Hive Support in Sparkling Water¶
Spark supports reading data natively from Hive and H2O supports that in a Hadoop environment as well. In Sparkling Water you can decide which tool you want to use for this task. This tutorial explains what is needed to use H2O to read data from Hive in the Sparkling Water environment.
Import Data from Hive via Hive Metastore¶
Make sure
$SPARK_HOME/conf
contains the hive-site.xml with your Hive configuration.In YARN client mode or any local mode, please copy the required connector jars for your Metastore to
$SPARK_HOME/jars
. You can find these jars in$HIVE_HOME/lib directory
. For example, if you are using MySQL as a Metastore for Hive, copy MySQL metastore JDBC connector. This is not required in the YARN cluster mode.
This is all preparation we need to do. The following code shows how to import the table.
Scala
To read data from Hive in Sparkling Water, you can use the method:
val airlinesTable = h2oContext.importHiveTable("default", "airlines")
Python
To read data from Hive in PySparkling, you can use the method:
airlines_frame = h2oContext.importHiveTable("default", "airlines")
R
To read data from Hive in RSparkling, you can use the method:
airlines_frame <- h2oContext$importHiveTable("default", "airlines")
This call reads the airlines table from the default database.
Import Data from Hive via JDBC connection¶
This feature reads data from Hive via a standard JDBC connection.
Obtain the Hive JDBC Client JAR¶
To be able to connect to Hive, Sparkling Water will need Hive JDBC Client JAR on the class-path. The jar can be obtained from in the following ways.
For Hortonworks, Hive JDBC client jars can be found at
/usr/hdp/current/hive-client/lib/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar
on one of the edge nodes after you have installed HDP. For more information, see Hortenworks documentation https://docs.hortonworks.com/HDPDocuments/HDP2/HDP-2.6.4/bk_data-access/content/hive-jdbc-odbc-drivers.html.For Cloudera, install the JDBC package for your operating system according to instructions stated on Cloudera documentation https://www.cloudera.com/documentation/enterprise/5-3-x/topics/cdh_ig_hive_jdbc_install.html. The path to the jar then will be
/usr/lib/hive/lib/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar
You can also retrieve this from Maven for the desired version using
mvn dependency:get -Dartifact=groupId:artifactId:version
.
Import Data from a non-Kerberized Hive¶
Sparkling Water can import data from the non-Kerberized hive. This also applies for the case when your Hadoop cluster is Kerberized but Hive is not.
To import data from non-Kerberized Hive, run:
Scala
First, start Sparkling Shell with the Hive JDBC client JAR on the class-path
./bin/sparkling-shell --jars /path/to/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar
Create H2OContext
with properties ensuring connectivity to Hive
import ai.h2o.sparkling._
val hc = H2OContext.getOrCreate()
Import data table from Hive
val frame = hc.importHiveTable("jdbc:hive2://hostname:10000/default", "airlines")
Python
First, start PySparkling Shell with the Hive JDBC client JAR on the class-path
./bin/pysparkling --jars /path/to/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar
Create H2OContext
with properties ensuring connectivity to Hive
from pysparkling import *
hc = H2OContext.getOrCreate()
Import data table from Hive
frame = hc.importHiveTable("jdbc:hive2://hostname:10000/default", "airlines")
R
Run your R environment and install required libraries according to RSparkling tutorial and then create Spark context with the Hive JDBC client JAR on the class-path.
library(sparklyr)
library(rsparkling)
conf <- spark_config()
conf$sparklyr.jars.default <- "/path/to/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar"
sc <- spark_connect(master = "yarn-client", config = conf)
hc <- H2OContext.getOrCreate()
Import data table from Hive
frame <- hc$importHiveTable("jdbc:hive2://hostname:10000/default", "airlines")
Import Data from Kerberized Hive in a Kerberized Hadoop Cluster¶
Before a given connection to Hive is made, a user has to be authenticated with the Hive instance via a delegation token and pass the delegation token to Sparkling Water. Sparkling Water ensures that the delegation token is being automatically refreshed, thus delegation token never expires in long-running Sparkling Water applications.
First, we need to generate the initial token, which can be generated with the following steps.
Authenticate your user against Kerberos.
kinit <your_user_name>
Put Hive JDBC client JAR on the Hadoop class-path.
export HADOOP_CLASSPATH=/path/to/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar
Set path to sparkling-water-assembly-3.32.1.3-1-3.0-all.jar which is bundled in Sparkling Water archive.
SW_ASSEMBLY=/path/to/sparkling-water-3.32.1.3-1-3.0/jars/sparkling-water-assembly_2.12-3.32.1.3-1-3.0-all.jar
- Get the delegation token generated with arguments:
hiveHost
- The full address of HiveServer2, for examplehostname:10000
hivePrincipal
- Hiveserver2 Kerberos principal, for examplehive/hostname@DOMAIN.COM
tokenFile
- The output file which the delegation token will be generated to
hadoop jar $SW_ASSEMBLY water.hive.GenerateHiveToken -hiveHost <your_hive_host> -hivePrincipal <your_hive_principal> -tokenFile hive.token
With the token generated, we can run Sparkling Water with Hive support for the Kerberized Hadoop cluster as:
Scala
First, start Sparkling Shell with the Hive JDBC client JAR on the class-path
./bin/sparkling-shell --jars /path/to/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar
Create H2OContext
with properties ensuring connectivity to Hive
import ai.h2o.sparkling._
val conf = new H2OConf()
conf.setKerberizedHiveEnabled()
conf.setHiveHost("hostname:10000") // The full address of HiveServer2
conf.setHivePrincipal("hive/hostname@DOMAIN.COM") // Hiveserver2 Kerberos principal
conf.setHiveJdbcUrlPattern("jdbc:hive2://{{host}}/;{{auth}}") // Doesn't have to be specified if host is set
val source = scala.io.Source.fromFile("hive.token")
try {
conf.setHiveToken(source.mkString())
} finally {
source.close()
}
val hc = H2OContext.getOrCreate(conf)
Import data table from Hive
val frame = hc.importHiveTable("jdbc:hive2://hostname:10000/default;auth=delegationToken", "airlines")
Python
First, start PySparkling Shell with the Hive JDBC client JAR on the class-path
./bin/pysparkling --jars /path/to/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar
Create H2OContext
with properties ensuring connectivity to Hive
from pysparkling import *
conf = H2OConf()
conf.setKerberizedHiveEnabled()
conf.setHiveHost("hostname:10000") # The full address of HiveServer2
conf.setHivePrincipal("hive/hostname@DOMAIN.COM") # Hiveserver2 Kerberos principal
conf.setHiveJdbcUrlPattern("jdbc:hive2://{{host}}/;{{auth}}") # Doesn't have to be specified if host is set
with open('hive.token', 'r') as tokenFile:
token = tokenFile.read()
conf.setHiveToken(token)
hc = H2OContext.getOrCreate(conf)
Import data table from Hive
frame = hc.importHiveTable("jdbc:hive2://hostname:10000/default;auth=delegationToken", "airlines")
R
Run your R environment and install required libraries according to RSparkling tutorial and then create Spark context with the Hive JDBC client JAR on the class-path.
library(sparklyr)
library(rsparkling)
conf <- spark_config()
conf$sparklyr.jars.default <- "/path/to/hive-jdbc-<version>-standalone.jar"
sc <- spark_connect(master = "yarn-client", config = conf)
Create H2OContext
with properties ensuring connectivity to Hive
h2oConf <- H2OConf()
conf.setKerberizedHiveEnabled()
h2oConf$setHiveHost("hostname:10000")
h2oConf$setHivePrincipal("hive/hostname@DOMAIN.COM")
tokenFile <- 'hive.token'
token <- readChar(tokenFile, file.info(tokenFile)$size)
h2oConf$setHiveToken(token)
hc <- H2OContext.getOrCreate(h2oConf)
Import data table from Hive
frame <- hc$importHiveTable("jdbc:hive2://hostname:10000/default;auth=delegationToken", "airlines")