Hive Data Manipulation Language
There are multiple ways to modify data in Hive:
EXPORT and IMPORT commands are also available (as of Hive 0.8).
Loading files into tables
Hive does not do any transformation while loading data into tables. Load operations are currently pure copy/move operations that move datafiles into locations corresponding to Hive tables.
Syntax
LOAD DATA [LOCAL] INPATH 'filepath' [OVERWRITE] INTO TABLE tablename [PARTITION (partcol1=val1, partcol2=val2 ...)]
Synopsis
Load operations are currently pure copy/move operations that move datafiles into locations corresponding to Hive tables.
- filepath can be:
- a relative path, such as
project/data1
- an absolute path, such as
/user/hive/project/data1
- a full URI with scheme and (optionally) an authority, such as
hdfs://namenode:9000/user/hive/project/data1
- a relative path, such as
- The target being loaded to can be a table or a partition. If the table is partitioned, then one must specify a specific partition of the table by specifying values for all of the partitioning columns.
- filepath can refer to a file (in which case Hive will move the file into the table) or it can be a directory (in which case Hive will move all the files within that directory into the table). In either case, filepath addresses a set of files.
- If the keyword LOCAL is specified, then:
- the load command will look for filepath in the local file system. If a relative path is specified, it will be interpreted relative to the user's current working directory. The user can specify a full URI for local files as well - for example:
file:///user/hive/project/data1
- the load command will try to copy all the files addressed by filepath to the target filesystem. The target file system is inferred by looking at the location attribute of the table. The copied data files will then be moved to the table.
- the load command will look for filepath in the local file system. If a relative path is specified, it will be interpreted relative to the user's current working directory. The user can specify a full URI for local files as well - for example:
- If the keyword LOCAL is not specified, then Hive will either use the full URI of filepath, if one is specified, or will apply the following rules:
- If scheme or authority are not specified, Hive will use the scheme and authority from the hadoop configuration variable
fs.default.name
that specifies the Namenode URI. - If the path is not absolute, then Hive will interpret it relative to
/user/<username>
- Hive will move the files addressed by filepath into the table (or partition)
- If scheme or authority are not specified, Hive will use the scheme and authority from the hadoop configuration variable
- If the OVERWRITE keyword is used then the contents of the target table (or partition) will be deleted and replaced by the files referred to by filepath; otherwise the files referred by filepath will be added to the table.
- Note that if the target table (or partition) already has a file whose name collides with any of the filenames contained in filepath, then the existing file will be replaced with the new file.
Notes
- filepath cannot contain subdirectories.
- If the keyword LOCAL is not given, filepath must refer to files within the same filesystem as the table's (or partition's) location.
- Hive does some minimal checks to make sure that the files being loaded match the target table. Currently it checks that if the table is stored in sequencefile format, the files being loaded are also sequencefiles, and vice versa.
- A bug that prevented loading a file when its name includes the "+" character is fixed in release 0.13.0 (HIVE-6048).
- Please read CompressedStorage if your datafile is compressed.
Inserting data into Hive Tables from queries
Query Results can be inserted into tables by using the insert clause.
Syntax
Standard syntax: INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE tablename1 [PARTITION (partcol1=val1, partcol2=val2 ...) [IF NOT EXISTS]] select_statement1 FROM from_statement; INSERT INTO TABLE tablename1 [PARTITION (partcol1=val1, partcol2=val2 ...)] select_statement1 FROM from_statement; Hive extension (multiple inserts): FROM from_statement INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE tablename1 [PARTITION (partcol1=val1, partcol2=val2 ...) [IF NOT EXISTS]] select_statement1 [INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE tablename2 [PARTITION ... [IF NOT EXISTS]] select_statement2] [INSERT INTO TABLE tablename2 [PARTITION ...] select_statement2] ...; FROM from_statement INSERT INTO TABLE tablename1 [PARTITION (partcol1=val1, partcol2=val2 ...)] select_statement1 [INSERT INTO TABLE tablename2 [PARTITION ...] select_statement2] [INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE tablename2 [PARTITION ... [IF NOT EXISTS]] select_statement2] ...; Hive extension (dynamic partition inserts): INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE tablename PARTITION (partcol1[=val1], partcol2[=val2] ...) select_statement FROM from_statement; INSERT INTO TABLE tablename PARTITION (partcol1[=val1], partcol2[=val2] ...) select_statement FROM from_statement;
Synopsis
- INSERT OVERWRITE will overwrite any existing data in the table or partition
- unless
IF NOT EXISTS
is provided for a partition (as of Hive 0.9.0).
- unless
- INSERT INTO will append to the table or partition, keeping the existing data intact. (Note: INSERT INTO syntax is only available starting in version 0.8.)
- As of Hive 0.13.0, a table can be made immutable by creating it with TBLPROPERTIES ("immutable"="true"). The default is "immutable"="false".
INSERT INTO behavior into an immutable table is disallowed if any data is already present, although INSERT INTO still works if the immutable table is empty. The behavior of INSERT OVERWRITE is not affected by the "immutable" table property.
An immutable table is protected against accidental updates due to a script loading data into it being run multiple times by mistake. The first insert into an immutable table succeeds and successive inserts fail, resulting in only one set of data in the table, instead of silently succeeding with multiple copies of the data in the table.
- As of Hive 0.13.0, a table can be made immutable by creating it with TBLPROPERTIES ("immutable"="true"). The default is "immutable"="false".
- Inserts can be done to a table or a partition. If the table is partitioned, then one must specify a specific partition of the table by specifying values for all of the partitioning columns.
- Multiple insert clauses (also known as Multi Table Insert) can be specified in the same query.
- The output of each of the select statements is written to the chosen table (or partition). Currently the OVERWRITE keyword is mandatory and implies that the contents of the chosen table or partition are replaced with the output of corresponding select statement.
- The output format and serialization class is determined by the table's metadata (as specified via DDL commands on the table).
- As of Hive 0.14, if a table has an OutputFormat that implements AcidOutputFormat and the system is configured to use a transaction manager that implements ACID, then INSERT OVERWRITE will be disabled for that table. This is to avoid users unintentionally overwriting transaction history. The same functionality can be achieved by using TRUNCATE TABLE (for non-partitioned tables) or DROP PARTITION followed by INSERT INTO.
Notes
- Multi Table Inserts minimize the number of data scans required. Hive can insert data into multiple tables by scanning the input data just once (and applying different query operators) to the input data.
- Starting with Hive 0.13.0, the select statement can include one or more common table expressions (CTEs) as shown in the SELECT syntax. For an example, see Common Table Expression.
Dynamic Partition Inserts
Version information
This information reflects the situation in Hive 0.12; dynamic partition inserts were added in Hive 0.6.
In the dynamic partition inserts, users can give partial partition specifications, which means just specifying the list of partition column names in the PARTITION clause. The column values are optional. If a partition column value is given, we call this a static partition, otherwise it is a dynamic partition. Each dynamic partition column has a corresponding input column from the select statement. This means that the dynamic partition creation is determined by the value of the input column. The dynamic partition columns must be specified last among the columns in the SELECT statement and in the same order in which they appear in the PARTITION() clause.
Dynamic Partition inserts are disabled by default. These are the relevant configuration properties for dynamic partition inserts:
Configuration property | Default | Note |
---|---|---|
|
| Needs to be set to |
|
| In |
| 100 | Maximum number of dynamic partitions allowed to be created in each mapper/reducer node |
| 1000 | Maximum number of dynamic partitions allowed to be created in total |
| 100000 | Maximum number of HDFS files created by all mappers/reducers in a MapReduce job |
|
| Whether to throw an exception if dynamic partition insert generates empty results |
Example
FROM page_view_stg pvs INSERT OVERWRITE TABLE page_view PARTITION(dt='2008-06-08', country) SELECT pvs.viewTime, pvs.userid, pvs.page_url, pvs.referrer_url, null, null, pvs.ip, pvs.cnt
Here the country
partition will be dynamically created by the last column from the SELECT
clause (i.e. pvs.cnt
). Note that the name is not used. In nonstrict
mode the dt
partition could also be dynamically created.
Additional Documentation
Writing data into the filesystem from queries
Query results can be inserted into filesystem directories by using a slight variation of the syntax above:
Syntax
Standard syntax: INSERT OVERWRITE [LOCAL] DIRECTORY directory1 [ROW FORMAT row_format] [STORED AS file_format] (Note: Only available starting with Hive 0.11.0) SELECT ... FROM ... Hive extension (multiple inserts): FROM from_statement INSERT OVERWRITE [LOCAL] DIRECTORY directory1 select_statement1 [INSERT OVERWRITE [LOCAL] DIRECTORY directory2 select_statement2] ... row_format : DELIMITED [FIELDS TERMINATED BY char [ESCAPED BY char]] [COLLECTION ITEMS TERMINATED BY char] [MAP KEYS TERMINATED BY char] [LINES TERMINATED BY char] [NULL DEFINED AS char] (Note: Only available starting with Hive 0.13)
Synopsis
- Directory can be a full URI. If scheme or authority are not specified, Hive will use the scheme and authority from the hadoop configuration variable
fs.default.name
that specifies the Namenode URI. - If LOCAL keyword is used, Hive will write data to the directory on the local file system.
- Data written to the filesystem is serialized as text with columns separated by ^A and rows separated by newlines. If any of the columns are not of primitive type, then those columns are serialized to JSON format.
Notes
- INSERT OVERWRITE statements to directories, local directories, and tables (or partitions) can all be used together within the same query.
- INSERT OVERWRITE statements to HDFS filesystem directories are the best way to extract large amounts of data from Hive. Hive can write to HDFS directories in parallel from within a map-reduce job.
- The directory is, as you would expect, OVERWRITten; in other words, if the specified path exists, it is clobbered and replaced with the output.
- As of Hive 0.11.0 the separator used can be specified, in earlier versions it was always the ^A character (\001)
- In Hive 0.14, inserts into ACID compliant tables will deactivate vectorization for the duration of the select and insert. This will be done automatically. ACID tables that have data inserted into them can still be queried using vectorization.
Inserting into tables from SQL
The INSERT...VALUES statement can be used to insert data into tables directly from SQL.
Version Information
INSERT...VALUES is available starting in Hive 0.14.
Syntax
Standard 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
Synopsis
- Each row listed in the VALUES clause is inserted into table tablename.
- Values must be provided for every column in the table. The standard SQL syntax that allows the user to insert values into only some columns is not yet supported. To mimic the standard SQL, nulls can be provided for columns the user does not wish to assign a value to.
- Dynamic partitioning is supported in the same way as for INSERT...SELECT.
- If the table being inserted into supports ACID and a transaction manager that supports ACID is in use, this operation will be auto-committed upon successful completion.
Examples
CREATE TABLE students (name VARCHAR(64), age INT, gpa DECIMAL(3, 2)) CLUSTERED BY (age) INTO 2 BUCKETS STORED AS ORC; INSERT INTO TABLE students VALUES ('fred flintstone', 35, 1.28), ('barney rubble', 32, 2.32); CREATE TABLE pageviews (userid VARCHAR(64), link STRING, from STRING) PARTITIONED BY (datestamp STRING) CLUSTERED BY (userid) INTO 256 BUCKETS STORED AS ORC; INSERT INTO TABLE pageviews PARTITION (datestamp = '2014-09-23') VALUES ('jsmith', 'mail.com', 'sports.com'), ('jdoe', 'mail.com', null); INSERT INTO TABLE pageviews PARTITION (datestamp) VALUES ('tjohnson', 'sports.com', 'finance.com', '2014-09-23'), ('tlee', 'finance.com', null, '2014-09-21');
Update
Version Information
UPDATE is available starting in Hive 0.14.
Updates can only be performed on tables that support ACID. See Hive Transactions for details.
Syntax
Standard Syntax: UPDATE tablename SET column = value [, column = value ...] [WHERE expression]
Synopsis
- The referenced column must be a column of the table being updated.
- The value assigned must be an expression that Hive supports in the select clause. Thus arithmetic operators, UDFs, casts, literals, etc. are supported. Subqueries are not supported.
- Only rows that match the WHERE clause will be updated.
- Partitioning columns cannot be updated.
- Bucketing columns cannot be updated.
- In Hive 0.14, upon successful completion of this operation the changes will be auto-committed.
Notes
- Vectorization will be turned off for update operations. This is automatic and requires no action on the part of the user. Non-update operations are not affected. Updated tables can still be queried using vectorization.
Delete
Version Information
DELETE is available starting in Hive 0.14.
Deletes can only be performed on tables that support ACID. See Hive Transactions for details.
Syntax
Standard Syntax: DELETE FROM tablename [WHERE expression]
Synopsis
- Only rows that match the WHERE clause will be deleted.
- In Hive 0.14, upon successful completion of this operation the changes will be auto-committed.
Notes
- Vectorization will be turned off for delete operations. This is automatic and requires no action on the part of the user. Non-delete operations are not affected. Tables with deleted data can still be queried using vectorization.