WARNING: This tool is currently in beta and has only been tested on a limited number of dbt projects using the snowflake
dialect. It might not perform as expected in every situation. Please report any issues or suggestions in the Repository
The DBT Column Lineage Extractor is a lightweight Python-based tool for extracting and analyzing data column lineage for dbt projects. This tool utilizes the sqlglot library to parse and analyze SQL queries defined in your dbt models and maps their column lineage relationships.
- Extract column level lineage for specified model columns, including direct and recursive relationships.
- Output results in a human-readable JSON format, which can be programmatically integrated for use cases such as data impact analysis, data tagging, etc.; or visualized with other tools.
pip install dbt-column-lineage-extractor==0.1.3b1
To run the DBT Column Lineage Extractor, you need the following files:
catalog.json
: Provides the schema of the models, including names and types of the columns.manifest.json
: Offers model-level lineage information.
These files are generated by executing the command:
dbt docs generate
- The
dbt docs generate
command does not parse your SQL syntax. Instead, it connects to the data warehouse to retrieve schema information. - Ensure that the relevant models are materialized in your dbt project as either tables or views for accurate schema information.
- If the models aren't materialized in your development environment, you might use the
--target
flag to specify an alternative target environment with all models materialized (e.g.,--target prod
), given you have access to it. - After modifying the schemas, update the materialized models in your warehouse before running the
dbt docs generate
command.
The DBT Column Lineage Extractor can be used in two ways: via the command line interface or by integrating the Python scripts into your codebase.
cd examples
First, generate column lineage relationships to model's direct parents and children using the dbt_column_lineage_direct
command, e.g.:
dbt_column_lineage_direct --manifest ./inputs/manifest.json --catalog ./inputs/catalog.json
Then analyze recursive column lineage relationships for a specific model and column using the dbt_column_lineage_recursive
command, e.g.:
dbt_column_lineage_recursive --model model.jaffle_shop.stg_orders --column order_id
See more usage guides using dbt_column_lineage_direct -h
and dbt_column_lineage_recursive -h
.
See the readme file in the examples
directory for more detailed instructions on how to integrate the DBT Column Lineage Extractor into your python scripts.
-
seed.jaffle_shop.raw_orders -- id
- Structured Ancestors:
{}
- Structured Descendants:
{ "model.jaffle_shop.stg_orders": { "order_id": { "+": { "model.jaffle_shop.customers": { "number_of_orders": { "+": {} } }, "model.jaffle_shop.orders": { "order_id": { "+": {} } } } } } }
- Structured Ancestors:
-
model.jaffle_shop.stg_orders -- order_id
- Structured Ancestors:
{ "seed.jaffle_shop.raw_orders": { "id": { "+": {} } } }
- Structured Descendants:
{ "model.jaffle_shop.customers": { "number_of_orders": { "+": {} } }, "model.jaffle_shop.orders": { "order_id": { "+": {} } } }
- Structured Ancestors:
The structured JSON outputs can be used programmatically, or loaded into visualization tools like jsoncrack.com to visualize the column lineage relationships and dependencies.
- Doesn’t support parse certain syntax, e.g. lateral flatten
- Doesn’t support dbt python models
- Only tested with
snowflake
dialect so far