strategy
- timestamp
- check
snapshots/<filename>.sql
{% snapshot snapshot_name %}
{{ config(
strategy="timestamp",
updated_at="column_name"
) }}
select ...
{% endsnapshot %}
dbt_project.yml
snapshots:
<resource-path>:
+strategy: timestamp
+updated_at: column_name
snapshots/<filename>.sql
{% snapshot snapshot_name %}
{{ config(
strategy="check",
check_cols=[column_name] | "all"
) }}
{% endsnapshot %}
dbt_project.yml
snapshots:
<resource-path>:
+strategy: check
+check_cols: [column_name] | all
Description
The snapshot strategy dbt should use to detect record changes. Read the guide to snapshots to understand the differences between the two.
Default
This is a required configuration. There is no default value.
Examples
Use the timestamp strategy
snapshots/timestamp_example.sql
{% snapshot orders_snapshot_timestamp %}
{{
config(
target_schema='snapshots',
strategy='timestamp',
unique_key='id',
updated_at='updated_at',
)
}}
select * from {{ source('jaffle_shop', 'orders') }}
{% endsnapshot %}
Use the check strategy
{% snapshot orders_snapshot_check %}
{{
config(
target_schema='snapshots',
strategy='check',
unique_key='id',
check_cols=['status', 'is_cancelled'],
)
}}
select * from {{ source('jaffle_shop', 'orders') }}
{% endsnapshot %}
Advanced: define and use custom snapshot strategy
Behind the scenes, snapshot strategies are implemented as macros, named snapshot_<strategy>_strategy
- Source code for the timestamp strategy
- Source code for the check strategy
It's possible to implement your own snapshot strategy by adding a macro with the same naming pattern to your project. For example, you might choose to create a strategy which records hard deletes, named timestamp_with_deletes
.
- Create a macro named
snapshot_timestamp_with_deletes_strategy
. Use the existing code as a guide and adjust as needed. - Use this strategy via the
strategy
configuration:
snapshots/<filename>.sql
{% snapshot snapshot_name %}
{{ config(
strategy="timestamp_with_deletes",
updated_at="column_name"
) }}
{% endsnapshot %}
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