Hudi connector#
The Hudi connector enables querying Hudi tables.
Requirements#
To use the Hudi connector, you need:
Hudi version 0.12.3 or higher.
Network access from the Trino coordinator and workers to the Hudi storage.
Access to a Hive metastore service (HMS).
Network access from the Trino coordinator to the HMS.
Data files stored in the Parquet file format. These can be configured using file format configuration properties per catalog.
General configuration#
To configure the Hive connector, create a catalog properties file
etc/catalog/example.properties
that references the hudi
connector and defines the HMS to use with the hive.metastore.uri
configuration property:
connector.name=hudi
hive.metastore.uri=thrift://example.net:9083
There are HMS configuration properties available for use with the Hudi connector. The connector recognizes Hudi tables synced to the metastore by the Hudi sync tool.
Additionally, following configuration properties can be set depending on the use-case:
Property name |
Description |
Default |
---|---|---|
|
List of column names that are hidden from the query output. It can be used to hide Hudi meta fields. By default, no fields are hidden. |
|
|
Access Parquet columns using names from the file. If disabled, then columns are accessed using the index. Only applicable to Parquet file format. |
|
|
Number of threads to generate splits from partitions. |
|
|
Number of threads to run background split loader. A single background split loader is needed per query. |
|
|
Unlike uniform splitting, size-based splitting ensures that each batch of splits has enough data to process. By default, it is enabled to improve performance. |
|
|
The split size corresponding to the standard weight (1.0) when size-based split weights are enabled. |
|
|
Minimum weight that a split can be assigned when size-based split weights are enabled. |
|
|
Rate at which splits are queued for processing. The queue is throttled if this rate limit is breached. |
|
|
Maximum outstanding splits in a batch enqueued for processing. |
|
|
Maximum number of metastore data objects per transaction in the Hive metastore cache. |
|
SQL support#
The connector provides read access to data in the Hudi table that has been synced to Hive metastore. The globally available and read operation statements are supported.
Basic usage examples#
In the following example queries, stock_ticks_cow
is the Hudi copy-on-write
table referred to in the Hudi quickstart guide.
USE example.example_schema;
SELECT symbol, max(ts)
FROM stock_ticks_cow
GROUP BY symbol
HAVING symbol = 'GOOG';
symbol | _col1 |
-----------+----------------------+
GOOG | 2018-08-31 10:59:00 |
(1 rows)
SELECT dt, symbol
FROM stock_ticks_cow
WHERE symbol = 'GOOG';
dt | symbol |
------------+--------+
2018-08-31 | GOOG |
(1 rows)
SELECT dt, count(*)
FROM stock_ticks_cow
GROUP BY dt;
dt | _col1 |
------------+--------+
2018-08-31 | 99 |
(1 rows)
Schema and table management#
Hudi supports two types of tables depending on how the data is indexed and laid out on the file system. The following table displays a support matrix of tables types and query types for the connector:
Table type |
Supported query type |
---|---|
Copy on write |
Snapshot queries |
Merge on read |
Read-optimized queries |
Metadata tables#
The connector exposes a metadata table for each Hudi table. The metadata table contains information about the internal structure of the Hudi table. You can query each metadata table by appending the metadata table name to the table name:
SELECT * FROM "test_table$timeline"
$timeline
table#
The $timeline
table provides a detailed view of meta-data instants
in the Hudi table. Instants are specific points in time.
You can retrieve the information about the timeline of the Hudi table
test_table
by using the following query:
SELECT * FROM "test_table$timeline"
timestamp | action | state
--------------------+---------+-----------
8667764846443717831 | commit | COMPLETED
7860805980949777961 | commit | COMPLETED
The output of the query has the following columns:
Name |
Type |
Description |
---|---|---|
|
|
Instant time is typically a timestamp when the actions performed. |
|
|
Type of action performed on the table. |
|
|
Current state of the instant. |