Updated on 2024-10-08 GMT+08:00

Using the Hive Client

Scenario

This section guides users to use a Hive client in an O&M or service scenario.

Prerequisites

  • The client has been installed. For example, the client is installed in the /opt/hadoopclient directory. The client directory in the following operations is only an example. Change it to the actual installation directory.
  • Service component users have been created by the MRS cluster administrator. In security mode, machine-machine users need to download the keytab file. A human-machine user must change the password upon the first login.

Using the Hive Client (Versions Earlier Than MRS 3.x)

  1. Install the client. For details, see Installing a Client.
  2. Log in to the node where the client is installed as the client installation user.
  3. Run the following command to go to the client installation directory:

    cd /opt/hadoopclient

  4. Run the following command to configure environment variables:

    source bigdata_env

  5. Log in to the Hive client based on the cluster authentication mode.

    • In security mode, run the following command to complete user authentication and log in to the Hive client:

      kinit Component service user

      beeline

    • In common mode, run the following command to log in to the Hive client. If no component service user is specified, the current OS user is used to log in to the Hive client.

      beeline -n component service user

    After a beeline connection is established, you can compile and submit HQL statements to execute related tasks. To run the Catalog client command, you need to run the !q command first to exit the beeline environment.

  6. Run the following command to execute the HCatalog client command:

    hcat -e "cmd"

    cmd must be a Hive DDL statement, for example, hcat -e "show tables".

    • To use the HCatalog client, choose More > Download Client on the service page to download the clients of all services. This restriction does not apply to the beeline client.
    • Due to permission model incompatibility, tables created using the HCatalog client cannot be accessed on the HiveServer client. However, the tables can be accessed on the WebHCat client.
    • If you use the HCatalog client in Normal mode, the system performs DDL commands using the current user who has logged in to the operating system.
    • Exit the beeline client by running the !q command instead of by pressing Ctrl + c. Otherwise, the temporary files generated by the connection cannot be deleted and a large number of junk files will be generated as a result.
    • If multiple statements need to be entered during the use of beeline clients, separate the statements from each other using semicolons (;) and set the value of entireLineAsCommand to false.

      Setting method: If beeline has not been started, run the beeline --entireLineAsCommand=false command. If the beeline has been started, run the !set entireLineAsCommand false command.

      After the setting, if a statement contains semicolons (;) that do not indicate the end of the statement, escape characters must be added, for example, select concat_ws('\;', collect_set(col1)) from tbl.

Using the Hive Client (MRS 3.x or Later)

  1. Install the client. For details, see Installing a Client.
  2. Log in to the node where the client is installed as the client installation user.
  3. Run the following command to go to the client installation directory:

    cd /opt/hadoopclient

  4. Run the following command to configure environment variables:

    source bigdata_env

  5. Log in to the Hive client based on the cluster authentication mode.

    • In security mode, run the following command to complete user authentication and log in to the Hive client:

      kinit Component service user

      beeline

    • In common mode, run the following command to log in to the Hive client. If no component service user is specified, the current OS user is used to log in to the Hive client.

      beeline -n Component service user

  6. Run the following command to execute the HCatalog client command:

    hcat -e "cmd"

    cmd must be a Hive DDL statement, for example, hcat -e "show tables".

    • To use the HCatalog client, choose More > Download Client on the service page to download the clients of all services. This restriction does not apply to the beeline client.
    • Due to permission model incompatibility, tables created using the HCatalog client cannot be accessed on the HiveServer client. However, the tables can be accessed on the WebHCat client.
    • If you use the HCatalog client in Normal mode, the system performs DDL commands using the current user who has logged in to the operating system.
    • Exit the beeline client by running the !q command instead of by pressing Ctrl + C. Otherwise, the temporary files generated by the connection cannot be deleted and a large number of junk files will be generated as a result.
    • If multiple statements need to be entered during the use of beeline clients, separate the statements from each other using semicolons (;) and set the value of entireLineAsCommand to false.

      Setting method: If beeline has not been started, run the beeline --entireLineAsCommand=false command. If the beeline has been started, run the !set entireLineAsCommand false command.

      After the setting, if a statement contains semicolons (;) that do not indicate the end of the statement, escape characters must be added, for example, select concat_ws('\;', collect_set(col1)) from tbl.

Common Hive Client Commands

The following table lists common Hive Beeline commands.

For more commands, see https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/Hive/HiveServer2+Clients#HiveServer2Clients-BeelineCommands.

Table 1 Common Hive Beeline commands

Command

Description

set <key>=<value>

Sets the value of a specific configuration variable (key).

NOTE:

If the variable name is incorrectly spelled, the Beeline does not display an error.

set

Prints the list of configuration variables overwritten by users or Hive.

set -v

Prints all configuration variables of Hadoop and Hive.

add FILE[S] <filepath> <filepath>*

add JAR[S] <filepath> <filepath>*

add ARCHIVE[S] <filepath> <filepath>*

Adds one or more files, JAR files, or ARCHIVE files to the resource list of the distributed cache.

add FILE[S] <ivyurl> <ivyurl>*

add JAR[S] <ivyurl> <ivyurl>*

add ARCHIVE[S] <ivyurl> <ivyurl>*

Adds one or more files, JAR files, or ARCHIVE files to the resource list of the distributed cache using the lvy URL in the ivy://goup:module:version?query_string format.

list FILE[S]

list JAR[S]

list ARCHIVE[S]

Lists the resources that have been added to the distributed cache.

list FILE[S] <filepath>*

list JAR[S] <filepath>*

list ARCHIVE[S] <filepath>*

Checks whether given resources have been added to the distributed cache.

delete FILE[S] <filepath>*

delete JAR[S] <filepath>*

delete ARCHIVE[S] <filepath>*

Deletes resources from the distributed cache.

delete FILE[S] <ivyurl> <ivyurl>*

delete JAR[S] <ivyurl> <ivyurl>*

delete ARCHIVE[S] <ivyurl> <ivyurl>*

Delete the resource added using <ivyurl> from the distributed cache.

reload

Enable HiveServer2 to discover the change of the JAR file hive.reloadable.aux.jars.path in the specified path. (You do not need to restart HiveServer2.) Change actions include adding, deleting, or updating JAR files.

dfs <dfs command>

Runs the dfs command.

<query string>

Executes the Hive query and prints the result to the standard output.