Spanner federated queries
As a data analyst, you can query data in Spanner from BigQuery using federated queries.
BigQuery Spanner federation enables BigQuery to query data residing in Spanner in real-time, without copying or moving data.
You can query Spanner data in two ways:
- Create a Spanner external dataset.
- Use an
EXTERNAL_QUERY
function.
Use external datasets
The simplest way to query Spanner tables is to create an external dataset. Once you create the external dataset, your tables from the corresponding Spanner database are visible in BigQuery and you can use them in your queries - for example in joins, unions or subqueries. However, no data is moved from Spanner to BigQuery storage.
You don't need to create a connection to query Spanner data if you create an external dataset.
Use EXTERNAL_QUERY
function
Like for other federated databases, you can also query Spanner
data with an EXTERNAL_QUERY
function. This may be useful if you want to query Spanner
database which uses PostgreSQL dialect or want to have more control over the
connection parameters.
Before you begin
- Ensure that your BigQuery administrator has created a Spanner connection and shared it with you. See Choose the right connection.
- To get the permissions that you need to query a Spanner
instance, ask your administrator to grant you the BigQuery Connection
User (
roles/bigquery.connectionUser
) Identity and Access Management (IAM) role. You also need to ask your administrator to grant you one of the following:- If you are a fine-grained access control user, you need access to a
database role that has the
SELECT
privilege on all Spanner schema objects in your queries. - If you aren't a fine-grained access control user, you need the Cloud Spanner
Database Reader (
roles/spanner.databaseReader
) IAM role.
For information about granting IAM roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations. For information about fine-grained access control, see About fine-grained access control.
- If you are a fine-grained access control user, you need access to a
database role that has the
Choose the right connection
If you are a Spanner fine-grained access control user, when you run a
federated query with an EXTERNAL_QUERY
function, you must use a
Spanner connection that specifies a database role. Then all
queries that you run with this connection use that database role.
If you use a connection that doesn't specify a database role, you must have the IAM roles indicated in Before you begin.
Query data
To send a federated query to Spanner from a GoogleSQL query, use the
EXTERNAL_QUERY
function.
Formulate your Spanner query in either GoogleSQL or PostgreSQL, depending on the specified dialect of the database.
The following example makes a federated query to a Spanner
database named orders
and joins the results with a BigQuery
table named mydataset.customers
.
SELECT c.customer_id, c.name, rq.first_order_date FROM mydataset.customers AS c LEFT OUTER JOIN EXTERNAL_QUERY( 'my-project.us.example-db', '''SELECT customer_id, MIN(order_date) AS first_order_date FROM orders GROUP BY customer_id''') AS rq ON rq.customer_id = c.customer_id GROUP BY c.customer_id, c.name, rq.first_order_date;
Spanner Data Boost
Data Boost is a fully managed, serverless feature that provides independent compute resources for supported Spanner workloads. Data Boost lets you execute analytics queries and data exports with near-zero impact to existing workloads on the provisioned Spanner instance. Data Boost lets you run federated queries with independent compute capacity separate from your provisioned instances to avoid impacting existing workloads on Spanner. Data Boost is most impactful when you run complex ad hoc queries, or when you want to process large amounts of data without impacting the existing Spanner workload. Running federated queries with Data Boost can lead to significantly lower CPU consumption, and in some cases, lower query latency.
Before you begin
To get the permission that you need to enable access to Data Boost,
ask your administrator to grant you the
Cloud Spanner Database Admin (roles/spanner.databaseAdmin
) IAM role on the Spanner database.
For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.
This predefined role contains the
spanner.databases.useDataBoost
permission,
which is required to
enable access to Data Boost.
You might also be able to get this permission with custom roles or other predefined roles.
Enable Data Boost
When using external datasets, Data Boost is always used and you don't have to enable it manually.
If you want to use Data Boost for your EXTERNAL_QUERY
queries, you must enable it when creating a connection that is used by your query.
Read data in parallel
Spanner can divide certain queries into smaller pieces, or partitions, and fetch the partitions in parallel. For more information, see Read data in parallel in the Spanner documentation.
However, this option is restricted to queries that meet one of the following conditions:
The first operator in the execution plan is a distributed union operator.
There is no distributed union operator in the execution plan.
Other queries return an error. To view the query execution plan for a Spanner query, see Understand how Spanner executes queries.
When running federated queries with external datasets, the "Read data in parallel" option is always used.
To enable parallel reads when using the
EXTERNAL_QUERY
,
enable it when you
create the Connection.
Manage query execution priority
When you run federated queries with an EXTERNAL_QUERY
function, you can assign priority (high
, medium
, or low
) to individual queries by specifying the query_execution_priority
option:
SELECT * FROM EXTERNAL_QUERY( 'my-project.us.example-db', '''SELECT customer_id, MIN(order_date) AS first_order_date FROM orders GROUP BY customer_id''', '{"query_execution_priority":"high"}');
The default priority is medium
.
Queries with priority high
will compete with transactional traffic.
Queries with priority low
are best-effort, and might get preempted by
background load, for example scheduled backups.
When running federated queries with external datasets, all queries have always medium
priority.
View a Spanner table schema
If you use external datasets, your Spanner tables are visible directly in BigQuery Studio and you can see their schemas.
However, you can also see the schemas without defining external datasets. You can use EXTERNAL_QUERY
function also to query information_schema views to access database metadata. The following example returns information about the columns in the table MyTable
:
Google SQL database
SELECT * FROM EXTERNAL_QUERY( 'my-project.us.example-db', '''SELECT t.column_name, t.spanner_type, t.is_nullable FROM information_schema.columns AS t WHERE t.table_catalog = '' AND t.table_schema = '' AND t.table_name = 'MyTable' ORDER BY t.ordinal_position ''');
PostgreSQL database
SELECT * from EXTERNAL_QUERY( 'my-project.us.postgresql.example-db', '''SELECT t.column_name, t.data_type, t.is_nullable FROM information_schema.columns AS t WHERE t.table_schema = 'public' and t.table_name='MyTable' ORDER BY t.ordinal_position ''');
For more information, see the following information schema references in the Spanner documentation:
Pricing
- On the BigQuery side, standard federated query pricing applies.
- On the Spanner side, queries are subject of Spanner pricing
- Pricing may change when moving from Preview to General Availability stage
Troubleshooting
This section helps you troubleshoot issues you might encounter when sending a federated query to Spanner.
- Issue: Query is not root partitionable.
- Resolution: If you configure the connection to read data in parallel, either the first operator in the query execution plan must be a distributed union, or your execution plan must not have any distributed unions. To resolve this error, view the query execution plan and rewrite the query. For more information, see Understand how Spanner executes queries.
- Issue: Deadline exceeded.
- Resolution: Select the option to read data in parallel and rewrite the query to be root partitionable. For more information, see Understand how Spanner executes queries.
What's next
- Learn about creating Spanner external datasets
- Learn about federated queries.
- Learn about Spanner to BigQuery data type mapping.