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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PARQUET-2249?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17738146#comment-17738146
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ASF GitHub Bot commented on PARQUET-2249:
-----------------------------------------
pitrou commented on code in PR #196:
URL: https://github.com/apache/parquet-format/pull/196#discussion_r1245293430
##########
src/main/thrift/parquet.thrift:
##########
@@ -966,6 +985,23 @@ struct ColumnIndex {
/** A list containing the number of null values for each page **/
5: optional list<i64> null_counts
+
+ /**
+ * A list of Boolean values to determine pages that contain only NaNs. Only
+ * present for columns of type FLOAT and DOUBLE. If true, all non-null
+ * values in a page are NaN. Writers are suggested to set the corresponding
+ * entries in min_values and max_values to NaN, so that all lists have the
same
+ * length and contain valid values. If false, then either all values in the
+ * page are null or there is at least one non-null non-NaN value in the page.
+ * As readers are supposed to ignore all NaN values in bounds, legacy readers
+ * who do not consider nan_pages yet are still able to use the column index
+ * but are not able to skip only-NaN pages.
+ */
+ 6: optional list<bool> nan_pages
Review Comment:
> A new reader that implements this PR can do the distinction via the
nan_pages or value_counts computation.
Wait... I thought the `[-Inf, +Inf]` convention was meant to avoid a new
`nan_pages` or `value_counts` field? If not, then what's the point?
> Parquet spec (parquet.thrift) is inconsistent w.r.t. ColumnIndex + NaNs
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: PARQUET-2249
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PARQUET-2249
> Project: Parquet
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: parquet-format
> Reporter: Jan Finis
> Priority: Major
>
> Currently, the specification of {{ColumnIndex}} in {{parquet.thrift}} is
> inconsistent, leading to cases where it is impossible to create a parquet
> file that is conforming to the spec.
> The problem is with double/float columns if a page contains only NaN values.
> The spec mentions that NaN values should not be included in min/max bounds,
> so a page consisting of only NaN values has no defined min/max bound. To
> quote the spec:
> {noformat}
> * When writing statistics the following rules should be followed:
> * - NaNs should not be written to min or max statistics
> fields.{noformat}
> However, the comments in the ColumnIndex on the null_pages member states the
> following:
> {noformat}
> struct ColumnIndex {
> /**
> * A list of Boolean values to determine the validity of the corresponding
> * min and max values. If true, a page contains only null values, and
> writers
> * have to set the corresponding entries in min_values and max_values to
> * byte[0], so that all lists have the same length. If false, the
> * corresponding entries in min_values and max_values must be valid.
> */
> 1: required list<bool> null_pages{noformat}
> For a page with only NaNs, we now have a problem. The page definitly does
> *not* only contain null values, so {{null_pages}} should be {{false}} for
> this page. However, in this case the spec requires valid min/max values in
> {{min_values}} and {{max_values}} for this page. As the only value in the
> page is NaN, the only valid min/max value we could enter here is NaN, but as
> mentioned before, NaNs should never be written to min/max values.
> Thus, no writer can currently create a parquet file that conforms to this
> specification as soon as there is a only-NaN column and column indexes are to
> be written.
> I see three possible solutions:
> 1. A page consisting only of NaNs (or a mixture of NaNs and nulls) has it's
> null_pages entry set to {*}true{*}.
> 2. A page consisting of only NaNs (or a mixture of NaNs and nulls) has
> {{byte[0]}} as min/max, even though the null_pages entry is set to
> {*}false{*}.
> 3. A page consisting of only NaNs (or a mixture of NaNs and nulls) does have
> NaN as min & max in the column index.
> None of the solutions is perfect. But I guess solution 3. is the best of
> them. It gives us valid min/max bounds, makes null_pages compatible with
> this, and gives us a way to determine only-Nan pages (min=max=NaN).
> As a general note: I would say that it is a shortcoming that Parquet doesn't
> track NaN counts. E.g., Iceberg does track NaN counts and therefore doesn't
> have this inconsistency. In a future version, NaN counts could be introduced,
> but that doesn't help for backward compatibility, so we do need a solution
> for now.
> Any of the solutions is better than the current situation where engines
> writing such a page cannot write a conforming parquet file and will randomly
> pick any of the solutions.
> Thus, my suggestion would be to update parquet.thrift to use solution 3.
> I.e., rewrite the comments saying that NaNs shouldn't be included in min/max
> bounds by adding a clause stating that "if a page contains only NaNs or a
> mixture of NaNs and NULLs, then NaN should be written as min & max".
>
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