[ aws . machinelearning ]
Creates a DataSource
object. A DataSource
references data that can be used to perform CreateMLModel
, CreateEvaluation
, or CreateBatchPrediction
operations.
CreateDataSourceFromS3
is an asynchronous operation. In response to CreateDataSourceFromS3
, Amazon Machine Learning (Amazon ML) immediately returns and sets the DataSource
status to PENDING
. After the DataSource
has been created and is ready for use, Amazon ML sets the Status
parameter to COMPLETED
. DataSource
in the COMPLETED
or PENDING
state can be used to perform only CreateMLModel
, CreateEvaluation
or CreateBatchPrediction
operations.
If Amazon ML can’t accept the input source, it sets the Status
parameter to FAILED
and includes an error message in the Message
attribute of the GetDataSource
operation response.
The observation data used in a DataSource
should be ready to use; that is, it should have a consistent structure, and missing data values should be kept to a minimum. The observation data must reside in one or more .csv files in an Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) location, along with a schema that describes the data items by name and type. The same schema must be used for all of the data files referenced by the DataSource
.
After the DataSource
has been created, it’s ready to use in evaluations and batch predictions. If you plan to use the DataSource
to train an MLModel
, the DataSource
also needs a recipe. A recipe describes how each input variable will be used in training an MLModel
. Will the variable be included or excluded from training? Will the variable be manipulated; for example, will it be combined with another variable or will it be split apart into word combinations? The recipe provides answers to these questions.
See also: AWS API Documentation
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
create-data-source-from-s3
--data-source-id <value>
[--data-source-name <value>]
--data-spec <value>
[--compute-statistics | --no-compute-statistics]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
[--cli-auto-prompt <value>]
--data-source-id
(string)
A user-supplied identifier that uniquely identifies the
DataSource
.
--data-source-name
(string)
A user-supplied name or description of the
DataSource
.
--data-spec
(structure)
The data specification of a
DataSource
:
DataLocationS3 - The Amazon S3 location of the observation data.
DataSchemaLocationS3 - The Amazon S3 location of the
DataSchema
.DataSchema - A JSON string representing the schema. This is not required if
DataSchemaUri
is specified.DataRearrangement - A JSON string that represents the splitting and rearrangement requirements for the
Datasource
. Sample -"{\"splitting\":{\"percentBegin\":10,\"percentEnd\":60}}"
DataLocationS3 -> (string)
The location of the data file(s) used by a
DataSource
. The URI specifies a data file or an Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) directory or bucket containing data files.DataRearrangement -> (string)
A JSON string that represents the splitting and rearrangement processing to be applied to a
DataSource
. If theDataRearrangement
parameter is not provided, all of the input data is used to create theDatasource
.There are multiple parameters that control what data is used to create a datasource:
``percentBegin`` Use
percentBegin
to indicate the beginning of the range of the data used to create the Datasource. If you do not includepercentBegin
andpercentEnd
, Amazon ML includes all of the data when creating the datasource.``percentEnd`` Use
percentEnd
to indicate the end of the range of the data used to create the Datasource. If you do not includepercentBegin
andpercentEnd
, Amazon ML includes all of the data when creating the datasource.``complement`` The
complement
parameter instructs Amazon ML to use the data that is not included in the range ofpercentBegin
topercentEnd
to create a datasource. Thecomplement
parameter is useful if you need to create complementary datasources for training and evaluation. To create a complementary datasource, use the same values forpercentBegin
andpercentEnd
, along with thecomplement
parameter. For example, the following two datasources do not share any data, and can be used to train and evaluate a model. The first datasource has 25 percent of the data, and the second one has 75 percent of the data. Datasource for evaluation:{"splitting":{"percentBegin":0, "percentEnd":25}}
Datasource for training:{"splitting":{"percentBegin":0, "percentEnd":25, "complement":"true"}}
``strategy`` To change how Amazon ML splits the data for a datasource, use the
strategy
parameter. The default value for thestrategy
parameter issequential
, meaning that Amazon ML takes all of the data records between thepercentBegin
andpercentEnd
parameters for the datasource, in the order that the records appear in the input data. The following twoDataRearrangement
lines are examples of sequentially ordered training and evaluation datasources: Datasource for evaluation:{"splitting":{"percentBegin":70, "percentEnd":100, "strategy":"sequential"}}
Datasource for training:{"splitting":{"percentBegin":70, "percentEnd":100, "strategy":"sequential", "complement":"true"}}
To randomly split the input data into the proportions indicated by the percentBegin and percentEnd parameters, set thestrategy
parameter torandom
and provide a string that is used as the seed value for the random data splitting (for example, you can use the S3 path to your data as the random seed string). If you choose the random split strategy, Amazon ML assigns each row of data a pseudo-random number between 0 and 100, and then selects the rows that have an assigned number betweenpercentBegin
andpercentEnd
. Pseudo-random numbers are assigned using both the input seed string value and the byte offset as a seed, so changing the data results in a different split. Any existing ordering is preserved. The random splitting strategy ensures that variables in the training and evaluation data are distributed similarly. It is useful in the cases where the input data may have an implicit sort order, which would otherwise result in training and evaluation datasources containing non-similar data records. The following twoDataRearrangement
lines are examples of non-sequentially ordered training and evaluation datasources: Datasource for evaluation:{"splitting":{"percentBegin":70, "percentEnd":100, "strategy":"random", "randomSeed"="s3://my_s3_path/bucket/file.csv"}}
Datasource for training:{"splitting":{"percentBegin":70, "percentEnd":100, "strategy":"random", "randomSeed"="s3://my_s3_path/bucket/file.csv", "complement":"true"}}
DataSchema -> (string)
A JSON string that represents the schema for an Amazon S3
DataSource
. TheDataSchema
defines the structure of the observation data in the data file(s) referenced in theDataSource
.You must provide either the
DataSchema
or theDataSchemaLocationS3
.Define your
DataSchema
as a series of key-value pairs.attributes
andexcludedVariableNames
have an array of key-value pairs for their value. Use the following format to define yourDataSchema
.{ “version”: “1.0”,
“recordAnnotationFieldName”: “F1”,
“recordWeightFieldName”: “F2”,
“targetFieldName”: “F3”,
“dataFormat”: “CSV”,
“dataFileContainsHeader”: true,
“attributes”: [
{ “fieldName”: “F1”, “fieldType”: “TEXT” }, { “fieldName”: “F2”, “fieldType”: “NUMERIC” }, { “fieldName”: “F3”, “fieldType”: “CATEGORICAL” }, { “fieldName”: “F4”, “fieldType”: “NUMERIC” }, { “fieldName”: “F5”, “fieldType”: “CATEGORICAL” }, { “fieldName”: “F6”, “fieldType”: “TEXT” }, { “fieldName”: “F7”, “fieldType”: “WEIGHTED_INT_SEQUENCE” }, { “fieldName”: “F8”, “fieldType”: “WEIGHTED_STRING_SEQUENCE” } ],
“excludedVariableNames”: [ “F6” ] }
DataSchemaLocationS3 -> (string)
Describes the schema location in Amazon S3. You must provide either the
DataSchema
or theDataSchemaLocationS3
.
Shorthand Syntax:
DataLocationS3=string,DataRearrangement=string,DataSchema=string,DataSchemaLocationS3=string
JSON Syntax:
{
"DataLocationS3": "string",
"DataRearrangement": "string",
"DataSchema": "string",
"DataSchemaLocationS3": "string"
}
--compute-statistics
| --no-compute-statistics
(boolean)
The compute statistics for a
DataSource
. The statistics are generated from the observation data referenced by aDataSource
. Amazon ML uses the statistics internally duringMLModel
training. This parameter must be set totrue
if the DataSourceneeds to be used forMLModel
training.
--cli-input-json
| --cli-input-yaml
(string)
Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton
. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml
.
--generate-cli-skeleton
(string)
Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input
, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json
. Similarly, if provided yaml-input
it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml
. If provided with the value output
, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command.
--cli-auto-prompt
(boolean)
Automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
DataSourceId -> (string)
A user-supplied ID that uniquely identifies the
DataSource
. This value should be identical to the value of theDataSourceID
in the request.