Hive Table retention support - hadoop

I want to support retention on a Hive table for old partitions. Basically I need to automatically delete Hive partitions after a specific period. I can manually do this or with a script but I have noticed that a retention property exists in every Hive Table but I can't find many information about it.
For example when using descibe in a hive table there is a retention property
desc formatted my_hive_table;
>>>
col_name data_type comment
...
Retention: 0 NULL
...
and I have found this 2014 Jira but I am not sure if it is implemented and how.
Can anyone confirm if Hive supports this capability and if yes how to configure it properly?

I think it's available in Hive 3, at least it's in HDP since 3.1.4
See configuration here https://docs.cloudera.com/HDPDocuments/HDP3/HDP-3.1.4/using-hiveql/content/hive-set-partition-retention.html

Related

hive metastrore (COLUMNS_V2) for azure databricks

I have configured Hive Version 2.3.0 in azure sql database on DBR 10.X. I can see entries all delta tables in dbo.TBLS however [dbo].[COLUMNS_V2] shows only one entry per table which is like below..
CD_ID
COMMENT
COLUMN_NAME
TYPE_NAME
INTEGER_IDX
346
from deserializer
col
array
0
what I am missing here? why don't I see all columns for Table ID-346?
I came accross this same problem and found the cause for my case:
When I wrote data to the hive table in my databricks notebook I had:
myDf.write.mode('Delta').saveAsTable('myHiveDb.myTable')
This caused the columns to not show up in COLUMNS_V2. Instead you need to change the mode to 'Hive' instead of 'Delta':
myDf.write.mode('Hive').saveAsTable('myHiveDb.myTable')

Spark(2.3) not able to identify new columns in Parquet table added via Hive Alter Table command

I have a Hive Parquet table which I am creating using Spark 2.3 API df.saveAstable. There is a separate Hive process that alters the same parquet table to add columns (based on requirements).
However, next time when I try to read the same parquet table into Spark dataframe, the new column which was added to the parquet table using Hive Alter Table command is not showing up in the df.printSchema output.
Based on initial analysis, it seems that there might be some conflict, and Spark is using its own schema instead of reading the Hive metastore.
Hence, I tried the below options :
Changing the spark setting:
spark.sql.hive.convertMetastoreParquet=false
and Refreshing the spark catalog:
spark.catalog.refreshTable("table_name")
However, the above two options are not solving the problem.
Any suggestions or alternatives would be super helpful.
This sounds like a bug described in SPARK-21841. JIRA description also contains the idea for a possible workaround:
...Interestingly enough it appears that if you create the table
differently like:
spark.sql("create table mydb.t1 select ip_address from mydb.test_table limit 1")
Run your alter table on mydb.t1 val t1 = spark.table("mydb.t1")
Then it works properly...
To fix this solution, you have to use the same alter command used in hive to spark-shell as well.
spark.sql("alter table TABLE_NAME add COLUMNS (col_A string)")

Attempt to do update or delete using transaction manager that does not support these operations

While trying to update a data in Hive table in Cloudera Quickstart VM, I'm getting this error.
Error while compiling statement: FAILED: SemanticException [Error 10294]: Attempt to do update or delete using transaction manager that does not support these operations.
I added some changes in hive-site.xml file and also restarted the hive and cloudera.These are changes which I made in Hive-site.xml
hive.support.concurrency – true
hive.enforce.bucketing – true
hive.exec.dynamic.partition.mode – nonstrict
hive.txn.manager –org.apache.hadoop.hive.ql.lockmgr.DbTxnManager
hive.compactor.initiator.on – true
hive.compactor.worker.threads – 1
I've tried with the configuration you provided in a hortonworks sandbox and I was able to do ACID operations on a table and I suppose it works also in Cloudera environment. Although there a some things to mention:
make sure hive has the properties you gave it (you can verify them in Hive CLI using SET command)
table that you work with must be bucketed, declared as ORC format and has in it's table properties 'transactional'='true' (hive support ACID operations only for ORC format and transactional tables). An example of a proper table is like this:
hive>create table testTableNew(id int ,name string ) clustered by (id) into 2 buckets stored as orc TBLPROPERTIES('transactional'='true');
You can follow this example.

Hive - Hbase integration Transactional update with timestamp

I am new to hadoop and big data, just trying to figure out the possibilities to move my Data store to hbase these days, and I have come across a problem, which some of you might be able to help me with. So its like,
I have a hbase table "hbase_testTable" with Column Family : "ColFam1". I have set the version of "ColFam1" to 10, as I have to maintain history upto 10 updates to this column family. Which works fine. When I try to add new rows through hbase shell with explicit timestamp value it works fine. Basically I want to use the timestamp as my version control. So I specify the time stamp as
put 'hbase_testTable' '1001','ColFam1:q1', '1000$', 3
where '3' is my version. And everything works fine.
Now I am trying to integrate with HIVE external table, and I have all mappings well set to match that of hbase table like below :
create external table testtable (id string, q1 string, q2 string, q3 string)
STOREd BY 'org.apache.hadoop.hive.hbase.HBaseStorageHandler' WITH
SERDEPROPERTIES ("hbase.columns.mapping" = ":key,colfam1:q1, colfam1:q2, colfam1:q3")
TBLPROPERTIES("hbase.table.name" = "testtable", "transactional" = "true");
And works fine with normal insertion. It updates the HBase table and vice-versa.
Even though the external table is made "Transactional", I am not able to update the data on HIVE. It gives me an error :
FAILED: SemanticException [Error 10294]: Attempt to do update or delete
using transaction manager that does not support these operations
Said that, Any updates, made to the hbase tables are reflected immediately on the hive table.
I can update the Hbase table with hive external table by trying to insert into the hive external table for the "rowid" with new data for the column.
Is it possible to I control the timestamp being written to the referenced hbase table ( like 4,5,6,7..etc) Please help.
The timestamp is one of important element in Hbase versioning. You are trying to create your own timestamp, which works fine at Hbase level.
One point, is you should be very careful, with unique and non-negative. You can look at Custom versioning in HBase-Definitve Guide book.
Now you have Hive on top of Hbase. As per documentation,
there is currently no way to access the HBase timestamp attribute, and queries always access data with the latest timestamp.
Thats for the reading part. And for putting data, you can look here.
It still says that, you have to give valid time stamp and not any other value.
The future versions are expected to expose the timestamp attribute.
I hope you got a better idea regarding how to deal with custom timestamp in Hive-Hbase integration.

How to delete and update a record in Hive

I have installed Hadoop, Hive, Hive JDBC. which are running fine for me. But I still have a problem. How to delete or update a single record using Hive because delete or update command of MySQL is not working in Hive.
Thanks
hive> delete from student where id=1;
Usage: delete [FILE|JAR|ARCHIVE] <value> [<value>]*
Query returned non-zero code: 1, cause: null
As of Hive version 0.14.0: INSERT...VALUES, UPDATE, and DELETE are now available with full ACID support.
INSERT ... VALUES Syntax:
INSERT INTO TABLE tablename [PARTITION (partcol1[=val1], partcol2[=val2] ...)] VALUES values_row [, values_row ...]
Where values_row is:
( value [, value ...] )
where a value is either null or any valid SQL literal
UPDATE Syntax:
UPDATE tablename SET column = value [, column = value ...] [WHERE expression]
DELETE Syntax:
DELETE FROM tablename [WHERE expression]
Additionally, from the Hive Transactions doc:
If a table is to be used in ACID writes (insert, update, delete) then the table property "transactional" must be set on that table, starting with Hive 0.14.0. Without this value, inserts will be done in the old style; updates and deletes will be prohibited.
Hive DML reference:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/Hive/LanguageManual+DML
Hive Transactions reference:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/Hive/Hive+Transactions
You should not think about Hive as a regular RDBMS, Hive is better suited for batch processing over very large sets of immutable data.
The following applies to versions prior to Hive 0.14, see the answer by ashtonium for later versions.
There is no operation supported for deletion or update of a particular record or particular set of records, and to me this is more a sign of a poor schema.
Here is what you can find in the official documentation:
Hadoop is a batch processing system and Hadoop jobs tend to have high latency and
incur substantial overheads in job submission and scheduling. As a result -
latency for Hive queries is generally very high (minutes) even when data sets
involved are very small (say a few hundred megabytes). As a result it cannot be
compared with systems such as Oracle where analyses are conducted on a
significantly smaller amount of data but the analyses proceed much more
iteratively with the response times between iterations being less than a few
minutes. Hive aims to provide acceptable (but not optimal) latency for
interactive data browsing, queries over small data sets or test queries.
Hive is not designed for online transaction processing and does not offer
real-time queries and row level updates. It is best used for batch jobs over
large sets of immutable data (like web logs).
A way to work around this limitation is to use partitions: I don't know what you id corresponds to, but if you're getting different batches of ids separately, you could redesign your table so that it is partitioned by id, and then you would be able to easily drop partitions for the ids you want to get rid of.
Yes, rightly said. Hive does not support UPDATE option.
But the following alternative could be used to achieve the result:
Update records in a partitioned Hive table:
The main table is assumed to be partitioned by some key.
Load the incremental data (the data to be updated) to a staging table partitioned with the same keys as the main table.
Join the two tables (main & staging tables) using a LEFT OUTER JOIN operation as below:
insert overwrite table main_table partition (c,d)
select t2.a, t2.b, t2.c,t2.d from staging_table t2 left outer join main_table t1 on t1.a=t2.a;
In the above example, the main_table & the staging_table are partitioned using the (c,d) keys. The tables are joined via a LEFT OUTER JOIN and the result is used to OVERWRITE the partitions in the main_table.
A similar approach could be used in the case of un-partitioned Hive table UPDATE operations too.
You can delete rows from a table using a workaround, in which you overwrite the table by the dataset you want left into the table as a result of your operation.
insert overwrite table your_table
select * from your_table
where id <> 1
;
The workaround is useful mostly for bulk deletions of easily identifiable rows. Also, obviously doing this can muck up your data, so a backup of the table is adviced and care when planning the "deletion" rule also adviced.
Once you have installed and configured Hive , create simple table :
hive>create table testTable(id int,name string)row format delimited fields terminated by ',';
Then, try to insert few rowsin test table.
hive>insert into table testTable values (1,'row1'),(2,'row2');
Now try to delete records , you just inserted in table.
hive>delete from testTable where id = 1;
Error!
FAILED: SemanticException [Error 10294]: Attempt to do update or delete using transaction manager that does not support these operations.
By default transactions are configured to be off. It is been said that update is not supported with the delete operation used in the conversion manager. To support update/delete , you must change following configuration.
cd $HIVE_HOME
vi conf/hive-site.xml
Add below properties to file
<property>
<name>hive.support.concurrency</name>
<value>true</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>hive.enforce.bucketing</name>
<value>true</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>hive.exec.dynamic.partition.mode</name>
<value>nonstrict</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>hive.txn.manager</name>
<value>org.apache.hadoop.hive.ql.lockmgr.DbTxnManager</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>hive.compactor.initiator.on</name>
<value>true</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>hive.compactor.worker.threads</name>
<value>2</value>
</property>
Restart the service and then try delete command again :
Error!
FAILED: LockException [Error 10280]: Error communicating with the metastore.
There is problem with metastore. In order to use insert/update/delete operation, You need to change following configuration in conf/hive-site.xml as feature is currently in development.
<property>
<name>hive.in.test</name>
<value>true</value>
</property>
Restart the service and then delete command again :
hive>delete from testTable where id = 1;
Error!
FAILED: SemanticException [Error 10297]: Attempt to do update or delete on table default.testTable that does not use an AcidOutputFormat or is not bucketed.
Only ORC file format is supported in this first release. The feature has been built such that transactions can be used by any storage format that can determine how updates or deletes apply to base records (basically, that has an explicit or implicit row id), but so far the integration work has only been done for ORC.
Tables must be bucketed to make use of these features. Tables in the same system not using transactions and ACID do not need to be bucketed.
See below built table example with ORCFileformat, bucket enabled and ('transactional'='true').
hive>create table testTableNew(id int ,name string ) clustered by (id) into 2 buckets stored as orc TBLPROPERTIES('transactional'='true');
Insert :
hive>insert into table testTableNew values (1,'row1'),(2,'row2'),(3,'row3');
Update :
hive>update testTableNew set name = 'updateRow2' where id = 2;
Delete :
hive>delete from testTableNew where id = 1;
Test :
hive>select * from testTableNew ;
Configuration Values to Set for INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE
In addition to the new parameters listed above, some existing parameters need to be set to support INSERT ... VALUES, UPDATE, and DELETE.
Configuration key
Must be set to
hive.support.concurrency true (default is false)
hive.enforce.bucketing true (default is false) (Not required as of Hive 2.0)
hive.exec.dynamic.partition.mode nonstrict (default is strict)
Configuration Values to Set for Compaction
If the data in your system is not owned by the Hive user (i.e., the user that the Hive metastore runs as), then Hive will need permission to run as the user who owns the data in order to perform compactions. If you have already set up HiveServer2 to impersonate users, then the only additional work to do is assure that Hive has the right to impersonate users from the host running the Hive metastore. This is done by adding the hostname to hadoop.proxyuser.hive.hosts in Hadoop's core-site.xml file. If you have not already done this, then you will need to configure Hive to act as a proxy user. This requires you to set up keytabs for the user running the Hive metastore and add hadoop.proxyuser.hive.hosts and hadoop.proxyuser.hive.groups to Hadoop's core-site.xml file. See the Hadoop documentation on secure mode for your version of Hadoop (e.g., for Hadoop 2.5.1 it is at Hadoop in Secure Mode).
The UPDATE statement has the following limitations:
The expression in the WHERE clause must be an expression supported by a Hive SELECT clause.
Partition and bucket columns cannot be updated.
Query vectorization is automatically disabled for UPDATE statements. However, updated tables can still be queried using vectorization.
Subqueries are not allowed on the right side of the SET statement.
The following example demonstrates the correct usage of this statement:
UPDATE students SET name = null WHERE gpa <= 1.0;
DELETE Statement
Use the DELETE statement to delete data already written to Apache Hive.
DELETE FROM tablename [WHERE expression];
The DELETE statement has the following limitation:
query vectorization is automatically disabled for the DELETE operation.
However, tables with deleted data can still be queried using vectorization.
The following example demonstrates the correct usage of this statement:
DELETE FROM students WHERE gpa <= 1,0;
The CLI told you where is your mistake : delete WHAT? from student ...
Delete : How to delete/truncate tables from Hadoop-Hive?
Update : Update , SET option in Hive
If you want to delete all records then as a workaround load an empty file into table in OVERWRITE mode
hive> LOAD DATA LOCAL INPATH '/root/hadoop/textfiles/empty.txt' OVERWRITE INTO TABLE employee;
Loading data to table default.employee
Table default.employee stats: [numFiles=1, numRows=0, totalSize=0, rawDataSize=0]
OK
Time taken: 0.19 seconds
hive> SELECT * FROM employee;
OK
Time taken: 0.052 seconds
Upcoming version of Hive is going to allow SET based update/delete handling which is of utmost importance when trying to do CRUD operations on a 'bunch' of rows instead of taking one row at a time.
In the interim , I have tried a dynamic partition based approach documented here http://linkd.in/1Fq3wdb .
Please see if it suits your need.
UPDATE or DELETE a record isn't allowed in Hive, but INSERT INTO is acceptable.
A snippet from Hadoop: The Definitive Guide(3rd edition):
Updates, transactions, and indexes are mainstays of traditional databases. Yet, until recently, these features have not been considered a part of Hive's feature set. This is because Hive was built to operate over HDFS data using MapReduce, where full-table scans are the norm and a table update is achieved by transforming the data into a new table. For a data warehousing application that runs over large portions of the dataset, this works well.
Hive doesn't support updates (or deletes), but it does support INSERT INTO, so it is possible to add new rows to an existing table.
To achieve your current need, you need to fire below query
> insert overwrite table student
> select *from student
> where id <> 1;
This will delete current table and create new table with same name with all rows except the rows that you want to exclude/delete
I tried this on Hive 1.2.1
There are few properties to set to make a Hive table support ACID properties and to support UPDATE ,INSERT ,and DELETE as in SQL
Conditions to create a ACID table in Hive.
1. The table should be stored as ORC file .Only ORC format can support ACID prpoperties for now
2. The table must be bucketed
Properties to set to create ACID table:
set hive.support.concurrency =true;
set hive.enforce.bucketing =true;
set hive.exec.dynamic.partition.mode =nonstrict
set hive.compactor.initiator.on = true;
set hive.compactor.worker.threads= 1;
set hive.txn.manager = org.apache.hadoop.hive.ql.lockmgr.DbTxnManager;
set the property hive.in.test to true in hive.site.xml
After setting all these properties , the table should be created with tblproperty 'transactional' ='true'. The table should be bucketed and saved as orc
CREATE TABLE table_name (col1 int,col2 string, col3 int) CLUSTERED BY col1 INTO 4
BUCKETS STORED AS orc tblproperties('transactional' ='true');
Now the Hive table can support UPDATE and DELETE queries
Delete has been recently added in Hive version 0.14
Deletes can only be performed on tables that support ACID
Below is the link from Apache .
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/Hive/LanguageManual+DML#LanguageManualDML-Delete
Good news,Insert updates and deletes are now possible on Hive/Impala using Kudu.
You need to use IMPALA/kudu to maintain the tables and perform insert/update/delete records.
Details with examples can be found here:
insert-update-delete-on-hadoop
Please share the news if you are excited.
-MIK
Recently I was looking to resolve a similar issue, Apache Hive, Hadoop do not support Update/Delete operations. So ?
So you have two ways:
Use a backup table: Save the whole table in a backup_table, then truncate your input table, then re-write only the data you are intrested to mantain.
Use Uber Hudi: It's a framework created by Uber to resolve the HDFS limitations including Deletion and Update. You can give a look in this link:
https://eng.uber.com/hoodie/
an example for point 1:
Create table bck_table like input_table;
Insert overwrite table bck_table
select * from input_table;
Truncate table input_table;
Insert overwrite table input_table
select * from bck_table where id <> 1;
NB: If the input_table is an external table you must follow the following link:
How to truncate a partitioned external table in hive?
If you want to perform Hive CRUD using ACID operations, you need check whether you have
hive 0.14 version or not
In order to perform CREATE, SELECT, UPDATE, DELETE, We have to ensure while creating the table with the following conditions
File format should be in ORC file format with
TBLPROPERTIES(‘transactional’=’true’)
Table should be CLUSTERED BY
with some Buckets, please refer the below CREATE TABLE statement.
You can use below query to create table with above properties-
CREATE TABLE STUDENT
(
STD_ID INT,
STD_NAME STRING,
AGE INT,
ADDRESS STRING
)
CLUSTERED BY (ADDRESS) into 3 buckets
ROW FORMAT DELIMITED
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
STORED as orc tblproperties('transactional'='true');

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