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Version: 0.17.19

MetricProviders

MetricProviders generate and register Metrics to support Expectations, and they are an important part of the Expectation software development kit (SDK). Typically, MetricProviders are used to resolve complex requirements and are not implemented widely. If you're considering using MetricProviders, you're encouraged to join the Great Expectations Slack community and discuss your requirements in the #gx-community-support channel.

You'll encounter references to MetricProviders in many of the topics in the Great Expectations (GX) documentation. An in-depth knowledge of MetricProvider functionality is helpful, but not required to successfully complete the tasks documented in these topics. However, some knowledge of MetricProvider functionality is useful if you're developing Custom Expectations, or you're maintaining or extending MetricProvider classes.

MetricProviders let you declare all the Metrics that are needed to support an Expectation in concise, Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) syntax. MetricProviders support the following use cases:

  • Conceptually grouping code for Metrics calculation across multiple backends.
  • Incremental development. You can develop Metrics for each Execution Engine, one at a time.
  • Sharing Metrics across Expectations.
  • Generating Metrics that can be inferred from specific types of Expectation automatically.

Assumed knowledge

To get the most out of the information provided here, you should have an understanding of:

  • Expectations
  • Metrics
  • The Metric registry
  • ExecutionEngines

Class hierarchy

Although the class hierarchy for MetricProviders and Expectations is different, they use the same naming conventions. The following is the MetricProviders class hierarchy:

MetricProvider
QueryMetricProvider
TableMetricProvider
ColumnAggregateExpectation
MapMetricProvider
ColumnMapMetricProvider
RegexColumnMapMetricProvider
SetColumnMapMetricProvide
ColumnPairMapMetricProvider
MulticolumnMapExpectation
MulticolumnMapMetricProvider

If you’re not sure which MetricProvider you should use with an Expectation, you can usually infer the correct MetricProvider class name from the Expectation class name. For example:

Expectation classMetricProvider class
ExpectationMetricProvider
BatchExpectationTableMetricProvider
ColumnAggregateExpectationColumnAggregateMetricProvider
ColumnMapExpectationColumnMapMetricProvider
RegexBasedColumnMapExpectationRegexColumnMapMetricProvider (built in)
SetBasedColumnMapExpectationSetColumnMapMetricProvider (built in)
ColumnPairMapExpectationColumnPairMapMetricProvider
MulticolumnMapExpectationMulticolumnMapMetricProvider
QueryExpectationQueryMetricProvider

Sometimes, the MetricProvider class is created directly from the Expectation class, so you don’t need to specify a MetricProvider or methods when declaring a new Expectation. For example, the RegexBasedColumnMapExpectation automatically implements the RegexColumnMapMetricProvider, and the SetBasedColumnMapExpectation automatically implements the SetColumnMapMetricProvider.

Define Metrics with a MetricProvider

The API for MetricProvider classes is unusual. MetricProvider classes are never intended to be instantiated, and they don’t have inputs or outputs in the normal sense of method arguments and return values. Instead, the inputs for MetricProvider classes are methods for calculating the Metric on different backend applications. Each method must be decorated with an appropriate decorator. On new, the MetricProvider class registers the decorated methods as part of the Metrics registry so that they can be invoked to calculate Metrics. The registered methods are the only output from MetricProviders.

note

Decorators invoked on new can make maintainability challenging. GX intends to address this shortcoming in future releases.

A typical MetricProvider class has three methods that correspond to the three primary ExecutionEngines used by GX (pandas, SQL, and SparkDF). Each of the three methods are marked with an appropriate decorator.

Each MetricProvider class supports different decorators. Every MetricProvider class can use @metric_value and @metric_partial. For the MetricProvider, QueryMetricProvider, and TableMetricProvider classes, these are the only supported Metric decorators.

The following table lists the MetricProvider subclasses and their associated Metrics.

SubclassSupported Metrics
ColumnAggregateMetricProvider@column_aggregate_value, @column_aggregate_partial
ColumnMapMetricProvider@column_condition_partial, @column_function_partial
ColumnPairMapMetricProvider@column_pair_condition_partial
MulticolumnMapMetricProvider@multicolumn_condition_partial, @multicolumn_function_partial