While creating hive tables, Can I point the 'LOCATION' to a place in hdfs where data is present. Do I still need to load data or Will the data be available on hive directly?
You can specify any location while creating table and the data will be accessible. If table is partitioned, then use ALTER TABLE ADD PARTITION or MSCK REPAIR TABLE table_name or Amazon version ALTER TABLE table_name RECOVER PARTITIONS , this will add any partitions that exist on HDFS but not in metastore to the metastore. See docs here: https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/Hive/LanguageManual+DDL#LanguageManualDDL-RecoverPartitions(MSCKREPAIRTABLE)
If table is not partitioned, you can simply specify the location with data while creating table or change table location using ALTER TABLE SET LOCATION.
Related
I have a question regarding creating tables in Hadoop.
I create external table the following way:
CREATE EXTERNAL HADOOP TABLE SCHEMA.TABLENAME (
ID BIGINT NOT NULL,
CODE INTEGER,
"VALUE" DOUBLE
STORED AS ORC
TBLPROPERTIES ('bigsql.table.io.doAs'='false',
'bucketing_version'='2',
'orc.compress'='ZLIB',
'orc.create.index'='true')
After I created this table I run Jenkins job (with sqoop process) which loads 70.000.000 records to this table.
Then I needed to remove this table, so I run:
DROP TABLE SCHEMA.TABLENAME
Later on I want to create a table with the same name as the previous one, but I need it to be empty. I make the same query as earlier, I do:
CREATE EXTERNAL HADOOP TABLE SCHEMA.TABLENAME (
ID BIGINT NOT NULL,
CODE INTEGER,
"VALUE" DOUBLE
STORED AS ORC
TBLPROPERTIES ('bigsql.table.io.doAs'='false',
'bucketing_version'='2',
'orc.compress'='ZLIB',
'orc.create.index'='true')
But when I create table this way, it has 70.000.000 records inside it again, although I didn't run any job to populate it.
This is why I have two questions:
When I drop and create table with old name, then is it recovering records from the old table?
How can I drop (or truncate) table in bigsql/hive so that I have an empty table with the old name.
I am using bigsql and hive.
Dropping an external table doesn't remove the stored data, only the metadata from the Hive Metastore.
Refer Managed vs External Tables
Key points...
Use external tables when files are already present or in remote locations
files should remain even if the table is dropped
Create a managed table (remove EXTERNAL from your query), if you want to be able to DROP and/or TRUNCATE.
Or have your Jenkins job run hadoop fs -rm -skipTrash before the import.
I am creating a managed table via Impala as follows:
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS table_name
STORED AS parquet
TBLPROPERTIES ('transactional'='false', 'insert_only'='false')
AS ...
This should result in a managed table which does not support HIVE-ACID.
However, when I run the command I still end up with an external table.
Why is this?
I found out in the Cloudera documentation that neglecting the EXTERNAL-keyword when creating the table does not mean that the table definetly will be managed:
When you use EXTERNAL keyword in the CREATE TABLE statement, HMS stores the table as an external table. When you omit the EXTERNAL keyword and create a managed table, or ingest a managed table, HMS might translate the table into an external table or the table creation can fail, depending on the table properties.
Thus, setting transactional=false and insert_only=false leads to an External Table in the interpretation of the Hive Metastore.
Interestingly, only setting TBLPROPERTIES ('transactional'='false') is completly ignored and will still result in a managed table having transactional=true).
I created 2 external tables Hive. In first table specified data location with create statement. In second table loaded data after creating it.
I can see data file created for second table in /hive/warehouse/ directory. Then I set "external.table.purge"="true" for both tables. And DROP both tables. But data files of both tables remains as is.
What is the behaviour of 'external.table.purge'='true'. Shouldn't it delete data files as well on issuing Drop command?
If Hive does not take any ownership over data files of external table, why is there even an option as 'external.table.purge'='true'.
I read in one of the threads, where someone mentioned it is possible to delete data as well for external tables by ALTER TABLE ... SET TBLPROPERTIES('external.table.purge'='true'), but unable to find that post again.
You can not drop the data in external table but you can do it for internal(managed) tables. So convert the table to internal and then drop it.
First change eternal property to false.
hive> ALTER TABLE nyse_external SET TBLPROPERTIES('EXTERNAL'='False');
and then you can easily drop it.
hive> drop table nyse_external;
TBLPROPERTIES ("external.table.purge"="true") should work for hive version 4.x+.
Answer to point 1:
Table property "external.table.purge", which if true (and if the table is an external table), will let Hive know to delete the table data when the table is dropped. This feature is introduced in this apache jira.
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HIVE-19981 .
For reference on how to set the property take a look at this example,
https://docs.cloudera.com/runtime/7.2.7/using-hiveql/topics/hive_drop_external_table_data.html
When I am using DROP TABLE IF EXISTS <Table Name> in hive, it is not freeing the memory. The files are created as 0000_n.bz2 and they are still on disk.
I have two questions here:
1) Will these files keep on growing for each and every insert?
2) Is there any DROP equivalent to remove the files as well on the disk?
Couple of things you can do:
Check if the table is an external table and in that case you need to drop the files manually on HDFS as dropping tables won't drop the files:
hadoop fs -rm /HDFS_location/filename
Secondly check if you are in the right database. You need to issue use database command before dropping the tables. The database should be same as the one in which tables were created.
There are two types of tables in hive.
Hive managed table: If you drop a hive managed table the data in HDFS are automatically deleted.
External Table: If you drop an external table, hive doesnt delete the underlying data.
I believe yours is an external table.
Drop table if exists table_name purge;
This command will also remove data files from trash folder and cannot be recovered after table drop
What is the way to automatically update the metadata of Hive partitioned tables?
If new partition data's were added to HDFS (without alter table add partition command execution) . then we can sync up the metadata by executing the command 'msck repair'.
What to be done if a lot of partitioned data were deleted from HDFS (without the execution of alter table drop partition commad execution).
What is the way to syncup the Hive metatdata?
EDIT : Starting with Hive 3.0.0 MSCK can now discover new partitions or remove missing partitions (or both) using the following syntax :
MSCK [REPAIR] TABLE table_name [ADD/DROP/SYNC PARTITIONS]
This was implemented in HIVE-17824
As correctly stated by HakkiBuyukcengiz, MSCK REPAIR doesn't remove partitions if the corresponding folder on HDFS was manually deleted, it only adds partitions if new folders are created.
Extract from offical documentation :
In other words, it will add any partitions that exist on HDFS but not in metastore to the metastore.
This is what I usually do in the presence of external tables if multiple partitions folders are manually deleted on HDFS and I want to quickly refresh the partitions :
Drop the table (DROP TABLE table_name)
(dropping an external table does not delete the underlying partition files)
Recreate the table (CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE table_name ...)
Repair it (MSCK REPAIR TABLE table_name)
Depending on the number of partitions this can take a long time. The other solution is to use ALTER TABLE DROP PARTITION (...) for each deleted partition folder but this can be tedious if multiple partitions were deleted.
Try using
MSCK REPAIR TABLE <tablename>;
Ensure the table is set to external, drop all partitions then run the table repair:
alter table mytable_name set TBLPROPERTIES('EXTERNAL'='TRUE')
alter table mytable_name drop if exists partition (`mypart_name` <> 'null');
msck repair table mytable_name;
If msck repair throws an error, then run hive from the terminal as:
hive --hiveconf hive.msck.path.validation=ignore
or set hive.msck.path.validation=ignore;