This page is for data modellers who need to edit the properties of a pipe.
Overview
A pipe is a connector that links two objects in a PhixFlow model and sends data from the input object to the output object. Pipes allows you to control which attributes and which records from the input are delivered by to the output. With default configuration the pipe pass all attributes and records from the current run.
The pipe must be enabled to make it active.
For advanced configuration, see Advanced Pipe Configuration.
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A pipe joining a datasource to a data collector has no details to edit. All the configuration for the output data set occurs in the collector - either a database collector for a database datasource, or an HTTP collector for an HTTP datasource. |
Basic Settings
Enter a name. The name is used to refer to the pipe in other model elements. Pipe names default to in
.
The name:
- must start with a letter
- must not be an Attribute Function name.
- must not include special characters, except underscore _
Normally when a pipe requests data from a non-static input table, that table will first attempt to bring itself up to date, generating new recordsets as necessary, before supplying the data requested. However, if this field is ticked, the input table will not run. Pipes from collectors cannot be marked as static.
Pipes from collectors cannot be marked as static.
If this is a push pipe with positive offsets and this option is ticked then the notification to create another recordset will only be pushed along the pipe if the last recordset created contains at least one record. This causes the pipe to present each candidate set to the output table in a different way than usual.
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Select:
- Pull: pull pipes are the most common type in PhixFlow - they "pull" data from the input to the output. Pull pipes are shown as solid arrows on models.
- Look-up: look-up pipes are used to enrich data. Typically, you will have one of more pull pipes to supply the base data for an output, and if needed one or more look-up pipes to enrich the base data with values from additional inputs. Look-up pipes are shown as dashed lines on models.
- Push: data is "pushed" rather than "pulled" into the output table. Push pipes are most commonly used when sending data from tables to exporters (File Exporters, Database Exporters, HTTP Exporters). Push pipes are shown as dotted lines on models.
Select the type of input data to use.
- Latest: supply data from the current run (the latest recordset). This is the mostly commonly used option.
- Previous: supply data from the previous run (the previous recordset). This is used when you are comparing data for the current run with data from the previous run, for example, today's data with yesterday's.
- All: supply data from all runs (all recordsets).
- All Previous: supply data from all runs except the current run (all recordsets except the latest recordset).
- Same Run: this option should only be used where the input and output tables are set to Period: Transactional. The pipe will only collect data from inputs in the same analysis run. This configuration support several analysis runs going on at the same time without interfering with each other.
- Custom: select this option to display additional settings, described in the Custom Data to Read section, below. We recommend that you only use the custom settings when directed to by PhixFlow consultants or support.
Use this option to exclude or include input tables sets that have future dates relative to the recordset you are generating. For details about how future recordsets occur, see Managing Future Stream Sets, above.
In some circumstances the input table may have recordsets that have dates in the future relative to the recordset being generated for the output table. This may happen, for example, if:
- you roll-back some recordsets on the output table
- but do not roll-back the corresponding recordsets on the input table
- and then request that the output table is brought up to date.
Some of the recordsets on the input table will have dates in the future relative to some of the recordsets you are rebuilding.
By default, the Read Future Data check box is not ticked. This means pipes ignore any recordsets with dates in the future relative to the recordset you are generating. You want to ignore future recordsets when you rebuild an old recordset, because you want the pipe to retrieve the same data on the rerun as it retrieved when the recordset was first built.
When you run analysis on a table with a transactional period, it is possible that as your analysis is still running, a different run can start and complete. This run can generate additional recordsets on the input table with a future data relative to the date of the recordset you are generating. For transactional input tables, you want the pipe to use these future tables. To do this, tick the Read Future Data check box.
Filter
Filters are made up of a set of clauses; each clause in turn contains a number of conditions. These conditions must be satisfied for data to be passed through the pipe.
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When the pipe Type is Lookup, the filter controls which data will be cached in memory. |
Available when Type is Lookup.
For lookup pipes, PhixFlow uses the pipe cache when it looks-up data from tables or database collectors. For efficiency, the records are cached (stored temporarily in memory) so that if the same set of records need to be looked up again they are readily available without going back to the database.
Enter a number to set a limit on the data cache size available for the pipe. You need to estimate the largest number of records that the lookup pipe will return on a single read. Check whether PhixFlow is looking up:
- many records
The pipe does a single lookup onto a table or database table to get a large number of records in one go, for example 10,000 records. - few records may times
The pipe does many lookups, getting a small number of records for each lookup, for example, 10 records at a time. In this case, PhixFlow is usually using a key value, such as an account number, to get the data. The key value is:- for a table - the attribute used to filter the pipe
- for a database collector - a condition in the database query. For example:
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WHERE AccountNumber = _out.AccountNum |
If you do not set a limit for the cache, PhixFlow uses the system default set in System Configuration → System Tuning → Maximum Pipe Cache Size.
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In the log for an analysis run, which is available in the system console, PhixFlow reports warnings when a single read returns:
- over 90% of the specified cache size
- 100% or more of the cache size.
PhixFlow reports an error and stops the analysis run when:
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The Pipe "table_name.lookup_pipe_name" cache is 100% full (the cache size is 10). |
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Every time the lookup pipe is referenced, PhixFlow calculates the values of all of the variable elements of the query or pipe filter, and checks if it already has a set of data in the cache retrieved using this set of variable values. If so the data is immediately returned from the cache. Otherwise, a new set of data is read from the table of collector. If adding the new records to the cache would cause it to exceed the maximum cache size, previously cached results are removed to make enough room for the new results. |
Use this option to look up data from attributes that are present in a view on the input table.
Select a view from the list. If the input table has no views, the list will be empty.
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Sorting or filtering of records must be set directly on the pipe. It is not inherited from the pipe view. |
Use the pipe view to limit the attributes that the pipe reads when a table has lots of attributes containing many data records but you only need data from a few attributes. Only the data for the attributes in the view are sent to the output table.
Pipe views are very useful:
- during lookups a pipe loads and caches all of the attributes from the table. This can use a lot of memory, especially when there are many records.
- during file export all data records from all attributes are exported.
To set up a pipe view:
- Create a new view on the source table. In the view, only add the attributes you need.
- In the pipe Pipe View option, select the pipe view.
- Run analysis. PhixFlow only looks-up or exports data from the attributes specified on the view.
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If a File Exporter Properties is configured to export to Excel or to HTML:
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Select one of the options
- Where ALL...
- Where ANY...
To add more conditions, hover your mouse pointer over this field to display the button and add another condition to your filter.
Select an option from the list. PhixFlow adds more fields where you can:
- select how the filter matches (for example,
equals
,contains
,is null
) - enter a string that the filter uses to match the data. The string can be an expression or a literal string.
Hover your mouse pointer over conditions or clauses to display:
Note: ["123", "234", "345"] looks like a literal value but it can be evaluated as an expression.
Open the expression in a larger editor.
A cache extraction filter allows you to further filter the data retrieved by a pipe. These are not commonly used, but are sometimes helpful when either:
- Optimising performance on a lookup pipe when for a set of records, the record you require from the lookup depends on non-key data, e.g. the date
- When getting data from a pull pipe when the filter requires that you compare one value in each record with another; this is not possible within a standard filter.
For case 1, when using a lookup pipe, data retrieved is stored in a cache. See cache size for details. The cache extraction filter allows you, as you are processing a set of output records, to use different cached entries from the lookup for each of the records are you are processing. This is very fast compared to looking up from the source (i.e. going back to an external DB table or even another PhixFlow table) for each output record.
E.g. you want to look up the credit rating for a customer for a set of transactions - in the output, each transaction is represented by a single output record. You create an indexed lookup pipe using CustNo as the key for the index. This means that for each new CustNo you encounter in the data, all the credit rating entries for that CustNo would be retrieved by the pipe and placed into the cache. The credit rating for each customer is fully historied, so you get a number of entries for each CustNo. To get the relevant lookup entry for each output report (each transaction), you need to compare the transaction date of the output record to the dates of credit rating entries in the cache. So to extract the relevant record, you include a cache extraction filter in the form:
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StartDate >= _out.TransDate && (EndDate <= _out.TransDate || EndDate == _NULL) |
Cache extraction filters are entered free hand.
The attribute names referenced must exist in a table. This means that the each attribute must be one of:
- an attribute in a source table, if you are reading from a table
- if you are reading from an external database table, one of the fields returned by the database collector AND an attribute in the output table. This means to use an attribute with the source as a database collector, there must be an attribute of matching name in the output table
- an attribute in the destination table, in which case you will refer to it using the format
_out.AttributeName
Filter Examples
Filter on Current User
Sometimes when running analysis you want to select, from the source, only records belonging to the currently logged in user. To set a filter where, say, an attribute in the source Owner
equals the current logged in user, add a condition to the filter like this:
Owner
Equals _user.name
fx
Enter a list of values for an "Is In" or "Is Not In" filter
If you want to based on a list of values, use the Is in or Is not in comparators, then type the list of values into the comparison field as a comma separated list like this:
Country
Is in England, France, Germany
ABC
In this case you must NOT click the ABC icon to convert the value to an fx, because this will indicate that the value is a formula; it must be left as a literal value. If you do click the ABC icon, then the value must be entered like this:
Country
Is in ["England","France","Germany"]
fx
Sort/Group
For lookup pipes this section is called Order/Index.
Use this section to group and sort data as it comes through the pipe. This section has:
- a toolbar with standard buttons
- a grid that lists the attributes that you want to sort or use to group
- below the grid are the following options:
Not available on pipes connected to calculate tables.
Enter an upper limit for grouped records.
When collating the input records into groups, PhixFlow uses the specified sort order. When it has added the maximum number of records, any more records for the group are ignored.
This can be useful if you want the most recent record for an attribute that has many records.
- Tick the Group check box for the attribute you want to use for grouping.
- On an appropriate date attribute, apply a (Z-A) sort order.
- Set the Maximum Number of Records to 1.
Available when Type is Look-up.
Look-up pipes can be configured for fast "indexed" access to cached data collected from external tables, files or from other tables. Indexed access is controlled through configuring a pipe with an index and setting index expressions on grouping attributes. If the Type field on the Pipe is set to 'Look-up' then the field "Index Type" becomes available. This can have the value "None" meaning that there are no index keys or "Exact Match", "Best Match" or "Near Match" as described below:
Exact Match: The pipe retrieves data from its cache based on an exact match look-up with the values provided after evaluating the index expressions on the "Group By" attributes.Best Match: The pipe retrieves data from its cache based on a "Best Match" look-up after evaluating the index expressions on the "Group By" attributes.
Note: The last Group By Attribute with a key expression is used for the best match lookup. The index keys on any Group By attributes with a lower sequence number are used as an initial "Exact Match" to find the set of data on which to do the "Best Match". The "Best Match" is defined as the longest key value which matches the evaluated index expression.
Note: the last Group By Attribute with a key expression is used for the near match lookup. The index keys on any Group By attributes with a lower sequence number are used as an initial "Exact Match" to find the set of data on which to do the "Best Match". When "Near Match" is selected, an additional field appears where you can enter an expression which should evaluate to a number representing the allowed number of edits (e.g. deletions, insertions, substitutions and transpositions) which can be made when comparing the result of the index expression to the index key in order to achieve a match. For example if the index key is "Smyhte" and the result of the index expression is "Smith" this would still be a match providing that the allowed number of edits is 3 or more (i.e. substitute the 'i' for a 'y', transpose the 't' and the 'h' and then insert an 'e' at the end).
Using the Sort/Group Grid
To add an attribute to the list:
clickFor input attributes, PhixFlow displays the attribute name. (Read-only)
For a new attribute, enter a name.
Select the sort order
- (A-Z) to sort data records in ascending order, e.g. A to Z, 1 to 9, earliest to latest date.
- (Z-A) to sort data records in descending alpha-numeric order, e.g. Z to A, 9 to 1, latest to earliest date.
If this attribute is part of the candidate key set, you must tick the Group check box. Otherwise, the attributes will be used only to sort the data in the candidate set.
This field is available for lookup pipes with an Index Type option selected.
Look-up pipes can be configured for fast "indexed" access to cached data. This data is collected from external tables, files or from other tables. Indexed access is controlled through configuring a pipe with an index and setting index expressions on "Group By" attributes here.
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In some cases, you may have a pipe connected to a database collector, which pulls data from an external database table. In these cases, the fields in the database must have matching attribute names in the output table. You can refer to it using the format |
Aggregate Attributes
Use this section to define the properties of data that you want to combine as it comes through the pipe.
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You cannot aggregate data from attributes if the pipe's input is from: If you need to aggregate data from a database collector, you can use an SQL query. |
This section has:
- a toolbar with standard buttons
- a grid that lists the attributes that you want to aggregate.
Using the Aggregate Attributes Grid
To add an attribute to the list:
clickTo set the properties for an aggregate attribute, double-click its name in the grid. PhixFlow opens the attribute's sort properties:
Select an function to combine records.
- Average
- Count
- Distinct
- Maximum
- Minimum
- Sum
See Aggregate Function for details. Make sure the function matches the data in the attribute. For example, you cannot Sum text.
Select the attribute aggregated from the list of attributes in the input table.
PhixFlow does not use the value in this field if the Aggregate Function is Count.
Advanced
The following options are available when the pipe Type is Push or Pull. Allow Incomplete Stream Sets is also available when the pipe Type is Lookup.
This field is available when the input is not Transactional. Where the input table is transactional PhixFlow will behave as though the box is ticked.
PhixFlow cannot complete a recordset if:
either the input table is set to beTip |
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You must tick this check box on all the pipes that will read from a static (or effectively static) input table in the analysis run. PhixFlow will report an error if there is any pipe trying to complete the table set during the analysis run. |
Pipes that are not used in the analysis run do not try to complete a recordset, so will not report an error. (Unused pipes can occur if they lead to tables on branches of the model that are not being run.)
Max Records To Read
Enter a number for the maximum number of records that should be read down this pipe. The pipe may read more than this number of records if it is configured to carry out multiple reads simultaneously. For example:
- a pipe can be connected to a File Collector Properties that reads multiple files simultaneously
- the pipe strategy is Directed with multiple workers.
Select an option to specify how this pipe should be implemented. See the section on Directed Merge Strategy
- Default: this is the way pipes usually works
- Directed: when reading from a large data set; see Using Directed Pipes to Read from Large Data Sets
Max Workers
This field is available when Strategy is Directed
Enter the maximum number of concurrent worker tasks. When no value is specified, this defaults to 1.
This field is available when Strategy is Directed
Enter the number of key values to read for a single worker task, which runs a single select statement.
When no value is specified, this defaults to 1000. This is the maximum value that can be used when reading from an Oracle database.
- Pipe Logging: when ticked, PhixFlow always logs the number of records returned by this pipe, whatever is set here.
The following properties are available in Basic Settings when you set Data To Read to Custom.
Every time the analysis engine runs, all of the recordsets that are created by all of the tables affected by that analysis run are given the same Run ID.
Enter the number of recordsets to be retrieved from the input table.
For a push pipe with positive offsets. enter the maximum number of recordsets that can be created i.e. the maximum number of cycles this pipe can initiate.
For example, if:
- the from and to offsets are both 0.0
- and the output table requires table generation for the period 17/10/07 - 18/10/07