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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PARQUET-2249?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17741009#comment-17741009
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ASF GitHub Bot commented on PARQUET-2249:
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JFinis commented on PR #196:
URL: https://github.com/apache/parquet-format/pull/196#issuecomment-1625354736
@tustvold @crepererum Do I interpret your answer correctly in that your
suggestion would be to
* Create a new `ColumnOrder` for floats that simply is defined as IEEE 754
total order, if we need such new order for backward compatibility (which we
probably need, as apparently parquet-mr will otherwise perform filtering
incorrectly)
* When that order is used, don't handle NaNs explicitly. Instead, just use
the total order relation for ordering and min/max computation (which will
result in NaNs being written as max and -NaNs being written as min if they
exist).
Did I get this right?
I guess this can also be implemented in each language by "bit casting" the
float bits to integer bits and doing an integer comparison, correct? So even if
the underlying language doesn't have native support for total ordering, it
should still be possible to implement this.
I do see a certain beauty in this approach in it being "simple". As always,
I'm happy to adapt my PR to this approach, if we can get consensus that we want
this.
@mapleFU @gszadovszky @pitrou @wgtmac What is your opinion on this proposal?
> 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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