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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.
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 in a database collector for a database datasource
- or in an HTTP collector for an HTTP datasource.
Property Pane Toolbar
For information about the toolbar options, see the Common Properties page, Toolbars and Controls section.
Properties Tab
Parent Details
If this item is within or belongs to another, its parent name is shown here. See the Parent Details section on the Common Properties page for more details.
Basic Settings
Field | Description |
---|---|
Name | Enter a name. The name is used to refer to the pipe in other model elements. Pipe names default to The name:
|
Enabled | Untick to prevent the pipe from being used during an analysis run. Tick to indicate the pipe properties are complete and the pipe is ready to be used. |
Static | 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. Untick when the 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. Tick to prevent the input table from updating itself. The pipe will pull the existing data from the input table. Pipes from collectors cannot be marked as static. In the model, hover over a pipe to display an icon that shows |
Mandatory | Untick Tick to indicate that, when multiple tables are being merged, there must be an input record from this pipe for an output record to be generated by the output table. 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. |
Multiplier | Untick is the default. Tick so that, for each output record generated by a table, the table will get a set of records from each of its input pipes. If the multiplier flag is ticked on one of these, then the table will generate an output record for each record from the set of records provided by the multiplier pipe. For each output record, each of the other input pipes will provide the same set of records as normal. |
Type | Select:
|
Data to Read | Select the type of input data to use.
|
Read Future Data | 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 Recordsets, below. Untick to exclude future recordsets from this analysis run. This is the default. Tick to include future recordsets in this analysis run. For example, for a table with Period: Transactional , you will want to include new recordsets that are being added to the input table after your analysis run starts. |
Input | Enter the name of the object at the start of the pipe. Show Properties for This Item |
Output | The name of the table at the end of the pipe. |
Managing Future Recordsets
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.
When the pipe Type is Lookup, the filter controls which data will be cached in memory.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Cache Size | Available when Type is Lookup. The default value is set in System Configuration. 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:
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. Warnings and Errors In the log for an analysis run, which is available in the system console, PhixFlow reports warnings when a single read returns:
PhixFlow reports an error and stops the analysis run when:
Error Message: Cache Size Limit Exceeded The Pipe "table_name.lookup_pipe_name" cache is 100% full (the cache size is 10). More cache details 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. |
Pipe View | 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. 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:
To set up a pipe view:
Using pipe views with file exporters If a File Exporter is configured to export to Excel or to HTML:
|
Include History Records | Untick to filter out superseded records. Tick to include superseded records. |
Condition | Select one of the options
To add more conditions, hover your mouse pointer over this field to display the button and add another condition to your filter. |
Clause | Select an option from the list. PhixFlow adds more fields where you can:
|
Filter Icons | Hover your mouse pointer over conditions or clauses to display:
|
Cache Extraction Filter | 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:
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: 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:
|
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 or Order/Index
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; see Using the Sort/Group Grid, below
- the following below the grid, when Basic Settings → Type is Look-up:
Field | Description |
---|---|
Maximum Number of records per Group | Available when Type is Look-up, except where the pipe is connected to a calculate table. 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.
|
Index Type | 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:
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Using the Sort/Group Grid
To add an attribute to the list:
- click Show Attributes to open the list of attributes in the input table
- drag an attribute into the grid.
To remove an attribute, click Delete in the toolbar.
To set the sort or group properties for an attribute, double-click its name in the grid. If you want to create a new attribute that is not present in the input table, in the section toolbar, click Create New. PhixFlow opens the attribute's sort properties:
Field | Description |
---|---|
Attribute | For input attributes, PhixFlow displays the attribute name. (Read-only) For a new attribute, enter a name. |
Order | Enter the number for the order the attribute appears in the grid and the order in which it is processed. Other attributes are renumbered. |
Direction | Select the sort order
|
Group | Untick by default, data is not grouped. Tick to group data records by the value in this attribute. 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. |
Index Expression | 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. |
Audit Summary | This option is on the Audit tab; see Common Properties. |
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 _out.AttributeName
Aggregate Attributes
Use this section to define the properties of data that you want to combine as it comes through the pipe.
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.
To add an attribute to the list:
- click Show Attributes to open the list of attributes in the input table
- drag an attribute into the grid.
To remove an attribute, click Delete in the toolbar.
To set the properties for an aggregate attribute, double-click its name in the grid. PhixFlow opens the attribute's sort properties:
Field | Description |
---|---|
A Function | Select an function to combine records.
See Aggregate Function for details. Make sure the function matches the data in the attribute. For example, you cannot Sum text. |
Attribute | 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. |
Name | Enter the name for the aggregated attribute. This can be the same as the original attribute. |
Order | The order of the aggregate attribute in the output table. |
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.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Data Expected | Untick means the pipe may receive no data from its input during an analysis run. Tick means PhixFlow reports an error if the pipe receives no data from the input datasource, collector or table during an analysis run. |
Allow Incomplete Streamsets | 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. Untick to complete a recordset before passing the data to the output table. During the analysis run, PhixFlow pulls data into the input table until the recordset is complete. If it cannot complete the recordset, PhixFlow reports an error message. PhixFlow cannot complete a recordset if:
Tick PhixFlow ignores incomplete recordsets in a static input table and does not report an error. 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.) |
Buffer Size | Enter a number for the buffer size used to perform the table calculation. If a large amount of data is being processed, then setting a large buffer size will give better performance. |
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:
|
Strategy | Select an option to specify how this pipe should be implemented. See the section on Directed Merge Strategy
|
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. |
Worker Size | 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. |
Log Traffic | When system logging → Pipe Logging is ticked, PhixFlow always logs the number of records returned by this pipe, whatever is set here; see System Logging Configuration. To change this property, you must have the Modify System Logging Configuration privilege. Untick to prevent logging. Ticking this box has no effect when the system logging option is ticked. Tick to log details of communication. Ticking this box has no effect when the system configuration option Allow Logging is not ticked. |
Custom Data to Read
The following properties are available in Basic Settings when you set Data To Read to Custom.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Only collect from same run | 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. Untick so the pipe can collect recordsets with different Run IDs. Tick so that the pipe will only collect recordsets from the input table that have the same Run ID as the recordset currently being created by the output table. You should only tick this check box if both the input and output tabkes have Period set to Transactional. |
From Offset | Enter the offset applied to the start of the collection period, relative to the period in the output table that requires populating. |
To Offset | Enter the offset applied to the end of the collection period, relative to the period in the output table that requires populating. |
Max Stream Sets | 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. |
Historied | Untick so that all data will be collected from the input table, regardless of period. In this case, any From Offset or To Offset values determine whether the required data periods in the input table exist before the table calculation can be carried out. Tick so that the pipe will collect data from the input table by period. For example, if:
the pipe reads data from the input table for the period 17/10/07 - 18/10/07. |
Description
We recommend that you always enter a description to explain the purpose of this item.
Audit Tab
Audit Summary
See the Common Properties page, Audit Summary section.
Learn More
For links to all pages in this topic, see Analysis Models for Batch Processing Data.
Terminology changes in progress
As part of the redesign of PhixFlow, we are changing the following terms:
dashboard → screen
stream → table
stream attributes → attributes
stream item → record
stream set → recordset
stream view → view
stream item action → record-action
stream action → table-action
driver class → database driver
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