AbdelrahmanElhawary opened a new pull request, #17143:
URL: https://github.com/apache/iceberg/pull/17143
### Problem Context
Apache Iceberg supports reading Parquet files with `TIMESTAMP_MILLIS`
annotations by converting the millisecond values to Iceberg's internal
microsecond representation ($\times 1000$). While this scaling logic works
correctly for `PLAIN` encoded pages (via `TimestampMillisReader`), it is
completely bypassed when a column is entirely dictionary-encoded (e.g., columns
with duplicate or low-cardinality values, like a batch extraction timestamp).
When this optimization occurs, the values are displayed as incorrect dates
in the year 1970 because raw millisecond values are treated as microseconds.
Closes #17135
### Root Cause Analysis
In `VectorizedArrowReader#read`, the engine checks whether a column segment
produces a dictionary-encoded vector:
```
boolean dictEncoded =
vectorizedColumnIterator.producesDictionaryEncodedVector();
if (vectorizedColumnIterator.hasNext()) {
if (dictEncoded) {
vectorizedColumnIterator.dictionaryBatchReader().nextBatch(vec, -1,
nullabilityHolder);
} else {
switch (readType) { ... }
}
}
```
If `dictEncoded` is true, the reader completely bypasses the type-specific
switch statement—which normally maps to `ReadType.TIMESTAMP_MILLIS` and uses
the correct `TimestampMillisReader`. Instead, it shortcuts by populating a
generic `IntVector` with raw dictionary IDs and attaches the raw Parquet
`Dictionary` object straight to the `VectorHolder` returned to Spark.
When Spark eventually decodes these IDs via` Dictionary#decodeToLong(id)`,
it receives unscaled milliseconds from the raw Parquet metadata, resulting in
corrupted timestamps.
### Solution
The fix intercepts the raw Parquet `Dictionary` inside
`VectorizedArrowReader#setRowGroupInfo` right after initialization.
If the column's modern `LogicalTypeAnnotation` indicates it is a `TIMESTAMP`
with `TimeUnit.MILLIS` precision, the dictionary is wrapped in a proxy wrapper.
This proxy intercepts calls to` decodeToLong(int id)` and scales the returned
values to microseconds.
This approach resolves the bug gracefully:
It fixes the issue on the optimized dictionary-passthrough path.
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