This is a data plane SDK (it is for interacting with Azure Data Explorer service). For the control plane (resource administration), go here
go get github.com/Azure/azure-kusto-go/kusto
- go version 1.13
Below are some simple examples to get users up and running quickly. For full examples, please refer to the GoDoc for the packages.
// auth package is: "github.com/Azure/go-autorest/autorest/azure/auth"
authorizer := kusto.Authorization{
Config: auth.NewClientCredentialsConfig(clientID, clientSecret, tenantID),
}
This creates a Kusto Authorizer using your client identity, secret and tenant identity. You may also uses other forms of authorization, please see the Authorization type in the GoDoc for more.
client, err := kusto.New(endpoint, authorizer)
if err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
endpoint represents the Kusto endpoint. This will resemble: "https://..kusto.windows.net".
The Kusto package package queries data into a *table.Row which can be printed or have the column data extracted.
// table package is: github.com/Azure/azure-kusto-go/kusto/data/table
// Query our database table "systemNodes" for the CollectionTimes and the NodeIds.
iter, err := client.Query(ctx, "database", kusto.NewStmt("systemNodes | project CollectionTime, NodeId"))
if err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
defer iter.Stop()
// .Do() will call the function for every row in the table.
err = iter.Do(
func(row *table.Row) error {
fmt.Println(row) // As a convenience, printing a *table.Row will output csv
return nil
},
)
if err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
Users will often want to turn the returned data into Go structs that are easier to work with. The *table.Row object that is returned supports this via the .ToStruct() method.
// NodeRec represents our Kusto data that will be returned.
type NodeRec struct {
// ID is the table's NodeId. We use the field tag here to to instruct our client to convert NodeId to ID.
ID int64 `kusto:"NodeId"`
// CollectionTime is Go representation of the Kusto datetime type.
CollectionTime time.Time
}
iter, err := client.Query(ctx, "database", kusto.NewStmt("systemNodes | project CollectionTime, NodeId"))
if err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
defer iter.Stop()
recs := []NodeRec{}
err = iter.Do(
func(row *table.Row) error {
rec := NodeRec{}
if err := row.ToStruct(&rec); err != nil {
return err
}
recs = append(recs, rec)
return nil
},
)
if err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
The ingest/ package provides access to Kusto's ingestion service for importing data into Kusto. This requires some prerequisite knowledge of acceptable data formats, mapping references, ...
That documentation can be found here
Kusto's ingestion service makes no guarantees on when the data will show up in the table and is optimized for large chunks of data and not small uploads at a high rate.
If ingesting data from memory, it is suggested that you stream the data in via FromReader() passing in the reader from an io.Pipe(). The data will not begin ingestion until the writer closes.
Setup is quite simple, simply pass a *kusto.Client, the name of the database and table you wish to ingest into.
in, err := ingest.New(kustoClient, "database", "table")
if err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
Ingesting a local file requires simply passing the path to the file to be ingested:
if _, err := in.FromFile(ctx, "/path/to/a/local/file"); err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
FromFile() will accept Unix path names on Unix platforms and Windows path names on Windows platforms. The file will not be deleted after upload (there is an option that will allow that though).
This package will also accept ingestion from an Azure Blob Storage file:
if _, err := in.FromFile(ctx, "https://myaccount.blob.core.windows.net/$root/myblob"); err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
This will ingest a file from Azure Blob Storage. We only support https:// paths and your domain name may differ than what is here.
Sometimes you want to ingest a stream of data that you have in memory without writing to disk. You can do this simply by chunking the data via an io.Reader.
r, w := io.Pipe()
enc := json.NewEncoder(w)
go func() {
defer w.Close()
for _, data := range dataSet {
if err := enc.Encode(data); err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
}
}()
if _, err := in.FromReader(ctx, r); err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
It is important to remember that FromReader() will terminate when it receives an io.EOF from the io.Reader. Use io.Readers that won't return io.EOF until the io.Writer is closed (such as io.Pipe).
Ingestion from a stream commits blocks of fully formed data encodes (JSON, AVRO, ...) into Kusto:
if err := in.Stream(ctx, jsonEncodedData, ingest.JSON, "mappingName"); err != nil {
panic("add error handling")
}
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com.
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This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments.