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Pollock is a benchmark for data loading on character-delimited files.

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Pollock

Pollock is a benchmark for data loading on character-delimited files, developed at the Information Systems Group of the Hasso Plattner Institute. The highlights of our experiments are these results, obtained on 16 different systems under test:

System under test Pollock score (simple) Pollock score (weighted)
CleverCSV 0.7.4 9.19 9.45
CSVCommons 1.9.0 6.64 9.25
Hypoparsr 0.1.0 3.88 4.37
OpenCSV 5.6 6.63 7.74
Pandas 1.4.3 9.89 9.43
Python native csv 3.10.5 9.72 9.43
R native csv 4.2.1 7.79 6.40
UniVocity 2.9.1 9.93 7.93
Mariadb 10.9.3 9.58 7.48
MySQL 8.0.31 9.58 7.48
PostgreSQL 15.0 0.13 6.96
SQLite 3.39.0 9.95 9.37
LibreOffice Calc 7.3.6 9.92 7.83
SpreadDesktop 9.92 9.59
SpreadWeb 9.72 9.43
Dataviz 5.00 5.15

Repository structure

The structure of the repository is the following:

  • open_data_crawl: contains the scripts used to crawl the open data portals of different countries to sample the statistics about file types.
  • survey: contains the csv files used in the paper survey, and their annotations with respect to dialect and pollutions.
  • survey_sample: contains the sample of 100 files used in the paper experiment, with their clean versions and loading parameters.
  • polluted_files: contains the generated polluted files for the Pollock benchmark.
  • pollock is the main source folder for the Pollock benchmark: it contains the files necessary to generate the polluted versions of an input file (polluters_base.py and polluters_stdlib.py) as well as the files with the metrics to evaluate results of data loading.
  • sut is the source folder that contains the scripts used to benchmark given systems. These scripts can be in bash, python, or heterogeneous format, depending on the specific tool that is under test.
  • results contains the results of loading both the polluted files and the survey files for each of the systems evaluated. The folder will also contain .csv files that summarize the evaluation results - for each of the systems under test and for all of them together (aggregate_results_{dataset}.csv, global_results_{dataset}.csv).
  • The file docker-compose.yml contains a list of the docker images that are used to run the benchmark. The images are built from the Dockerfile files in the sut folder.
  • The two files pollute_main.py and evaluate.py are used to run the pollution of a source file and to evaluate all systems under test that have a folder in results/loading

Running the benchmark

The results of the Pollock benchmark can be obtained in three steps:

1. Generating the polluted versions of the source files
2. Loading the polluted files in each SUT.
3. Calculating the Pollock scores with the output files for each SUT.

For convenience, in this repository we already provide the intermediate artifacts necessary to run the steps 2. and 3., so that our results can be reproduced with different degrees of completeness. We include results for 16 different systems:

  • 6 csv loading modules: clevercsv,csvcommons,hypoparsr,opencsv,pandas,pycsv,rcsv, univocity
  • 4 rdbms: mariadb,mysql,postgres,sqlite
  • 3 spreadsheet systems: libreoffice,spreaddesktop,spreadweb
  • A data visualization tool, dataviz

Step 1: Generating polluted files

The code for running the benchmark is written using Docker (and docker-compose). The following command will build the docker image to generate the polluted files:

docker-compose up --build pollution

After this step, the set of benchmark files are contained in the folder polluted_files. Inside this folder there are three sub-folders: csv containing the generated polluted files in the .csv format, clean containing the cleaned versions of the generated files, and parameters containing JSON files storing the corresponding loading parameters for each file. The files in the repository uses Git Large File Storage (LFS), so to correctly load their contents use: git lfs checkout.

Step 2: Loading polluted files in each SUT

Once the folder polluted_files/ contains the polluted files, the next step is to load them in each of the systems under test. If a unix-based systems is used, the following one-liner executes loading for all SUT:

chmod +x benchmark.sh; ./benchmark.sh    

Otherwise, loading can be done by running the following docker-compose commands in a sequence:

Loading commands
docker-compose up --detach mariadb-server mysql-server postgres-server
docker-compose up opencsv-client
docker-compose up csvcommons-client
docker-compose up univocity-client
docker-compose up pycsv-client
docker-compose up pandas-client
docker-compose up rcsv-client
docker-compose up clevercs-client
docker-compose up rhypoparsr-client
docker-compose up libreoffice-client
docker-compose up sqlite-client

docker-compose up postgres-client
docker-compose up mariadb-client
docker-compose up mysql-client

At the end of the loading stages, the results will be available in the folder results/{sut}/polluted_files, where {sut} stands for a given SUT name. Alternatively, the results of this step can be found in the repository. If users wish to skip step 2, they can extract each systems' archive in the folder results/{sut}. We also include archives for the spreadweb, spreaddesktop, and dataviz systems, for which due to their commercial nature, we do not share the scripts to obtain the output files.

Step 3: Pollock scores calculation

To run the evaluation step, use the command:

docker-compose up evaluate

The script outputs the benchmark scores for each of the polluted files in a csv file under results/{sut}/ for each of the systems. Moreover, all results are saved in the file results/global_results_polluted_files.csv and aggregated in the file results/aggregate_results_polluted_files.csv. The script also outputs the results of the benchmark with the simple and weighted Pollock scores.

Pollution list

For the complete list of benchmark files, expand the following table.

Pollock files
Pollution level File name Pollution type
Standard file source.csv Standard file
File and table pollution (12 files) file_no_payload.csv Empty file, with a size of 0 bytes
file_no_trailing_newline.csv File terminated without a newline sequence
file_double_trailing_newline.csv File terminated with a double newline sequence
file_no_header.csv File where there is no header row
file_header_multirow_2.csv File where there are two header rows.
file_header_multirow_3.csv File where are three header rows.
file_preamble.csv File with a preamble rows delimited from the rest of the file with an empty row.
file_multitable_less.csv File with two tables, the first with less columns than the second.
file_multitable_more.csv File with two tables, the first with more columns than the second.
file_multitable_same.csv File with two tables with the same number of columns.
file_header_only.csv File with only header row.
file_one_data_row.csv File with a single data row.
Inconsistent number of delimiters (1428 files) row_less_sep_rowX_colY.csv File where row X has a missing delimiter corresponding to column Y (672 files, one for each row/col combination except first column)
row_more_sep_rowX_colY.csv File where row X has an extra delimiter corresponding to column Y (756 files, one for each row/col combination)
Structural character change (849 files) file_field_delimiter_0x20.csv File where fields are delimited with space.
file_field_delimiter_0x2C_0x20.csv File where fields are delimited with comma and space.
file_field_delimiter_0x3B.csv File where fields are delimited with semicolon.
file_field_delimiter_0x9.csv File where fields are delimited with tab.
file_quotation_char_0x27.csv File where the quotation character is the apostrophe.
file_escape_char_0x5C.csv File where the escape character is the backslash.
file_escape_char_0x00.csv File where the escape character is missing.
file_record_delimiter_0xA.csv File where rows end with the LF character.
file_record_delimiter_0xD.csv File where rows end with the CR character.
row_extra_quoteX_colY.csv File where the cell in row X and column Y has an extra, unescaped quotation character (756 files, one for each row/col combination)
row_field_delimiter_X_0x20.csv File where only row X is delimited with the space character (84 files one for each row)

Extra: Benchmark a single SUT

To benchmark a specific system, you can use the Docker configurations in the file docker-compose.yml. For example, to benchmark the python csv module:

docker-compose up pycsv-client

To benchmark the RDBMS systems, make sure to first run the corresponding server first, for example:

docker-compose up postgres-server and, once the server is up and running: docker-compose up postgres-client To benchmark a specific system, run the benchmark.py script with the --sut argument followed by the name of the corresponding system folder, e.g.:

docker-compose run evaluate python3 evaluate.py --sut pycsv-client

The script reports the overall success, completeness, and conciseness score and outputs the specific results for each of the benchmark files in a CSV file, whose path can be specified with the --result parameter. (This command updates the result CSV files).

For the full list of parameters, run:

docker-compose run evaluate python3 evaluate.py --help

Extra: Change experiment dataset

The repository contains a .env file that every scripts reads from, specifying which dataset to run the experiments on. The default setting is the polluted_file dataset, to run experiments for the survey sample, simply comment out the first line and uncomment the second line of the file. To experiment with the survey sample file, its content should be as follows:

    #DATASET=polluted_files
    DATASET=survey_sample

To evaluate the results of the survey sample, run evaluate script with:

    docker-compose run evaluation python3 evaluate.py --dataset survey_sample

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