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Hyparquet is a lightweight, pure JavaScript library for parsing Apache Parquet files. Apache Parquet is a popular columnar storage format that is widely used in data engineering, data science, and machine learning applications for efficiently storing and processing large datasets.
Hyparquet allows you to read and extract data from Parquet files directly in JavaScript environments, both in Node.js and in the browser. It is designed to be fast, memory-efficient, and easy to use.
Why make a new parquet parser? First, existing libraries like parquetjs are officially "inactive". Importantly, they do not support the kind of stream processing needed to make a really performant parser in the browser. And finally, no dependencies means that hyparquet is lean, and easy to package and deploy.
Online parquet file reader demo available at:
https://hyparam.github.io/hyparquet/
Demo source: index.html
Install the hyparquet package from npm:
npm install hyparquet
If you're in a node.js environment, you can load a parquet file with the following example:
const { parquetMetadata } = await import('hyparquet')
const fs = await import('fs')
const buffer = fs.readFileSync('example.parquet')
const arrayBuffer = new Uint8Array(buffer).buffer
const metadata = parquetMetadata(arrayBuffer)
If you're in a browser environment, you'll probably get parquet file data from either a drag-and-dropped file from the user, or downloaded from the web.
To load parquet data in the browser from a remote server using fetch
:
import { parquetMetadata } from 'hyparquet'
const res = await fetch(url)
const arrayBuffer = await res.arrayBuffer()
const metadata = parquetMetadata(arrayBuffer)
To parse parquet files from a user drag-and-drop action, see example in index.html.
To read the entire contents of a parquet file in a browser environment:
const { parquetRead } = await import("https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/hyparquet/src/hyparquet.min.js")
const res = await fetch(url)
const arrayBuffer = await res.arrayBuffer()
await parquetRead({
file: arrayBuffer,
onComplete: data => console.log(data)
})
To read large parquet files, it is recommended that you filter by row and column. Hyparquet is designed to load only the minimal amount of data needed to fulfill a query. You can filter rows by number, or columns by name:
import { parquetRead } from 'hyparquet'
await parquetRead({
file,
columns: ['colA', 'colB'], // include columns colA and colB
rowStart: 100,
rowEnd: 200,
onComplete: data => console.log(data),
})
Hyparquet supports asynchronous fetching of parquet files over a network.
You can provide an AsyncBuffer
which is like a js ArrayBuffer
but the slice
method returns Promise<ArrayBuffer>
.
interface AsyncBuffer {
byteLength: number
slice(start: number, end?: number): Promise<ArrayBuffer>
}
You can read parquet files asynchronously using HTTP Range requests so that only the necessary byte ranges from a url
will be fetched:
import { parquetRead } from 'hyparquet'
const url = 'https://...'
await parquetRead({
file: { // AsyncBuffer
byteLength,
async slice(start, end) {
const headers = new Headers()
headers.set('Range', `bytes=${start}-${end - 1}`)
const res = await fetch(url, { headers })
if (!res.ok || !res.body) throw new Error('fetch failed')
return readableStreamToArrayBuffer(res.body)
},
}
onComplete: data => console.log(data),
})
The parquet format is known to be a sprawling format which includes options for a wide array of compression schemes, encoding types, and data structures.
Hyparquet does not support 100% of all parquet files. Supporting every possible compression codec available in parquet would blow up the size of the hyparquet library. In practice, most parquet files use snappy compression.
Parquet compression types supported by default:
You can extend support for other compression codecs using the compressors
option.
import { parquetRead } from 'hyparquet'
import { gunzipSync } from 'zlib'
parquetRead({ file, compressors: {
GZIP: (input, output) => output.set(gunzipSync(input)), // add gzip support
}})
Parquet encodings:
The most common compression codec used in parquet is snappy compression. Hyparquet includes a built-in snappy decompressor written in javascript.
We developed hysnappy to make parquet parsing even faster. Hysnappy is a snappy decompression codec written in C, compiled to WASM.
To use hysnappy for faster parsing of large parquet files, override the SNAPPY
compressor for hyparquet:
import { parquetRead } from 'hyparquet'
import { snappyUncompressor } from 'hysnappy'
parquetRead({ file, compressors: {
SNAPPY: snappyUncompressor(),
}})
Parsing a 420mb wikipedia parquet file using hysnappy reduces parsing time by 40% (4.1s to 2.3s).
FAQs
parquet file parser for javascript
We found that hyparquet demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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