facets

· 13 min read
Michael Collado

Good data is paramount to making good decisions- but how can you trust the quality of your data and its dependencies?

The Parable of Bad Data

Several years ago, I worked as a developer on the experimentation team at Amazon, which owned the code libraries and data processing systems that supported experimentation on the amazon.com website (among other systems). Developers used our libraries and a microservice we maintained to “trigger” an experiment for a customer- that is, the customer was randomized into either control or treatment and the resulting assignment was recorded in the logs, which my team consumed in the analysis of the data later on. One of the interesting parts of my job was helping our users diagnose problems with their experiment results.

A classic example was a Kindle developer who was prototyping a new feature for book pages that would make the site more engaging for Kindle owners- perhaps a “look inside” feature, or maybe some better recommendations. A customer would come to the website and the developer’s code would determine if the customer belonged in Control or Treatment. If Control, the assignment was logged and no feature was shown- the site looked to the customer as it always had. But if the assignment was Treatment, the code would check the customer’s account to determine if they owned a Kindle device and, if yes, the assignment was logged and the customer saw the fancy new feature on the books page.

The experiment showed the developer’s feature would be wildly successful- an increase of over $10 in Kindle book purchases per customer on average over the course of the 2 weeks the experiment ran- projected to be tens of billions of dollars in annual revenue due to this one feature!

With data in hand, the developer requested tons of resources to build the feature up to production standards. After three months and two dozen people’s labor, the feature was ready to ship. The developers deployed their new service and the incredible feature was unleashed. For days afterward, everyone watched the metrics dashboards waiting for that hockey stick uptick in the revenue graphs 📈. But it never materialized! The graph was flat. No change at all! Weeks went by. Nothing. How could the experiment results be so far from reality?

Of course, if you’ve ever run A/B tests, you probably already recognized the developer’s mistake. In their randomization logic, customers who were assigned control were logged and forgotten, while customers who were assigned treatment were logged only after validating that they owned a Kindle device. It turned out the total number of customers who came to amazon.com was far greater than the number of customers who owned a Kindle device. And if you divide the total sum of Kindle book sales by all of the amazon.com customers, regardless of whether they own a Kindle device, that average will come out quite a lot lower than if you calculate the average Kindle book revenue from only customers who own Kindles.

Yoda says, poorly run experiments lead to bad data. Bad data leads to bad insights. Bad insights lead to bad decisions. Bad decisions lead to suffering

In reality, this story never happened. Why? Because we knew the adage- Bad Data is Worse than No Data. In the story, people took data of poor quality and used it to justify bad decisions. In our system, we checked the quality of the data and, if we detected assignment imbalances, we simply invalidated the experiment and hid the results. Over the years, I can’t count the number of times our users asked us to just give them partial results or just exclude certain segments or to let them know if things were “trending” the right way. Our policy was firm- if we couldn’t trust the quality of the data, the results were meaningless and we would not surface them in our system.

Data-Driven Depends On Data-Quality

Today, most businesses consider themselves data-driven. The stereotype of the maverick CEO leading with his or her gut is mostly antiquated, with a handful of exceptions. And yet, even though people know intellectually that data is only useful if it is correct, we tend to stop digging once we find some data that confirms our pre-existing assumptions. We justify bad decisions by claiming that they are “data-based” without ever validating the quality of our sources. Where did that data come from? How old is it? Is the logic that generated it correct? Is it derived from some other dataset? What is the quality of that dataset? Data-driven: You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means

Thankfully, data quality validation is becoming more and more common in data engineering organizations. In part, this is due to the prevalence of new tools and their integration with common workflow engines which we already use to schedule the jobs that generate and process our data. One such tool that has been gaining in popularity is called Great Expectations, a Python-based framework for defining assertions about data sets which easily integrates with existing workflow tools, such as Airflow.

In software development, testing the behavior of our code with unit and integration tests has been common practice for years. Similarly, using Great Expectations, a data engineer can assert that a dataset has a row count that falls within an expected range, that column values are not null, or that values match a specified regular expression. One can even create custom expectations, such as validating that the number of records in treatment is roughly the same as the number of records in control (this post is not intended to be an in-depth tutorial on setting up Great Expectations; if you want to read more on its capabilities and to get started, I recommend the going through the Quick Start tutorial).

A Sample Assertion Suite

As a simple example, imagine a table of new customers that you need to import into your Data Warehouse. Before importing, we want to check the data quality of this new batch of customers. One example suite of assertions we could test is below:

{
"data_asset_type": "Dataset",
"expectation_suite_name": "customers_suite",
"expectations": [
{
"expectation_type": "expect_table_row_count_to_be_between",
"kwargs": {
"max_value": 1000,
"min_value": 100
},
"meta": {}
},
{
"expectation_type": "expect_table_column_count_to_equal",
"kwargs": {
"value": 8
},
"meta": {}
},
{
"expectation_type": "expect_table_columns_to_match_ordered_list",
"kwargs": {
"column_list": [
"id",
"created_at",
"updated_at",
"name",
"email",
"address",
"phone",
"city_id"
]
},
"meta": {}
},
{
"expectation_type": "expect_column_values_to_be_unique",
"kwargs": {
"column": "email"
},
"meta": {}
}
],
"meta": {
// ...
}
}

This sample suite contains 4 data quality assertions- that the dataset contains between 100 and 1000 rows, that the table contains exactly 8 columns, that they match the explicit list of column names we expect, and that the email column contains only distinct values.

Adding Data Quality Checks to an Airflow pipeline

With a suite of assertions in hand, we can update our Airflow DAG to only import data into our Data Warehouse if it matches our expectations. A simple DAG might look like this

from airflow import DAG
from airflow.contrib.operators.bigquery_operator import BigQueryOperator
from airflow.utils.dates import days_ago
from great_expectations_provider.operators.great_expectations import GreatExpectationsOperator

dag = DAG(
'etl_customers',
schedule_interval='@daily',
catchup=False,
default_args=default_args,
description='Loads newly registered customers daily.'
)

t1 = BigQueryOperator(
task_id='if_not_exists',
sql='''
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS food_delivery.customers (
id INT64,
created_at TIME,
updated_at TIME,
name STRING,
email STRING,
address STRING,
phone STRING,
city_id INT64
)
''',
use_legacy_sql=False,
dag=dag
)

t2 = GreatExpectationsOperator(
expectation_suite_name='customers_suite',
batch_kwargs={
'table': 'tmp_customers',
'datasource': 'food_delivery_db'
},
dag=dag
task_id='customers_expectation',
)

t3 = BigQueryOperator(
task_id='etl',
sql='''
SELECT id, created_at, updated_at, name, email, address, phone, city_id
FROM food_delivery.tmp_customers
''',
destination_dataset_table='airflow_marquez.food_delivery.customers',
use_legacy_sql=False,
dag=dag
)

t1 >> t2 >> t3

This is great! Our DAG creates our target table in BigQuery (if it doesn’t already exist), checks the quality of the tmp_customers table by running the customers_suite defined earlier, then imports only if all of the data quality checks pass.

And thus ended all data quality problems forever.

Just kidding.

Because reality is never so straightforward. In reality, the recommendations team wanted to start generating recommendations for new customers without waiting until the next day, so they built a data pipeline to start consuming from the tmp_customers table directly. And the supply chain folks wanted to start detecting what recipes are gaining popularity so they can predict what supplies will need to be restocked sooner, so they started reading from the both tmp_orders table and the tmp_customers table before they’re available in the DW. Oh, and the scheduling team needs an idea of the geography of the various customers that are ordering and what the distances are between restaurants and customers so they can get the right number of drivers in the right neighborhoods and of course the marketing team wants to use all of this data to make predictions about how much to spend on the right search engine and social media ads and they absolutely cannot wait until tomorrow at 8AM to update their models. I am the gatekeeper

Tracing Data Quality With OpenLineage Facets

Users are never satisfied with the way things are supposed to work. There’s always a reason to work around gatekeepers- oftentimes, very good reasons that have real business impact- and data engineering is full of creative and resourceful people who absolutely will find a way to get at that data. Even at Amazon, the experiment data was available in the click stream logs, so resourceful users could (and sometimes did) calculate their own experiment results if they really wanted to. So it’s important not just to have data quality checks, but to trace the impact of that data throughout an organization.

The OpenLineage standard uses Facets to augment the core data model with useful information about the jobs, runs, and datasets reported on. One interesting detail about facets is that they can be attached to an entity after the fact. In the Marquez reference implementation, a dataset version is created every time a job run writes to or otherwise modifies a dataset. Output facets, such as the new record count or the number of bytes written, are attached directly to the dataset version when the job run completes. But consuming jobs can also attach facets to the version of the dataset that exists at the start time of the job’s execution.

In the OpenLineage Airflow integration, Great Expectations tasks, such as the one in our example DAG above, are evaluated after they run and the expectation results (as well as some other data quality metrics) are collected into a DataQuality Metrics Input Dataset Facet , which is reported to the server along with the rest of the lineage metadata. In Marquez, we recognize the version of the dataset that was read by the job run and the data quality metadata is permanently associated with that dataset version. The impact of this is that any job that reads that data, whether it happens before or after the dataset quality assertion, can be linked to the data quality facet recorded (provided that the dataset version doesn’t change between the data quality check and the read job).

This integration is extremely straightforward to get working. If you already have the Marquez Airflow DAG running in your Airflow workflows, there’s nothing to do! Great Expectations tasks are already being detected and the metrics and assertion statuses are already being reported to your configured instance of Marquez.

If you’ve never integrated Marquez with your Airflow setup, add a couple of environment variables and change one line of code:

- from airflow import DAG
+ from marquez_airflow import DAG
from airflow.contrib.operators.bigquery_operator import BigQueryOperator
from airflow.utils.dates import days_ago
from great_expectations_provider.operators.great_expectations import GreatExpectationsOperator

I’ve previously written about how to determine the version of the dataset that was read by a particular job run . With Great Expectations now integrated into my Airflow DAG, I want to see what the data quality metrics are for the latest version of the customers dataset that was processed by my ETL job. I’ll hit my datakin demo instance:

$ curl "https://demo.datakin.com/api/v1/namespaces/food_delivery/jobs/etl.etl_delivery_7_days" | jq | less
{
"id": {
"namespace": "food_delivery",
"name": "etl.etl_delivery_7_days"
},
"type": "BATCH",
"name": "etl.etl_delivery_7_days",
"createdAt": "2021-07-23T19:32:03.401782Z",
"updatedAt": "2021-08-06T05:11:03.604573Z",
"namespace": "food_delivery",
"inputs": [
{
"namespace": "food_delivery",
"name": "public.customers"
},
//...
],
"latestRun": {
"id": "1043e596-ccb8-4bfb-8fc2-7ee066253248",
"jobVersion": {
"namespace": "food_delivery",
"name": "etl.etl_delivery_7_days",
"version": "bc6c294b-b0eb-3160-a06d-1ff9ba3a4e1c"
},
"inputVersions": [
{
"namespace": "food_delivery",
"name": "public.customers",
"version": "4c33f292-40a9-304d-b43f-c7ffb2256e7f"
},
// ...
],
// ...
}
}

With the input version of the public.customers dataset, I can query Marquez for all the metadata we have about that specific version of the dataset.

$ curl "https://demo.datakin.com/api/v1/namespaces/food_delivery/datasets/public.customers/versions/4c33f292-40a9-304d-b43f-c7ffb2256e7f" | jq | less
{
"id": {
"namespace": "food_delivery",
"name": "public.customers"
},
"type": "DB_TABLE",
"name": "public.customers",
"physicalName": "public.customers",
"createdAt": "2021-08-06T05:02:59.189118Z",
"version": "4c33f292-40a9-304d-b43f-c7ffb2256e7f",
"namespace": "food_delivery",
"sourceName": "analytics_db",
"fields": [
{
"name": "id",
"type": "INTEGER",
"tags": [],
"description": "The unique ID of the customer."
},
// ...
],
"facets": {
"stats": {
"size": 53362712,
"rowCount": 4969
},
"dataSource": {
"uri": "jdbc:postgresql://localhost:3306/deliveries",
"name": "analytics_db"
},
"description": "A table for customers.",
"dataQuality": {
"bytes": 53362712,
"rowCount": 4969,
"columnMetrics": {
"id": {
"nullCount": 0,
"distinctCount": 4969
},
"name": {
"nullCount": 0,
"distinctCount": 4969
},
"email": {
"nullCount": 0,
"distinctCount": 4969
}
}
},
"greatExpectations_assertions": {
"assertions": [
{
"success": true,
"expectationType": "expect_table_row_count_to_be_between"
},
{
"success": true,
"expectationType": "expect_column_to_exist"
},
{
"success": true,
"columnId": "id",
"expectationType": "expect_column_values_to_be_unique"
},
{
"success": true,
"columnId": "id",
"expectationType": "expect_column_values_to_not_be_null"
},
{
"success": true,
"columnId": "created_at",
"expectationType": "expect_column_values_to_not_be_null"
},
//....
]
}
}
}

Note the facets field contains several properties- stats, dataSource, description, dataQuality and greatExpectations_assertions. Each of those describes some attribute about the dataset version. Some of the facets are attached at write-time, some are attached later- when the dataset is read.

In our Datakin demo, we have a lot more assertions than what I included in the sample suite above and that can be seen in this response. In addition to counting rows and columns, we also validate that id columns are unique and non-null, timestamps fall within specified ranges (did you know that if you accidentally write a timestamp too far in the future, certain JDBC drivers will overflow the Calendar instance they use for converting timezones?), and emails match expected regular expressions.

With the ability to attach data quality facets to dataset versions and the ability to trace the specific versions of datasets read by and written to by specific job runs, I can trust whether the data I’m looking at is good data or bad data. And if my data quality checks fail, I can find out whether I need to contact somebody over in marketing or recommendations to backfill their pipelines once the issue has been corrected.

Good data, bad data

Whether your business is an e-commerce shop that wants to improve its customer experience or a music streaming service that wants to make better listening recommendations or an autonomous vehicle company trying to improve the car’s ability to detect double parked vehicles, the quality of your data is paramount to making good decisions. Quality testing tools are out there and, chances are, they already work with the pipeline workflow tool you’re using today. And with OpenLineage support, you can be confident in the quality of the data at every stage in your pipeline.