I process TB-size ndjson files. I want to use jq to do some simple transformations between stages of the processing pipeline (e.g. rename a field), but it so slow that I write a single-use node or rust script instead.
I process TB-size ndjson files. I want to use jq to do some simple transformations between stages of the processing pipeline (e.g. rename a field), but it so slow that I write a single-use node or rust script instead.
I would love, _love_ to know more about your data formats, your tools, what the JSON looks like, basically as much as you're willing to share. :)
For about a month now I've been working on a suite of tools for dealing with JSON specifically written for the imagined audience of "for people who like CLIs or TUIs and have to deal with PILES AND PILES of JSON and care deeply about performance".
For me, I've been writing them just because it's an "itch". I like writing high performance/efficient software, and there's a few gaps that it bugged me they existed, that I knew I could fill.
I'm having fun and will be happy when I finish, regardless, but it would be so cool if it happened to solve a problem for someone else.
I maintain some tools for the videogame World of Warships. The developer has a file called GameParams.bin which is Python-pickled data (their scripting language is Python).
Working with this is pretty painful, so I convert the Pickled structure to other formats including JSON.
The file has always been prettified around ~500MB but as of recently expands to about 3GB I think because they’ve added extra regional parameters.
The file inflates to a large size because Pickle refcounts objects for deduping, whereas obviously that’s lost in JSON.
I care about speed and tools not choking on the large inputs so I use jaq for querying and instruction LLMs operating on the data to do the same.
This reminds me of someone who wrote a regex tool that matches by compiling regexes (at runtime of the tool) via LLVM to native code.
You could probably do something similar for a faster jq.
This isn't for you then
> The query language is deliberately less expressive than jq's. jsongrep is a search tool, not a transformation tool-- it finds values but doesn't compute new ones. There are no filters, no arithmetic, no string interpolation.
Mind me asking what sorts of TB json files you work with? Seems excessively immense.
> Uses jq for TB json files
> Hadoop: bro
> Spark: bro
> hive: bro
> data team: bro
made me remember this article
<https://adamdrake.com/command-line-tools-can-be-235x-faster-...>
JQ is very convenient, even if your files are more than 100GB. I often need to extract one field from huge JSON line files, I just pipe jq to it to get results. It's slower, but implementing proper data processing will take more time.
are those tools known for their fast json parsers?
[dead]
Now I'm really curious. What field are you in that ndjson files of that size are common?
I'm sure there are reasons against switching to something more efficient–we've all been there–I'm just surprised.
> Now I'm really curious. What field are you in that ndjson files of that size are common?
I'm not OP,but structured JSON logs can easily result in humongous ndjson files, even with a modest fleet of servers over a not-very-long period of time.
So what's the use case for keeping them in that format rather than something more easily indexed and queryable?
I'd probably just shove it all into Postgres, but even a multi terabyte SQLite database seems more reasonable.
Replying here because the other comment is too deeply nested to reply.
Even if it's once off, some people handle a lot of once-offs, that's exactly where you need good CLI tooling to support it.
Sure jq isn't exactly super slow, but I also have avoided it in pipelines where I just need faster throughput.
rg was insanely useful in a project I once got where they had about 5GB of source files, a lot of them auto-generated. And you needed to find stuff in there. People were using Notepad++ and waiting minutes for a query to find something in the haystack. rg returned results in seconds.
You make some good points. I've worked in support before, so I shouldn't have discounted how frequent "once-offs" can be.
The use case could be e.g. exactly processing an old trove of logs into something more easily indexed and queryable, and you might want to use jq as part of that processing pipeline
Fair, but for a once-off thing performance isn't usually a major factor.
The comment I was replying to implied this was something more regular.
EDIT: why is this being downvoted? I didn't think I was rude. The person I responded to made a good point, I was just clarifying that it wasn't quite the situation I was asking about.
At scale, low performance can very easily mean "longer than the lifetime of the universe to execute." The question isn't how quickly something will get done, but whether it can be done at all.
Good point. I said it above, but I'll repeat it here that I shouldn't have discounted how frequent once offs can be. I've worked in support before so I really should've known better
Certain people/businesses deal with one-off things every day. Even for something truly one-off, if one tool is too slow it might still be the difference between being able to do it once or not at all.