build-feature-store
À propos
Cette compétence construit un magasin de features basé sur Feast pour une gestion centralisée des features de ML, gérant à la fois le traitement par lots et le service en temps réel. Elle permet de définir des vues de features avec des transformations et des jointures correctes à un instant donné pour un apprentissage et une inférence cohérents. Utilisez-la lorsque vous gérez des features sur plusieurs modèles, assurez la cohérence entre l'entraînement et le service, ou avez besoin d'un service de features à faible latence.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/build-feature-storeCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
Build Feature Store
See Extended Examples for complete config files + templates.
Centralized feature mgmt w/ Feast → consistent feature serving across training + inference.
Use When
- Managing features for many ML models across teams
- Training-serving consistency for features
- Point-in-time correct historical features
- Low-latency features for real-time inference
- Reusing feature defs across projects
- Versioning feature transformations
- Feature catalog for discovery + governance
- Prevent feature leakage in training pipelines
In
- Required: Raw data sources (DBs, data lakes, warehouses)
- Required: Python env w/ Feast installed
- Required: Offline store backend (BigQuery, Snowflake, Redshift, Parquet)
- Required: Online store backend (Redis, DynamoDB, Cassandra, SQLite for dev)
- Optional: Feature transformation logic (Python, SQL, Spark)
- Optional: Entity key defs (user_id, product_id, etc.)
- Optional: K8s cluster for Feast server deploy
Do
Step 1: Init Feast Repo
Set up Feast project structure + config storage backends.
# Install Feast with required extras
pip install 'feast[redis,postgres]' # Add backends as needed
# Initialize new feature repository
feast init my_feature_repo
cd my_feature_repo
# Directory structure created:
# my_feature_repo/
# ├── feature_store.yaml # Configuration
# ├── features.py # Feature definitions
# └── data/ # Sample data (dev only)
Config feature_store.yaml:
# feature_store.yaml
project: customer_analytics
registry: data/registry.db # SQLite for dev, use S3/GCS for prod
provider: local
# Offline store for training data
offline_store:
type: postgres
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
Prod config w/ cloud backends:
# feature_store.prod.yaml
project: customer_analytics
registry: s3://feast-registry/prod/registry.db
provider: aws
offline_store:
type: bigquery
project_id: my-gcp-project
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
→ Feast repo init'd w/ config, sample feature defs, offline+online stores configured, registry accessible.
If err: Verify DB/Redis credentials (psql -U feast_user -h localhost), check conn string format, ensure DBs exist (CREATE DATABASE feature_store), verify cloud perms for S3/BigQuery/DynamoDB, test connectivity, check Feast ver compat w/ backends (feast version).
Step 2: Entities + Data Sources
Entity defs + connect to raw sources.
# entities.py
from feast import Entity, ValueType
# Define entities (primary keys for features)
customer = Entity(
name="customer",
description="Customer entity",
value_type=ValueType.INT64,
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
Data sources:
# data_sources.py
from feast import FileSource, BigQuerySource, RedshiftSource
from feast.data_format import ParquetFormat
from datetime import timedelta
# Development: File-based source
customer_transactions_source = FileSource(
path="data/customer_transactions.parquet",
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
→ Entity defs ref correct ID cols, sources connect to raw data, event_timestamp_col exists, created_timestamp_col allows point-in-time queries.
If err: Verify source files exist + readable, check BigQuery/Redshift credentials + table access, ensure timestamp cols correct format (Unix/ISO8601), verify Kafka connectivity + topic existence, check schema compat sources ↔ entities.
Step 3: Feature Views + Transformations
Feature views → how raw data becomes ML-ready features.
# feature_views.py
from feast import FeatureView, Field
from feast.types import Float32, Int64, String, Bool
from datetime import timedelta
from entities import customer, product
from data_sources import customer_features_source
# Simple feature view without transformations
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
→ Feature views registered, schema matches source, transformations execute w/o errs, TTL values appropriate, on-demand views combine batch + req features.
If err: Verify field names match source cols exactly, check dtype compat (Int64 vs Int32), ensure entity refs exist, validate transformation w/ sample data, check div-by-zero in calcs, verify req source schema matches inference payload.
Step 4: Apply Defs + Materialize
Deploy defs to registry, materialize to online store.
# Apply feature definitions to registry
feast apply
# Expected output:
# Created entity customer
# Created feature view customer_stats
# Created on demand feature view customer_segments
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
Programmatic materialization:
# materialize_features.py
from feast import FeatureStore
from datetime import datetime, timedelta
# Initialize feature store
fs = FeatureStore(repo_path=".")
# Materialize all feature views
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
→ Defs applied to registry w/o conflicts, materialization job completes, online store populated, freshness w/in TTL.
If err: Check offline store query succeeds (feast feature-views describe customer_stats), verify time range has data, ensure online store writable (Redis/DynamoDB perms), check dup feature names across views, verify entity keys in source, monitor materialization logs, check disk space for local stores.
Step 5: Retrieve for Training
Point-in-time correct historical features for model training.
# get_training_data.py
from feast import FeatureStore
import pandas as pd
from datetime import datetime
# Initialize feature store
fs = FeatureStore(repo_path=".")
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
Point-in-time correctness validation:
# validate_pit_correctness.py
import pandas as pd
from datetime import datetime, timedelta
def validate_point_in_time_correctness(training_df, entity_df):
"""
Ensure features don't leak future information.
"""
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
→ Historical features retrieved, entity_df timestamps preserved, no NaN for materialized features, point-in-time correct (no future leak), feature service groups logically.
If err: Check entity_df has req cols (entity names + event_timestamp), verify feature view names match registry, ensure offline store has data for time range, check timezone mismatches (use UTC), verify entity IDs in source, inspect SQL query err logs, validate TTL covers time range.
Step 6: Serve for Real-Time Inference
Low-latency features from online store for model serving.
# serve_features.py
from feast import FeatureStore
import time
# Initialize feature store
fs = FeatureStore(repo_path=".")
def get_inference_features(customer_ids: list, request_data: dict = None):
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
FastAPI integration:
# api.py
from fastapi import FastAPI
from pydantic import BaseModel
from feast import FeatureStore
import mlflow
app = FastAPI()
fs = FeatureStore(repo_path=".")
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
→ Online features retrieved in <10ms for single entity, batch scales efficiently, on-demand transformations execute, request-time + batch features merged, API <50ms e2e.
If err: Check online store populated (materialize if empty), verify Redis/DynamoDB connectivity + latency, ensure entity keys in online store, check cold start (warm cache), verify on-demand logic, monitor online store mem/CPU, check network latency service ↔ online store.
Check
- Feast repo init'd + configured
- Offline + online stores connected
- Entity defs match source data
- Feature views registered in registry
- On-demand transformations execute correctly
- Materialization completes w/o errs
- Historical features retrieved w/ PIT correctness
- Online features served low-latency (<10ms)
- Feature freshness w/in TTL
- Training-serving consistency verified
- Feature catalog accessible for discovery
Traps
- Feature leakage: Future data in historical features → always validate PIT correctness, use created_timestamp col
- Inconsistent transformations: Diff logic training vs serving → use Feast on-demand views for consistency
- Stale features: Online store not materialized regularly → scheduled materialization jobs (cron/Airflow)
- Missing entity keys: Entities in training not in online store → comprehensive materialization, handle missing gracefully
- Type mismatch: Schema types don't match source → validate dtypes before apply, explicit Field defs
- Slow online retrieval: Network latency or overloaded online store → co-locate w/ inference service, use conn pooling
- Large feature views: Millions of entities slow → partition by date, incremental materialization, optimize offline queries
- No feature versioning: Breaking changes affect prod models → version views, backward compat
- Timezone confusion: Mixing tz → incorrect joins. Always UTC
- Ignoring TTL: Serving expired features → set appropriate TTL, monitor freshness
→
track-ml-experiments— log feature metadata in MLflow experimentsorchestrate-ml-pipeline— schedule feature materialization jobsversion-ml-data— version raw data sources for feature engdeploy-ml-model-serving— integrate feature store w/ model servingserialize-data-formats— choose efficient storage for featuresdesign-serialization-schema— design schemas for feature sources
Dépôt GitHub
Compétences associées
content-collections
MétaCette compétence propose une configuration éprouvée en production pour Content Collections, un outil axé sur TypeScript qui transforme des fichiers Markdown/MDX en collections de données typées de manière sûre avec une validation Zod. Utilisez-la lors de la création de blogs, de sites de documentation ou d'applications Vite + React riches en contenu pour garantir la sécurité de typage et la validation automatique du contenu. Elle couvre tout, de la configuration du plugin Vite et de la compilation MDX à l'optimisation des déploiements et la validation des schémas.
polymarket
MétaCette compétence permet aux développeurs de créer des applications avec la plateforme de marchés prédictifs Polymarket, incluant l'intégration d'API pour le trading et les données de marché. Elle fournit également une diffusion de données en temps réel via WebSocket pour surveiller les transactions en direct et l'activité du marché. Utilisez-la pour mettre en œuvre des stratégies de trading ou pour créer des outils traitant les mises à jour de marché en direct.
creating-opencode-plugins
MétaCette compétence aide les développeurs à créer des plugins OpenCode qui s'interconnectent avec plus de 25 types d'événements tels que les commandes, les fichiers et les opérations LSP. Elle fournit la structure du plugin, les spécifications de l'API événementielle et les modèles d'implémentation pour les modules JavaScript/TypeScript. Utilisez-la lorsque vous avez besoin d'intercepter, de surveiller ou d'étendre le cycle de vie de l'assistant IA OpenCode avec une logique personnalisée pilotée par les événements.
sglang
MétaSGLang est un framework de service LLM haute performance spécialisé dans la génération rapide et structurée pour les workflows JSON, regex et agentiques grâce à son cache de préfixe RadixAttention. Il offre une inférence nettement plus rapide, particulièrement pour les tâches avec des préfixes répétés, ce qui le rend idéal pour les sorties complexes et structurées ainsi que les conversations multi-tours. Choisissez SGLang plutôt que des alternatives comme vLLM lorsque vous avez besoin d'un décodage contraint ou que vous construisez des applications avec un partage étendu de préfixes.
