Incorrect get_historical_features() Results
Overview and scope​
This troubleshooting article covers how to diagnose incorrect features returned
from a get_historical_features()
(GHF) call. In this article, some
troubleshooting steps are specific to whether GHF is using pre-computed feature
data. Refer to
Methods for calling get_historical_features()
to determine whether this is your case.
Resolution​
It is often difficult for Tecton Support Engineers to directly troubleshoot incorrect GHF results as we typically do not have access to your notebooks or raw data to debug your issues. We therefore provide the following list of possible causes that you can check:
Naive timezone conversions​
Symptom : Feature values are off by one day, but otherwise correct
Explanation : Tecton uses UTC as its internal time zone. If you pass in timestamps but missing the time zone identifier, either into your feature views from your data sources, or in your GHF spine, then Tecton will assume they are already in UTC. This could be a problem if your timestamps were actually intended to be in a local time zone different than UTC.
Resolution : Ensure you pass in timestamps with a time zone
schedule_offset
or data_delay
used​
Symptom : Feature values are off by one or more days, but otherwise correct
Explanation :
You can specify a
schedule_offset
in your feature views (SDK v0.4 compat and earlier) ordata_delay
in your data sources (SDK v0.4 and above), then you are telling Tecton to wait a certain amount of time to run a materialization job after it normally would. So, if you had aschedule_offset
of 2 hours and abatch_schedule
of 1 day, Tecton will run materialization jobs every day at 02:00 UTC instead of 00:00 UTC.Tecton tries to minimize any skew between training (e.g. GHF output) and inference (REST API output). As a result, if you pass in a timestamp of July 3 01:00 UTC, in the above example, Tecton will return features computed from July 1 00:00-23:59, instead of July 2 00:00-23:59, since the July 2 materialization job runs at July 3 02:00 UTC.
Resolution : Either accept Tecton’s behavior or add
schedule_offset
ordata_delay
to your GHF spine timestamps.
Custom batch aggregation issues (SDK v0.4 compat and below)​
Scope : When using Tecton SDK v0.4 “compat” and below, and when using a
@batch_feature_view
feature view type doing a time-based aggregation such asSUM()
orCOUNT DISTINCT()
over some time window.Symptom : You are missing data and/or the feature values are incorrect when using pre-materialized features, but everything is correct when not (passing
from_source=True
to GHF)Explanation: Tecton previously ran backfill materialization jobs differently than incremental/steady state jobs. For batch feature views using aggregations, you therefore needed to use a helper function,
tecton_sliding_window()
, to account for this difference, otherwise, the pre-materialized features would be incorrect.Resolution :
We recommend upgrading this feature to use the new SDK v0.4 feature framework. You can add new v0.4 features to an existing repository that already has v0.4 “compat” and below features.
If this is not possible, you will have to refactor your code to use a pipeline mode and
tecton_sliding_window()
. You can follow this example. As this design pattern is relatively complex, we recommend contacting Tecton support for assistance refactoring this feature.
Late-arriving data​
Scope : Any version of Tecton SDK
Symptom : GHF returns different values with
from_source
set toTrue
vs.False
when using built-in (tiled) aggregationsExplanation background : When you use a built-in aggregation via the
aggregations=
parameter in batch or streaming feature views, Tecton computes a “tile” for eachbatch_schedule
interval of time and rolls them up at serving time (via GHF or the REST API). For example, if yourbatch_schedule
is 1 day and you are computing the count of transactions over 7 days, then Tecton stores 1 day counts and at request time, returns the sum of these 7 “tiles” of 1 day counts.Explanation : Since Tecton creates tiles, if you have data that arrives outside a tile window then Tecton won’t include that data when it writes a tile for
from_source=False
. Example: you have data with a timestamp of July 20 that is written July 21), then Tecton won't include that data in the July 20. However, when you runfrom_source=True
, Tecton pulls the latest version of the data from your data source, so the data would be available then.Resolutions :
Correct for your late-arriving data issue upstream
Be content with (presumably small) variations in
from_source=True
andfrom_source=False
, knowing that theFalse
version is the one that minimizes training/serving skew.Use a custom aggregation that re-computes the entire aggregation every day, for example, as opposed to rolling up historical tiles.